The behavior you describe should be normal for any web server, as it is
for Apache, which is what I use. It is a security feature that prevents
malicious attacks on a web server from writing malware anywhere else in
the filesystem and possibly gaining elevated privileges.
On 01/20/2017 10:19 AM, Jerry Geis wrote:
Fun fact... If I echo my data to the same directory as the script is
located in it works. But it does not allow writing to /tmp
I'm good with that.
Thanks,
Jerry
On Fri, Jan 20, 2017 at 9:54 AM, Jerry Geis jerry.geis@gmail.com wrote:
Hi - Thanks for the reply.
I actually have selinux disabled on this box.
Jerry
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