chmod 666 ///
Bruce Hyatt
brucejhyatt at yahoo.com
Sat Apr 5 01:39:42 UTC 2008
It definitely was "chmod 666 ///," not chmod -R 666 ///"
Bruce
--- Patrick O'Callaghan <pocallaghan at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Fri, 2008-04-04 at 13:48 -0700, Bruce Hyatt wrote:
> > --- Patrick O'Callaghan <pocallaghan at gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > In a Unix (and Linux) pathname any sequence of one or more
> /
> > > characters
> > > collapses into a single /.
> > >
> > > Thus /// is exactly the same as / so your chmod affects
> only
> > > files in
> > > the root directory (and not those beneath it). Which is
> why I
> > > thought /tmp might the cause of the problem.
> >
> > In that case, it seems odd to me that executing "chmod 777
> ///"
> > didn't allow me to startx.
>
> Well, it seemed odd to me, which is why I suggested looking at
> /tmp, but
> that's definitely the meaning of ///. Try this to demonstrate:
>
> ls -l ///////////////////////tmp
>
> Are you sure it wasn't 'chmod -R 666 ///'?
>
> poc
>
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