Re: funny problem

2003-12-11 Thread Mikael Bystr
PowerMail, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: >Change the owner and access rights of your PowerMail user folder, then >click "apply to enclosed items". Please note that this often doesn't work in the Finder. BatchMod is better getting to permissions in nested folders and files. At least this is true in Ja

Re: funny problem

2003-12-11 Thread PowerMail Engineering
thenethopper wrote: >There is still >one (ore more?) database, which I cannot find that denies access. >Unfortunately, the error message is very cryptical. > >Can anybody give me an hint, which file causes the problems? Change the owner and access rights of your PowerMail user folder, then click

Re: funny problem

2003-12-11 Thread alan
If you still have the old drive around, I would strongly recommend that you do the backup "the right way". Use a program like Carbon Copy Cloner to make the backup, or at the least, follow the instructions at its web site to make the backup. Just logging on as root and copying everything will not

Re: funny problem

2003-12-11 Thread Matthias Schmidt
use Carbon Copy Cloner for the next backup For changing permissions you can use BatChmod. All the Best Matthias - schmidt-systementwicklung - Am/On: Wed, 10 Dec 2003 23:31:44 +0100 schrieb/wrote: thenethopper thenethopper > > >h

funny problem

2003-12-10 Thread thenethopper
hello, I have a peculiar problem. To built a new drive in my Powerbook, I made a backup from my old drive to the new drive. Therefore, I had to use the root account (to copy system files). What I did not expect is that the backup changed all access rights to files and folders to "system". Power