From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: References: <08116e317894475b99d4bfb852111455@quintile.net> <5A99A13A-E575-4F59-B3BC-59EB85216822@quintile.net> Date: Tue, 21 Oct 2014 14:21:43 +0200 Message-ID: From: Mats Olsson To: Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs <9fans@9fans.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Subject: Re: [9fans] Setting up Mail in Acme on the Raspberry Pi. Topicbox-Message-UUID: 1f4a305c-ead9-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 Hi again! Tried again with different setups in and I didn't get any error messages sometimes but auth/fgui didn't start but it works just fine manually. Maybe it's a Raspberry Pi thing. Kind regards from a cold Sweden, meo 2014-10-20 20:44 GMT+02:00, Mats Olsson : > Hi! > > Sorry for the confusion! It's easier for me to compile a kernel in > linux than understand the basics of Plan 9. So, yes you're right, Plan > 9 is different. But I won't give up so easy so thanks for your > patience with a 15+ years linux user trying to grasp something > completely different. Thanks Steve. I'll give it some more time > tomorrow since I feel kind of shot right now. Busy day and a lot of > travelling during the past weekend. > > Kindest regards, > Mats > > 2014-10-20 19:49 GMT+02:00, Quintile : >> FYI I'm Steve=F0=9F=98=84 >> >> I think some misunderstanding >> lib/riostart refers to a file in the lib directory >> in your home dir, as Rio is started in your home did. >> >> /lib/riostart is a different file. >> >> when rc(1) searches for command it does not strip >> the leading path like sh(1) does, so you can run commands like >> fs/zipfs, so you can classify commands - object orientation ? =F0=9F=98= =83 >> >> so, your script should be in lib, or bin/rc under your home >> directory, and this is what your script should reference. >> >> plan is different. >> >> -Steve >> >> >> >>> On 20 Oct 2014, at 18:32, Mats Olsson wrote: >>> >>> Hi again Peter! >>> >>> Thanks for your patience. I did "chmod +x /path to/riostart" but I >>> still get the error message that follows: lib/script '/bin/lib' file >>> does not exist . Since the script is in /lib I don't get the meaning >>> of < '/bin/lib' file does not exist>. Well /bin/lib doesn't exist but >>> /lib/script does. Would greatly appreciate a hint about what to do. >>> >>> Kind Greetings, >>> Mats >>> >>> PPS Text changes when sent DDS >>> >>> * should be an apostrophe like before /bin >>> >>> >>> 2014-10-20 19:28 GMT+02:00, Mats Olsson : >>>> Hi again Peter! >>>> >>>> Thanks for your patience. I did "chmod +x /path to/riostart" but I >>>> still get the error message that follows: lib/script '/bin/lib* file >>>> does not exist . Since the script is in /lib I don't get the meaning >>>> of < '/bin/lib' file does not exist>. Well /bin/lib doesn't exist but >>>> /lib/script does. Would greatly appreciate a hint about what to do. >>>> >>>> Kind Greetings, >>>> Mats >>>> >>>> PS Typo corrected DS >>>> >>>> 2014-10-20 19:25 GMT+02:00, Mats Olsson : >>>>> Hi again Peter! >>>>> >>>>> Thanks for your patience. I did "chmod +x /path to/riostart but I >>>>> still get the error message that follows: lib/script '/bin/lib* file >>>>> does not exist . Since the script is in /lib I don't get the meaning >>>>> of < '/bin/lib* file does not exist>. Well /bin/lib doesn't exist but >>>>> /lib/script does. Would greatly appreciate a hint about what to do. >>>>> >>>>> Kind Greetings, >>>>> Mats >>>>> >>>>> 2014-10-20 13:34 GMT+02:00, Steve Simon : >>>>>> Under plan9 the user who boots a machine has rights to its >>>>>> filesystem, >>>>>> so unless you are accessing a remote plan9 file server which is >>>>>> running >>>>>> an auth server I doubt your problems are to do with administration >>>>>> rights. >>>>>> >>>>>> Somtimes plan9 will produce slightly misleading error messages, >>>>>> permission >>>>>> denied might be saying the OS will not allow you to do what you >>>>>> wanted >>>>>> because it doesn't make sense. >>>>>> >>>>>> What I suspect is that you didn't chmod your startup (riostart) >>>>>> script >>>>>> to make it executable? >>>>>> >>>>>> If this isn't the problem can you cut and paste the exact command >>>>>> that >>>>>> produced >>>>>> the permission denied error? >>>>>> >>>>>> I have attached my startup script for interest, it lives in my >>>>>> $home/bin/rc/startup >>>>>> (other script names are available). >>>>>> >>>>>> -Steve >>>> >> >> >