I recieved this email some time back and am finally getting back to
it,
>This is a bug in linuxconf 1.10. This has been fixed in 1.11
and now 1.12
>which is out since friday (I have to write the changelog for
1.10 users
>though). The bug appears only when you are creating a user. If
you create
>the user and then visit this user again and "accept" the dialog
without
>changing anything, the quota will be set properly (If I recall
the bug).
>Jacques Gelinas ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
the version of linux conf I have is
gnome-linuxconf-0.13-16rh
linuxconf-1.11r18-3rh
but my quota does still not automatically update, I still have to open
and close the window as described below in my original email.
Thanks again.
> On Fri, 4 Sep 1998, Marxen, Sara wrote:
>
> > Hi...new to the list, hope someone can help me.
> >
> > I have used linuxconf to enable quotas on my /home filesystem for
> users.
> > That is I enabled user quota for a partition and then when
> > to file system / Set quota defaults to enable the default quota.
> > This is great, I do a repquota -a and each user has the default
> quota
> > there.
> > BUT, if I add a new user he does not inherit these quotas
> automatically.
> > Nor does he inherit them when I turn quota on and off (quotaon
> quotaoff)
> > or when
> > I run quotacheck /home or when I reboot. The only way he inherits
> the
> > quota is by me opening linuxconf going to file systems/Set quota
> > defaults and reclicking
> > accept. This is not a good solution. I have programs to
> add/delete
> > users in batch and
> > I do not want to have to, once or twice a day, remember to open
> > linuxconf
> > and reaccept my default quotas.
> >
> > Is there a command line solution to this problem? Have I missed
> > anything
> > in my config?
>
>
---
You are currently subscribed to linuxconf as: [[email protected]]
To unsubscribe, forward this message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]