Gentoo Archives: gentoo-user

From: German <gentgerman@×××××.com>
To: gentoo-user@l.g.o
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Screen: Cannot open your terminal '/dev/tty1' - please check [Update]
Date: Tue, 17 Mar 2015 15:42:14
Message-Id: 20150317114202.3bbdd3b2d5859e0ea3143acf@gmail.com
In Reply to: Re: [gentoo-user] Screen: Cannot open your terminal '/dev/tty1' - please check [Update] by Tom H
1 On Sat, 14 Mar 2015 14:03:21 -0400
2 Tom H <tomh0665@×××××.com> wrote:
3
4 > On Sat, Mar 14, 2015 at 6:08 AM, German <gentgerman@×××××.com> wrote:
5 > > On Sat, 14 Mar 2015 01:16:32 +0100 <wabenbau@×××××.com> wrote:
6 > >> <wabenbau@×××××.com> wrote:
7 > >>>
8 > >>> So it seems that after login you first have to chmod 770 the tty
9 > >>> before you do a su - user (user have to be in group tty of course).
10 > >>
11 > >> Forget about "chmod 770". Better do a "chmod g+rw". :-)
12 > >
13 > > Tried it, it also doesn't stay permanently. OK, no solution :(
14 >
15 > Because "/dev" is recreated at every boot.
16 >
17 > You have to override the tty rule(s) in
18 > "/lib/udev/rules.d/50-udev-default.rules" with a rule/rules in
19 > "/etc/udev/rules.d/".
20 >
21 > Since the 50-udev-default.rules is an upstream rule that's shipped by
22 > all the distros that I use, perhaps you should track down why this is
23 > happening rather than overriding it.
24 >
25 > Canek had asked whether you were using systemd and therefore logind.
26 > Since you're using openrc, perhaps you should check whether installing
27 > consolekit is a fix because it's the precursor to logind.
28
29 Just to emerge consolekit and see if it fix it?
30 >
31
32
33 --
34 German <gentgerman@×××××.com>

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