On 11/2/2012 12:41 PM, Cameron Gunnin wrote:
Hi,
I've been struggling with this for the past week to no avail. As the
title suggests, if I am logged in under a user that is not the user
who installed Cygwin (regardless of the user's windows permissions),
then I cannot modify near anything outside of /home/<user>/. Here's
what I'm trying to get working.
1a) Install Cygwin as a Local Administrator. Run "mkpasswd -l >
/etc/passwd" and "mkgroup -l > /etc/group"
Why are you running mkpasswd and mkgroup yourself? passwd-grp.sh
postinstall script runs this for you, including adding a '-c'
flag to pick up the local user.
OR (I would prefer 1a, but 1b is acceptable as well)
1b) Install Cygwin as Domain Administrator. Run "mkpasswd -d >
/etc/passwd" and "mkgroup -d > /etc/group"
2) Login as Domain User (has administrative privileges on local
machine AND can access the AD).
NOTE: At this point, I get the message:
Your group is currently "mkpasswd". This indicates that your
gid is not in /etc/group and your uid is not in /etc/passwd.
The /etc/passwd (and possibly /etc/group) files should be rebuilt.
See the man pages for mkpasswd and mkgroup then, for example, run
mkpasswd -l [-d] > /etc/passwd
mkgroup -l [-d] > /etc/group
Note that the -d switch is necessary for domain users.
3) Attempt to run "mkpasswd -d >> /etc/passwd" and "mkgroup -d >> /etc/group"
However, I get the message:
$ mkpasswd -d >> /etc/passwd
-sh: /etc/passwd: Permission Denied
Run it as the local or domain administrator that you used while installing.
--
Larry
_____________________________________________________________________
A: Yes.
> Q: Are you sure?
>> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
>>> Q: Why is top posting annoying in email?
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