ColdWater@lemmy.ca to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish · 1 day agoI never had problems with permission again after I know the real power of sudolemmy.caexternal-linkmessage-square107fedilinkarrow-up1607arrow-down113
arrow-up1594arrow-down1external-linkI never had problems with permission again after I know the real power of sudolemmy.caColdWater@lemmy.ca to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish · 1 day agomessage-square107fedilink
minus-squarebitchkat@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up44·18 hours agoHad an idiot “fix” a permission problem by running “sudo chmod -R 777 /” And that is why sudo privileges were removed for the vast majority of people.
minus-squaremlg@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up2·5 hours agoShared this before, but someone I know did a chmod on /bin which nuked all the SUID/GUID bits which borked the system lol. Surpsingly easy enough to undo by getting a list of the correct perms from a working system, but hilarious nonetheless
minus-squareMTK@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up7arrow-down1·12 hours agoseems reasonable to me, root is just a made up concept and the human owns the machine.
minus-squarebigbuckalex@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkarrow-up13·15 hours agoOh… That sounds like a nightmare. How do you even fix that? There’s no “revert the entire filesystem’s permissions to default” button that I’m aware of
minus-squarebitchkat@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·8 hours agoI think they had to reinstall. It was part of a Hadoop cluster and that was extra finicky.
minus-squarerabber@lemmy.calinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up12·14 hours agoYou restore the system from backup
minus-squarejustme@lemmy.dbzer0.comlinkfedilinkarrow-up5·15 hours agoIf you are lucky your system is atomic or has other roll back feature. Otherwise it’s reinstall time. I guess you could set up a fresh system, run a script that goes through each folder checking the permission and setting it on the target system.
Had an idiot “fix” a permission problem by running “sudo chmod -R 777 /”
And that is why sudo privileges were removed for the vast majority of people.
Shared this before, but someone I know did a chmod on /bin which nuked all the SUID/GUID bits which borked the system lol.
Surpsingly easy enough to undo by getting a list of the correct perms from a working system, but hilarious nonetheless
seems reasonable to me, root is just a made up concept and the human owns the machine.
Oh… That sounds like a nightmare. How do you even fix that? There’s no “revert the entire filesystem’s permissions to default” button that I’m aware of
I think they had to reinstall. It was part of a Hadoop cluster and that was extra finicky.
You restore the system from backup
If you are lucky your system is atomic or has other roll back feature. Otherwise it’s reinstall time.
I guess you could set up a fresh system, run a script that goes through each folder checking the permission and setting it on the target system.
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