03-21-2014
NFS does not care if you're root, being on a different machine -- you're someone else's root, not the root. Whether it'll allow you is down to its configuration.
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I am trying to change ownership of a file that I own by using the following command:
chown norfoklm norfolk
norfoklm is the user I am trying to change it to and norfolk is the name of the directory
The error I keep getting is:
chown: norfolk: Not owner
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2. AIX
hello
chown not change ownership
before:
205:system ~kuku
chown kuku:system ~kuku
after no change
205:system ~kuku
aix box
can someone help me?
ariec (2 Replies)
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Hi
Can anybody please let me know the usage of Chgrp command with an example???
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hi
i wrote a script to run 'C' executable which will create a new file, after that util is completed, i have to change the file ownership to some other user. for that i used "chown" for changing the file permission in Korn script
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is there a difference in chown on a file or a directory?
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
hello
i want shell script.
i have a source.txt
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I have a file fin2009_4.txt.gz in the unix ftp server. Owner of the file is: ftpusr.
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Hello
My oracledatabase creats some xmlfiles. this files has the owner hugo. now I've a script (how runs als hugo2) and this script will insert this XMLFile into the database. But that doesn't work, because the owner of the files is wrong, and hugo has not the rights to insert this files into... (3 Replies)
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Hi All,
I need your help in changing the owner of a directory.
I have a created a direcotry TEST with user "abc"....for the group "ftp".
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I am working on a test machine.
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LEARN ABOUT HPUX
systemd-volatile-root.service
SYSTEMD-VOLATILE-ROOT.SERVICE(8) systemd-volatile-root.service SYSTEMD-VOLATILE-ROOT.SERVICE(8)
NAME
systemd-volatile-root.service, systemd-volatile-root - Make the root file system volatile
SYNOPSIS
systemd-volatile-root.service
/lib/systemd/systemd-volatile-root
DESCRIPTION
systemd-volatile-root.service is a service that replaces the root directory with a volatile memory file system ("tmpfs"), mounting the
original (non-volatile) /usr inside it read-only. This way, vendor data from /usr is available as usual, but all configuration data in
/etc, all state data in /var and all other resources stored directly under the root directory are reset on boot and lost at shutdown,
enabling fully stateless systems.
This service is only enabled if full volatile mode is selected, for example by specifying "systemd.volatile=yes" on the kernel command
line. This service runs only in the initial RAM disk ("initrd"), before the system transitions to the host's root directory. Note that this
service is not used if "systemd.volatile=state" is used, as in that mode the root directory is non-volatile.
SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemd-fstab-generator(8), kernel-command-line(7)
systemd 237 SYSTEMD-VOLATILE-ROOT.SERVICE(8)