* Gene Heskett [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004-04-22 22:16]:
First I would like to apologize. I hadn't installed amanda from
source. The version I was using was the RPM that came with SuSE.
Now I have removed the RPM version and installed amanda as Gene
Haskett sugested. when I ran amcheck zampo it
* Paul Bijnens [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004-04-21 23:58]:
Sören Edzen wrote:
I belive I have dumper setuid root. It was one of the problems I
solved before I managed to create backups with amanda. I used the
following command:
chmod +s /usr/lib/amanda/dumper
Is this the right way to do it?
Sören Edzen wrote:
* Paul Bijnens [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004-04-21 23:58]:
The proper way is to make install as root, instead
of fixing it with chmod.
I did that. Maybe I should remove amanda and make a fresh install?
You mean that the make install as root did not set the suid-bit
on those
On Thursday 22 April 2004 14:49, Sören Edzen wrote:
* Paul Bijnens [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004-04-21 23:58]:
Sören Edzen wrote:
I belive I have dumper setuid root. It was one of the problems I
solved before I managed to create backups with amanda. I used the
following command:
chmod +s
Hi,
First I'll inform you that I'm new to amanda. I use it only locally
for now on SuSE 9.0 with an AMD Athlon. If you need to know more,
just let my know. Now for my problem. When I first started to use
amanda I managed to make one or two backups. Then when I tried to
schedule them as cron jobs I
Sören Edzen wrote:
I belive I have dumper setuid root. It was one of the problems I
solved before I managed to create backups with amanda. I used the
following command:
chmod +s /usr/lib/amanda/dumper
Is this the right way to do it?
Besides dumper there are others that have to be suid root.
The