On 14/08/17 03:20 PM, Roman Bysh wrote:
On 14/08/17 02:47 PM, Manfred Hollstein wrote:
On Mon, 14 Aug 2017, 20:26:42 +0200, Roman Bysh wrote:
On 14/08/17 02:21 PM, Manfred Hollstein wrote:
[...] What does the following show on your system:
rpm -V virtualbox virtualbox-host-kmp-default virtualbox-qt
Please run the command as user root. The "Tip!" above might actually help to resurrect the situation for you:
zypper in --force virtualbox virtualbox-host-kmp-default virtualbox-qt
Afterwards you could re-run the "rpm -V ..." command above and compare outputs.
If you suspect that some permissions are wrong for some programs, you can also check for that (again as "root"):
chkstat --system
If this indicates something *is* wrong, you can even set the permissions to their proper value (also as "root"):
chkstat --system --set
HTH, cheers.
l8er manfred
rpm -V virtualbox virtualbox-host-kmp-default virtualbox-qt /usr/lib/virtualbox/VBoxNetDHCP should be root:vboxusers 4750. (wrong permissions 0750) /usr/lib/virtualbox/VBoxNetAdpCtl should be root:vboxusers 4750. (wrong permissions 0750) /usr/lib/virtualbox/VBoxHeadless should be root:vboxusers 4750. (wrong permissions 0750) /usr/lib/virtualbox/VBoxSDL should be root:vboxusers 4750. (wrong permissions 0750) /usr/lib/virtualbox/VirtualBox should be root:vboxusers 4750. (wrong permissions 0750)
Thx. This indeed appears to be wrong. Do you have a group "vboxusers" on your system, and are you (your user ID) member of that group? You can check that by running the following command as "root":
grep vboxusers /etc/group
If the output shows something like
vboxusers:x:SOMENUMBER:YOURUSERNAME
you're OK. If the group exists, but you're not member of it, you can fix that by running the following command as "root":
usermod -a -G vboxusers YOURUSERNAME
In any case, the permissions appear to be wrong on your system, so I'd suggest you either re-install the packages ("zypper in ..." above), or get the permissions fixed for the already installed packages ("chkstat --system --set").
Once this has been done, you should logout from your desktop session and login again. If this still doesn't help, you should send us the following:
id # run as your normal user, not "root", not via "sudo" chkstat --system # run this as "root"
Cheers.
l8er manfred
Looks like the comman "chkstat --system --set" fixed the problem.
Thanks Manfred
Cheers!
Roman
Oops. Forgot the "d" :-) -- Cheers! Roman -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org