Does Xandros have selinux included/enabled? That's one thing that could
result in a non-obvious permissions problem.
If you have selinux, you should be able to do the following:
'ls -Z' should show security context of files.
'id' and 'sudo id' should display your user and root security contexts.
Here's a little more explanation of what some of this stuff means:
http://www.linuxtopia.org/online_books/getting_started_with_SELinux/SELinux_overview.html
Takes a bit to wrap your head around but once you do, it makes sense.
Received on Mon Dec 10 10:08:30 2007
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