Tony,
It is helpful to know that unless Red Hat does something during its install process to set up such a cron job, they were both completely unaware that this resetting of the permissions is even occuring. What I need right now is the solution. Is there a config file that needs to be...
I'm desperate. At two different ISPs, directories and files are being reset every few minutes to chmod 644. Neither ISP knows how to modify this behavior, create an exception for my directories, or make it stop. It's a security feature of Linux, it seems. Any help you can give is sorely appreciated!
I found this to work flawlessly on my Windows 2000 system:
http://www.littlewhitedog.com/reviews_other_00011.asp
It takes the reverse approach in that it lets Windows 2000 do the dual boot rather than forcing Windows to work with LILO.
If you should need it, I also have the entire document in...
This really did the trick for me ... I let W2K manage the boot process. Works flawlessly ...
http://www.littlewhitedog.com/reviews_other_00011.asp
There's also a Word downloadable version with graphic illustrations.
Don
This is what worked for me ... let Windows 2000 manage the dual boot process, not LILO. Here's an article and there's a downloadable Word version with full graphic illustrations.
http://www.littlewhitedog.com/reviews_other_00011.asp
Don
You might also want to take a look at how to boot your W2K/Linux system. I found that all of the various LILO-based solutions were problematic. Here's a link to another approach that uses W2K to resolve the booting of Linux. Works like a charm, too! Go to...
The only problem I experienced is that with version 1.37 of their firmware, Linksys made some 28 revisions, and now it's very stable for both my Windows 98SE and W2K machines at home. Check your version number and apply the upgrade, if necessary.
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