config.pck get changed back from correct values...
On the web interface, every day, the ownership for config.ock gets changed:
/var/lib/mailman/lists/MYLIST/config.pck gets set to mailman:mailman, while all other files and fodlers remain webadmin:mailman.
The result is that if I try to use the web interface, I get:
Bug in Mailman version 2.1.11
We're sorry, we hit a bug!
Please inform the webmaster for this site of this problem. Printing of traceback and other system information has been explicitly inhibited, but the webmaster can find this information in the Mailman error logs.
Once I set the *.pck file ownership to webadmin:mailman, everything works.
I tried checking check_perms and it reports back that there are no errors.
Any thoughts?
Thanks, John
john espiro wrote:
On the web interface, every day, the ownership for config.ock gets changed:
/var/lib/mailman/lists/MYLIST/config.pck gets set to mailman:mailman, while all other files and fodlers remain webadmin:mailman.
When ever the list is updated, the process creates a new, temporary file, and only after successfully updating that file does it rename it to config.pck. Thus, every time a list is updated in any way, the owner of config.pck becomes the owner of the process that did the update, in this case, the qrunners.
The result is that if I try to use the web interface, I get:
Bug in Mailman version 2.1.11
We're sorry, we hit a bug!
Please inform the webmaster for this site of this problem. Printing of traceback and other system information has been explicitly inhibited, but the webmaster can find this information in the Mailman error logs.
Once I set the *.pck file ownership to webadmin:mailman, everything works.
There is something wrong in your installation. Either the CGI wrappers (the files in Mailman's cgi-bin directory) are not group mailman and SETGID, or your web server/OS is not honoring the SETGID bit and setting the effective group of the CGI process to mailman.
In short, the owner of config.pck shouldn't matter because access is supposed to be by group.
-- Mark Sapiro mark@msapiro.net The highway is for gamblers, San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan
participants (2)
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john espiro
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Mark Sapiro