----- Original Message ----- | On 6/14/11, James A. Peltier <jpeltier at sfu.ca> wrote: | > The rules are parsed, applied and the permissions are then correct | > but why | > is it not doing so at boot? The file in questions I've called | > /etc/udev/rules.d/49-udev-override.rules and it contains | > | > KERNEL=="tty[A-Z]*", NAME="%k", GROUP="rcl", MODE="0660", | > OPTIONS="last_rule" | > | > the default 50-udev.rules file has been left untouched. SELinux is | > in | > permissive mode and so I can't find a reason why it is happening. | > Anyone | > have any ideas? | | I had similar problems with udev rules when adding a 2nd NIC and | needed to override the assignments which switched the original eth0 to | eth1. | | For some reason, despite all the info that says the over-ride filename | should be alphanumerically "smaller", it only works if the file is | alphanumerically "larger". Which kind of make sense to me since a | later rule should override an earlier one. | | So instead of 49-, try 51- instead :D Didn't work either. The MODE stuff works in either case, but the GROUP stuff does not. I've just decided to use puppet to manage it instead for now and might revisit it in the future -- James A. Peltier IT Services - Research Computing Group Simon Fraser University - Burnaby Campus Phone : 778-782-6573 Fax : 778-782-3045 E-Mail : jpeltier at sfu.ca Website : http://www.sfu.ca/itservices http://blogs.sfu.ca/people/jpeltier