On 2022-08-15 13:21:47 Per Jessen wrote:
|Siard wrote: |> /usr/local/bin is owned by root with permissions 755, so as a user I |> cannot put a script in there. |> |> I can change the ownership, but every time after a reboot it is owned |> by root again, with permissions 755. |> |> Does anyone know where this is set, and/or how I can make |> /usr/local/bin permanently make writable for a user? | |It isn't meant to be. /usr/local is for local stuff, i.e. not vendor or |system.
Indeed. I have a separate partition mounted at /usr/local, where I keep stuff that I want to preserve across installation events. I have set the permissions the same way as /tmp has, so that I can put stuff there without having to change to root. Leslie -- Operating System: Linux Distribution: openSUSE Leap 15.4 x86_64 Desktop Environment: Trinity