On Friday 27 February 2009, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Fri, 2009-02-27 at 17:23 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> Greetings;
>
> Touring the system investigating selinux alerts naming the
> Console*-daemon, it came to my attention that I had the start-stop links
> for ConsoleKit, LISa, and fglrx laying around, but that there were no
> corresponding files at the other end of the link in ../init.d. So I nuked
> them. Inspecting the ConsoleKit packages seems to indicate those files
> are not now part of the system. However, it was strange in that I could
> not rm them by typing the names, but had to copy paste the names into the
> command line.
What do you mean by "I could not rm them by typing the names, but had to
copy paste the names into the command line"?
Exactly that, I was looking at the name as shown by ls, and typing it exactly
& got a "file not found", but a copy/paste from that ls listing and it
worked.
Oddly, in both cases the K or S in the link name was lower case, in both my
typing, and in the copy/paste echo displayed. Strange...
> That seemed odd, but on
> further inspection with htop, the 50+ copies of ConsoleKit normally
> running on my F8 system are also on the missing list.
>
> Is this something I need to fix ASAP? According to yumex, all the
> ConsoleKit stuff is installed. Looking at SEadmin, the consolekit policy
> module is version 1.2.0.
Use "rpm -V <package>" to verify the installation of <package>.
Hmm:
[root@coyote sbin]# rpm -V ConsoleKit
[root@coyote sbin]# rpm -q ConsoleKit
ConsoleKit-0.3.0-2.fc10.i386
And to cover all the bases:
[root@coyote sbin]# rpm -V `rpm -q ConsoleKit`
[root@coyote sbin]#
Now, the fedora kernel disabled selinux, and I just did a touch /.autorelabel
before I rebooted last, and went to work on some furniture for the hour plus
that takes since there is nearly 2TB of drives here.
poc
Thanks Patrick.
--
Cheers, Gene
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
If at first you do succeed, try to hide your astonishment.