On Sun, Oct 20, 2019 at 02:02:15PM +0100, Nuno Silva wrote:
> On 2019-10-20, Chris Green wrote:
> 
> > On Sun, Oct 20, 2019 at 11:01:02AM +0200, Matthias Apitz wrote:
> >> El día domingo, octubre 20, 2019 a las 09:25:46a. m. +0100, Nuno Silva 
> >> escribió:
> >> 
> >> > On 2019-10-19, José María Mateos wrote:
> >> > 
> >> > > On Sat, 19 Oct 2019 19:17:06 +0100 Chris Green <c...@isbd.net> wrote:
> >> > >> Running 'evince ~/.mitt/fred.pdf' displays the PDF file successfully
> >> > >> but running 'evince ~/.mutt/fred.pdf' produces a Permission Denied
> >> > >> message in a pop-up window.  All directory names I have tried other
> >> > >> than .mutt allow the PDF file to be read.
> >> 
> >> I can't reproduce this on FreeBSD. The OP could run on any Linux (don't
> >> know if the problem is on Linux):
> >> 
> >> strace -o evince.tr -f  evince ~/.mutt/fred.pdf
> >> 
> >> and look into the file evince.tr which open(2) or stat(2) gives a
> >> Permission Denied and why. If the OP can't see this, he/she should 
> >> post this file somewhere.
> >> 
> >>    matthias
> >> 
> > I'm running xubuntu 19.04 on both systems which show this bug.  I
> > don't have evince on any other system at the moment.
> >
> > I will try the strace and also I may try installing evince on a system
> > which is running xubuntu 18.04 to see if the bug is there too.
> >
> > Thanks everyone and listen to this space! :-)
> 
> Do these systems have apparmor? It seems to be some sort of security
> tool which restricts access to files and directories based on rules.
> 
> I don't use ubuntu (or ubuntu-based) systems nor apparmor, but this
> looks like it might be related:
> 
> https://gitlab.com/apparmor/apparmor/raw/master/profiles/apparmor.d/abstractions/private-files
> 
I just removed apparmor from one of my systems (I can see no use for
it anyway), I still get the error with evince.

-- 
Chris Green

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