søn, 13.03.2005 kl. 13.17 skrev Miles Goodhew: > Kyrre, > > > On Fri, 11 Mar 2005 21:09:28 +0100, Kyrre Ness Sjobak > <kyrre@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Strange. I have experienced several times to delete something root-owned > > (in my home folder) from nautilus -> get thrown to ~/.Trash. (or > > media/trash, but removable media is usually vfat so permissions isn't an > > issue) > > > > When i then try to empty trash, all i get is "acess denied". > > If you own a directory, or if you have write permission to it, you > can modify all links (file names) within it. If root owns any "normal" > file in the dir, you can delete them immediately (rather, "unlink" > them - only the system can delete). > However, you can't unlink a directory file (yes, at the inode level, > everything's a file with a specific type) unless the directory only > contains the two links/names "." and ".." ("self inode" and "parent > inode"). > So it follows from the preceding two paragraphs that if root owns a > directory in your home directory (and you can't write to that > directory), then you can move it to some other directory (say > "~/.trashcan" or something similar), but you can never actually > crowbar it out of the filesystem. > > In that final case (and if you don't actually have root access to > the box you're using), I usually move the directory as far up the > filesystem as I can (put it in "/tmp" if it's the same filesystem), > rename it to something like "FOR_CLIFFS_SAKE_DELETE_ME" and then > possibly send the owner an email requesting it be expunged). Okay, i understand :) Isn't /tmp often flushed by a reboot etc, also? -- Fedora-desktop-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-desktop-list