-----Original Message----- From: centos-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of David A. Woyciesjes Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2007 8:36 AM To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: [CentOS] chown command goof up
Ross S. W. Walker wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: David Woyciesjes [mailto:david.woyciesjes@yale.edu]
So if I'm following this right, then I just need to run rpm --setugids `rpm -qa` as root, from /, and this should set the owner & groups on all files, as appropriate? Except for of course the files in /home? As for my original plan, I saw krename in yum. At first glance, that looks like it should do what I wanted. Anyone have experience with it?
Not sure what krename does, but yes an rpm --setugids `rpm
-qa` and an
rpm --setperms `rpm -qa` will reset all file perms and
ownership for all
files managed under RPM.
I gave a simple awk command to reset the perms in /home in
an earlier
post, basically using awk to parse the passwd fields and
then issuing a
shell statement with them.
Thanks Ross. I didn't do anything with file permissions (that I'm aware of), so I shouldn't have to use the --setperms, right?
Just tried rpm --setugids `rpm -qa`, and got "sh: line 2: package: command not found". Now to figure out where that one comes from...
Make sure popt is installed, which version of CentOS is this?
-Ross
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