Runing VMware Workstation 7.0.1-227600.i386.bundle in SUSE 11.4 post me an instruction installation for this. I have been trying so many tutorials and other numerous methods to sort this thing out. I'm so frustrated. And I'm totally a newbie to linux.
Why do I get an error when trying to do a simple install command?I'm trying to install VMware player 3.1.0 on Ubuntu 9.10 After logging in to the terminal and changing directory to the folder containing the VM player bundle file, I used the following command:
sudo sh VMware-Player-3.1.0-261024.i386.bundle
It then prompts me for the password:
[sudo] password for administrator:
After entering the password it then returns the error:
I've got some trouble while trying to install some applications on my linux system. It is said that the files in my /var/www/html/xxx directory, where I put them, is not writeable. The command chmod 777 xxx has been tried to make it work, but the error remains when I opened the applications again.
To be specific, I want to install phpFreeChat on my system, so I put those files in the /var/www/html/freechat directory, cd there and typed chmod 777 data/private, chmod 777 data/public on bash. Here's the result of list -al data:
drwxr-xr-x. 4 root root 4096 Jun 17 15:07 . drwxr-xr-x. 13 root root 4096 Jun 17 15:22 .. drwxrwxrwx. 2 root root 4096 Jun 17 15:07 private drwxrwxrwx. 3 root root 4096 Jun 17 15:07 public
These all seemed all right to me, until I typed http://localhost/freechat in my browser. Here's the result:
phpFreeChat cannot be initialized, please correct these errors: /var/www/html/freechat/src/../data/private is not writeable
I downloaded VMWare player because I want to use it to use Hexxeh's Chrome Flow. When I got to the download, it gave me a .bundle file. What do I do with it to install VMWare?
we have a customer that ran a sudo chmod +x -R * command on his / filesystem by mistake and now the machine cannot be accessed on the network Has anyone any idea what chmod command to run to restore the system to its original state ?
Does anyone know of a trick or tool that will show me ther directory?Example:neatcmd.bash /dir1/dir2/file1 /dir1/dir2/file1 permissions are 0640Or does anyone know of a tool or command what would convert, for example rwxr-x--- to 0750 suppose it could be scripted, but I was trying to make sure I did not have to re-invent the wheel if something was already out there.
I wan to install a .bin file after I logged in as a super user also changing mod of the file doesn't work as proved through file properties I tried also chown but in vain here is a picture of the terminal:Quote:
[aratux@localhost downloads]$ su Password: [root@localhost downloads]# AdobeAIRInstaller.bin
The automatic updater cannot install bundle-lang-gnome 2233: "A protected system package cannot be removed" ("Ein geschtztes System-Paket kann nicht entfernt werden.")Detail info: "Subprocess failed. Error: RPM failed: error: package bundle-lang-gnome-extras-de-11.2-19.21.1.noarch is not installed"
I completed the installation of VMWare Server 2.0.2 onto a CentOS 5.4 64-bit distribution. There is a VMware virtual machine file on the server in question, and I want to activate it through the application console.
I did not see anything readily apparent that would facilitate the importing of the virtual machine file. Does anyone have a procedure that can accomplish this task?
I'm such a newbie when it comes to Ubuntu, or any Linux varient, period. I was trying to install a driver for an HP All-in-One Printer and was trying all kinds of commands from different Google searches... still unsuccessful in the installation. I downloaded the file to my desktop, but after using a Chmod command someone mentioned, I now have a folder on my desktop named:
"You are not the owner so you cannot change these permissions". The folder's icon on my desktop has a red box with white circle on the middle right side and a lock symbol above that. I'm the only user so I don't get why the permissions are protected from me, how do i undo this?
Have a look at the image. i hav two users ,one is apoorv(administrator) and other is others(ordinary user). i want to restrict the ordinary user from accessing the files directory as shown in picture. so i tried the chmod command with o-rw option. but its not working ..i hav enabled auto mount for all partitions at boot time.
How can I give execute permission to chmod command from run level 3.Because in GUI mode we have the execute option in the properties of file. E.g. I gave following command chmod -x chomod After that I want to give the execute permission (x) to chmod command again but how from command prompt?
nfs mounted directory which is mounted rw. I and everyone else are members of a common group. We all have write permissions in the tree: All files and directories in the tree are in the common group. All directories are set to 775 and all files are set to 664 or 775, as appropriate.If a file is owned by someone else, even though the file and the directory are group writable, I get permission denied when I try to chmod the file.
Here's the command synopsis: 997 > ls -l portparms.txt -rwxrw-r--. 1 bdaugher fc 4091 Sep 5 2003 portparms.txt
I am just starting to learn to script and I need to know what this doesn't work, here's the error I get: "chmod: command not found" The error goes away when I delete the line with "dirname $NAME" in it.
#!/bin/sh echo "enter file name with extension and path" read NAME FULLPATH=`dirname $NAME` OPENFILE="open "$NAME OPENPATH="open "$FULLPATH echo $OPENFILE > /Users/admin/Desktop/tmpLink echo $OPENPATH >> /Users/admin/Desktop/tmpLink chmond +x /Users/admin/Desktop/tmpLink
Notice that "chmod" and "touch" are part of the package coreutils which gets installed only after these commands are used. I'm seeing a similar problem with selinux being referenced before the libselinux package is installed. I can boot the resulting image but after the kernel boots it panics because it cannot find /dev/root which might or might not have something to do with the errors above.
i have installed Red Hat-VMware Workshop v 6.0.1 successfully. Now i am trying to run virtual machine but i am getting an error that is "File not found: M41804.lck.This file is required to power on this virtual machine."Can any one provide me this file so that i can start redhat linux and do my assignment.
Is it possible to install Snow Leopard 10.6.6 VMware AMD edition (which I downloaded) on VMware linux? It is under Windows 7 so I just need to know if everything of VMware linux (like Hardware Virtualization) is the same under linux as for Windows.
I've been searching the web, without finding any sollution to my problem.vsFTPd is acting really weird. I've never seen this problem before, and I've been using vsftpd for some years nowWell.. The thing is, I've made a user that chroots to the folder /var/www on my server. And when I then try to chmod the file /var/www/htdocs/testsite/index.html through my ftp-client, I only get the error "550 SITE CHMOD command failed.", and when I then check in my /var/log/vsftpd.log it says
Code: FAIL CHMOD: Client "192.168.50.58", "/htdocs/testsite/index.html 777" Which I think would mean that it tries to chmod the file "/htdocs/testsite/index.html" instead of chmod the
I have installed php, mysql, and apatche. And i need the /var/www/ folder to be able to be read witten, and acsessed by anything. I have tried chmodding 777. But it still doesnt work.
I had created a file under a directory & set the permissions through chmod command but when I create another file under this directory, I get the default permissions. Is this due to umask or can I set the file permissions through chmod under a directory.
I'm trying lo lock a file (not using the chmod). This is the code I generated, but even locking the file I still can read and write the file from another process. (I'm working on a ubuntu 10.10, kernel 2.6.35-22-generic #35-Ubuntu SMP)
I have been using VMware Player for some time to host Fedora VMware images on Windows XP. I have been using Fedora 11 and 12 (both 32 and 64 bit) and recently started to use Fedora 13.
I use as a base the images provided by thoughtpolice. http://www.thoughtpolice.co.uk/
I usually install VMware tools and also keep the images updated (yum update) which sometimes changes the kernel.
I have recently had problems with the snapshots not having a network when I restore them. So far I don't have the problem with Fedora 11 and do have it with Fedora 12 (but used not to). I do have it with Fedora 13.
In each case the problem goes away when I uninstall the VMware tools and comes back when I install them again.
One of the symptoms is that SElinux complains about not being able to do something with /var/run/vmware-active-nics.
It looks to me that something is incorrect in the actions being taken when the snapshot is being restored. It does not happen every time and sometimes the network restores itself.
The network can be restored by rebooting the image.
I seem to be having a problem getting VMware 2.0.2-203138 installed on Fedora 13.I've downloaded the rpm from VWware's site, and ran rpm -iv VMware-server-2.0.2-203138.i386.rpmAfter I ran vmware-config.plIt came back saying it will use complier /usr/bin/gcc and asks me for the location of the C header files.I tell it /usr/src/kernels/2.6.33.6-147.2.4.fc13.i686/include but it comes back with the following error message
Code: The directory of kernel headers (version @@VMWARE@@ UTS_RELEASE) does not match your running kernel (version 2.6.33.6-147.2.4.fc13.i686). Even if the module were to
What does chmod 000 do?when i create a chmod'd file with the 000 permission what happens?I tried creating a file with 000 permissions, and I was still able to read and write to it. So what what does chmod 000 actually do?