On Fri, 08 Aug 2008 15:33:25 +0200, Aaron Konstam <akonstam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Fri, 2008-08-08 at 12:58 +0200, roland wrote:
On Fri, 08 Aug 2008 12:42:45 +0200, Ed Greshko <Ed.Greshko@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
> roland wrote:
>> On Thu, 07 Aug 2008 11:54:25 +0200, Anne Wilson
>> <cannewilson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>> On Thursday 07 August 2008 10:32:59 roland wrote:
>>>> Hello,
>>>>
>>>> I moved the homedirectories from one server to another.
>>>> Somehow the permissons got mixed up.
>>>> Is there anyway to check permissions?
>> I can check easely owner and group but what I would like to find is a
>> script that checks the permissions. I remember, sorry to mention it,
>> SCO unix, they had a utility to check the entire installation.
>> Like for example .dmrc, in the home dir, need to have a 644
permission.
>> What permissions should the other .dir have, like .gnome, .evolution
>> eso.
>
> Most directories are very happy with 744 permissions. That would be
> mostly what you want since 644 could present problems. The only
> directory that I *know requires* a different permission is .ssh, where
> you'd need 700.
>
> I did notice that you've convinced yourself that your problems are
> related to permissions and don't seem interested to explore other
> possibilities. AFAIK, you also didn't mention exactly *how* you moved
> the home directories.
>
I did not mean to give that impression, sorry.
I copied /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow, /etc/group, /etc/gshadow
I copied /home with rsync
I hope this is an answer and I am still interested in whatever solution
:-)
roland
That would make the uids and gids the same but would not affext the
permissiond in the home directory. Did you copy the home directories
also?
I do not really remember. I think I just put then there with rsync, but it
could also be that I copied them with tar and then rsync, but wouldn't
that have the same result?
Roland
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