On Tuesday 30 November 2004 03:13, Peter B Van Campen wrote:
On Monday 29 November 2004 6:21 pm, Anders Johansson wrote:
On Tuesday 30 November 2004 01:14, Fred A. Miller wrote:
On Sun November 28 2004 5:29 pm, Anders Johansson wrote:
ok, and how about "/sbin/resmgr list" (run as your regular user)
Hi Anders,
here is my output:
@linux:~> /sbin/resmgr list rw-- /dev/audio rw-- /dev/mixer rw-- /dev/dsp rw-- /dev/sequencer rw-- /dev/video rw-- /dev/modem rw-p /dev/cdrom rw-p /dev/cdrom1 rw-- /dev/cdrecorder rw-p /dev/dvd rw-p /dev/dvd1 rw-- /dev/sr0 rw-- /dev/sr1 rw-- /dev/sr2 rw-- /dev/sr3 rws- /dev/scanner r--- /dev/console rw-- /dev/pilot rw-- usb:any
This looks good, this means resmgr sees your login and gives you permissions to the devices. If there's some device you still don't get permissions on, it means either it's not listed in the above (in which case, add it to /etc/resmgr.conf) or the program you're using isn't set to use resmgr, in which case use the regular unix permissions
***a@linux:~> /sbin/resmgr login *** :0 status code 502 server message follows: you are not allowed to do this ***@linux:~> su Password: su: incorrect password ***@linux:~> su Password: linux:/home/*** # /sbin/resmgr login pbvanca :0
:)
success linux:/home/*** # /sbin/resmgr list status code 200 server message follows: no devices available
Yeah, you should exit from root. The "list" should be run as regular user