Actually this is *one of many *punishments following the sin of choosing *.nix

and not Microsoft Windows.

Have ever heard of "*chmod*" in windows ?

MS windows trust you with your machine.

You bought it , you paid for it , you own it.


although you have many ways of installing software.

apt , apt-get yum , blah blah.

You need to familiarise yourself with *find  / -name java* *  ,   which java*  because you have no idea where the installer installed the software you just installed on "your machine",

Have ever heard of *which* or *find* in windows ?


you can be in a directory in one terminal and delete it form another terminal .

Is that  linux security  feature ?

can you do the same  in windows  ?

what are others benefits you can enjoy in MS Windows because of this particular behaviour is not same in MS Windows ?

After you deleted the directory you are in from somewhere else you will end up in trash literally.

why  is this same unique  behaviour in Unix which came after Linux.


you see anything what's wrong with this ? can you see the missing the /r /n

manifest.txt

Main-Class:/classname /

why does manifest.text must have /r {carriage} or  /n {newline}.

Is it because jvm.dll it was written in C. C programming language also has the same feature.


why is there three ways to do same thing  ?

java - cp

java - classpath

java - class-path



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Marry loose with tight
coupling = healthy applications

On 04/01/2020 22:51, Emmanuel Bourg wrote:
Le 04/01/2020 à 16:06, Pham Huu Bang a écrit :

Thanks for this link
https://salsa.debian.org/java-team/tomcat9/blob/master/debian/README.Debian.
But I cannot *read* the file from /tmp (not *write* file to /tmp). The
strange thing is, it can read another file from another location, e.g in
/opt/:
The tomcat9 service is configured with a private /tmp directory (using
the 'PrivateTmp=yes' systemd directive). So Tomcat can't see what other
applications write to /tmp, and temporary files written by Tomcat are
out of reach from the other applications.

This is a security hardening setting that can be overridden as described
in the README file Olaf mentioned.

Emmanuel Bourg

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