Marc Uwe Kling would agree
This is what made me switch to Linux
Laughs in Unix
Like an Indian movie, this file is RRR.
Read ride remove. Or something.
What if it’s even more R?
What it is actually saying is if you don’t know how to gain access to edit this file you should not be editing this file.
I remember trying to mod a game from the xbox app, and couldn’t edit even with trustedinstaller/takeown shenanigans. Turns out the files are encrypted so you can’t even edit it from Linux. And if you disable encryption the game doesn’t run :D
that’s where the load bearing pineapple is saved
When I was a kid I deleted the
system32.dllfile on my grandfather’s computer because it showed up in some error message. It did in fact not solve the error 😅Strictly you stopped getting that particular error message.

Today I tried to wrestle my way with trusted installer… Went so far as to use psexec to make myself nt-authority\system and was still denied permission. ಥ_ಥ
I’ve done that, did nt authority not work for you? It did for me on server 2008.
You might need to kill any processes with handles to it using process hacker.
It was a DC using 2016 Essentials…And as it’s being replaced by a new server soonish, it wont matter as much anyway.
I just hope it will limp along until then.
Linux users: “I don’t have such weaknesses.”
“You fool, I could sudo rm the whole drive right now. It’s only out of my exuberant benevolence that I don’t.”
Later: me pressing the up key 38 times rather than type sudo apt update && upgrade
When you learn
Ctrl+Rto reverse search you can’t go back lol
I wish. I spent 4 hours trying to get both I and docker to have permission to see my other drive. I finally gave up entirely and made a puid:guid that had access to everything short of root and put myself on that. It’s still dubious as to whether that will work…
Just do it like a champ and run
sudo chmod -R +777 /! Who needs privilege access anyway?Did you try :Z? Maybe SELinux was blocking you?
Yeah I need to go in and get access to stuff I saved on my older distros/oses somehow
Immutable Distros joined the chat
Well, you can technically remove the immutable flag from files… but I wouldn’t
Well, you can technically boot Windows into safemode or boot the install iso to modify the files owned by TrustedInstaller. But should you really do it?
I also wouldn’t, just like I wouldn’t touch the immutable flag
sudo chown -R
Polkit asking you to type the password every few minutes when moving a bunch of files:
*when you run Windows:
Mastering file permissions is a big part of becoming Linux capable. And it essential to the “everything is a file” ethos. Wanna lock down an important file or program? chmod is a powerful ally.
Microslop has tried to adopt a half-ass elevated permissions scheme, but with lame-ass UAC and users who’ve no idea why Explorer doesn’t have administrator rights on their administrator account.
Windows’ way is more convenient for me, than chmod:
windows allows you to regulate file access more granularly, more flexible - per any particular user , particular group.
Chmod can’t do that.chmod can do 95% of everything I’ve ever needed, just with the “user” and “other” category. Private files, public-readable files, public read-write files, programs I compile but anyone can run… all that is just in the “user” and “other” category of chmod.
It gets 99% if you add the sticky bit (used on /tmp) and the “group” category. Serial ports are owned by root:dialout, and mode 660. To get serial port access, just add the user to the dialout group. For group assignments in college, each partner pairing had their own group they could use. Group work files were mode 660 so groups could edit each others’ work, but other groups couldn’t peek.
For the last 1%, use setfacl. It does everything that explorer.exe’s security tab can do.
Either I don’t understand your comment, or you don’t understand chmod. What you describe ins’t beyond chmod; it’s the basic functionality of chmod.
OP meant ACLs.
Which arent exactly straight forward in CLI in either Windows nor Linux.But it is pretty straightforward in the Windows GUI.
More or less.
Until you get into nested and inherited permissions ;) Then it get’s really fun.
Via chmod you can’t configure access to some arbitrary group or user. You have only the owner user, owner group and everything else is crowded into one lump “other”.
setfacl can do.
It’s just that some *NIX users want the stupid POSIX model and authenticating with user-ids (+ private keys) instead of proper usernames and password (and private keys).
Go figure /shrug
That’s what chown is for
So? How the hell is it supposed to know that when you’re trying to do things wrong? Would you rather it let any one do anything, so long as they control the mouse?
Yes. Fricking yes. Do we look like we care about Windows “protecting” us? No. Nobody actually does.














