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- <li><em>date</em>: Wed, 28 Sep 2005 14:56:52 -0400</li>
- <li><em>from</em>: egorra at attglobal.net (Roger Hammons)</li>
- <li><em>subject</em>: [ale] X Font Server (xfs) problem</li>
That's it! Worked perfectly!
I changed the permissions on /tmp as you suggested,
re-booted, and found xfs running with ps -ef and an
".xfont-unix" directory under /tmp. And no "Fatal
error" message.
Now I wonder if the permissions on the other directories
under "/" are correct. Most are "drwxr-xr-x" (as was
"/tmp" before I changed it.) Is Linux great or what?
Anyway, many, many thanks.
Roger
On 9/27/05, Roger Hammons <egorra at attglobal.net> wrote:
>
> 9/27 13:21:40 xfs: xfs startup succeeded
> 9/27 13:21:40 xfs: Fatal font server error:
> 9/27 13:21:40 xfs: Cannot establish any listening sockets
>
On 9/27/05, Michael Trausch answered:
Typically, at least in my experiences, /tmp is used for all sorts of
sockets, and it is okay to dump /tmp between sessions (in fact, I do
it all the time on my machines, a reboot will kill the whole thing,
and a reboot happens once every month. (This just prevents me from
forgetting things are there; I run 'df' fairly freqently, however, I
tend to put off emptying /tmp, lol, and it can sometimes get quite
large.)
However, if you've changed /tmp, you may want to ensure that its
permissions are properly set:
drwxrwxrwt 11 root root 18 2005-09-28 00:57 tmp/
It is slipping my mind at the moment the details behind it, but I do
seem to recall 1777 as being the proper octal permissions associated
with the permission string there. I could be wrong on that,
however... it does mean that it's a "sticky" directory, which
(slightly) enhances security. Many apps out there will silently fail
if they can't create a socket that can only be removed by them.
- Mike
</pre>
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