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On Sat, 14 Mar 2015 14:03:21 -0400 |
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Tom H <tomh0665@×××××.com> wrote: |
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> On Sat, Mar 14, 2015 at 6:08 AM, German <gentgerman@×××××.com> wrote: |
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> > On Sat, 14 Mar 2015 01:16:32 +0100 <wabenbau@×××××.com> wrote: |
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> >> <wabenbau@×××××.com> wrote: |
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> >>> |
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> >>> So it seems that after login you first have to chmod 770 the tty |
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> >>> before you do a su - user (user have to be in group tty of course). |
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> >> |
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> >> Forget about "chmod 770". Better do a "chmod g+rw". :-) |
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> > |
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> > Tried it, it also doesn't stay permanently. OK, no solution :( |
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> |
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> Because "/dev" is recreated at every boot. |
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> |
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> You have to override the tty rule(s) in |
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> "/lib/udev/rules.d/50-udev-default.rules" with a rule/rules in |
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> "/etc/udev/rules.d/". |
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> |
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> Since the 50-udev-default.rules is an upstream rule that's shipped by |
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> all the distros that I use, perhaps you should track down why this is |
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> happening rather than overriding it. |
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> |
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> Canek had asked whether you were using systemd and therefore logind. |
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> Since you're using openrc, perhaps you should check whether installing |
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> consolekit is a fix because it's the precursor to logind. |
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Just to emerge consolekit and see if it fix it? |
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> |
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-- |
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German <gentgerman@×××××.com> |