Glenn E. Bailey III
2016-Dec-15 01:49 UTC
[CentOS] Can't delete or move /home on 7.3 install
Tried this in both AWS and GCE as I though it may be a specific cloud vendor issue. SELinux is disabled, lsof | grep home shows nothing, lsattr /home shows nothing. Simply get "Device or resource busy." Works just find on 7.2 so I'm kinda at a loss. Scanned over the RHEL release notes and didn't see anything. Anyone else have this issue? We move our /home to another mount point and symlink /home to it .. -- "replicants are like any other machine. They're either a benefit or a hazard. If they're a benefit, it's not my problem."
On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 2:49 AM, Glenn E. Bailey III < replicant at dallaslamers.org> wrote:> Tried this in both AWS and GCE as I though it may be a specific cloud > vendor issue. SELinux is disabled, lsof | grep home shows nothing, > lsattr /home shows nothing. Simply get "Device or resource busy." > > Works just find on 7.2 so I'm kinda at a loss. Scanned over the RHEL > release notes and didn't see anything. Anyone else have this issue? We > move our /home to another mount point and symlink /home to it .. > >Do you have access to the console, so that you can try to do the move while in single user mode?
geo.inbox.ignored
2016-Dec-15 10:10 UTC
[CentOS] Can't delete or move /home on 7.3 install
On 12/15/2016 01:47 AM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:> On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 2:49 AM, Glenn E. Bailey III < > replicant at dallaslamers.org> wrote: > >> Tried this in both AWS and GCE as I though it may be a specific cloud >> vendor issue. SELinux is disabled, lsof | grep home shows nothing, >> lsattr /home shows nothing. Simply get "Device or resource busy." >> >> Works just find on 7.2 so I'm kinda at a loss. Scanned over the RHEL >> release notes and didn't see anything. Anyone else have this issue? We >> move our /home to another mount point and symlink /home to it .. >> >> > Do you have access to the console, so that you can try to do the move while > in single user mode? >}} that is one possibility. even greater is op is a 'user', not 'root'. _normally_ / most, if not all unix/linux systems, /home is owned by 'root'. which means *everything*, including a 'user' home directory is own by 'root'. therefore a 'user' running a normal user can do _nothing_ to his/her 'home' directory. therefore a normal user *must* 'sudo' or 'su' to make changes to users 'home' directory. hth. -- The important thing is not to stop questioning. - Albert Einstein CentOS GNU/Linux 6.8 KDE 4.3.4 peace out. tc,hago. g . =+Tired of having your microsoft os hacked? Change to Linux os, used by microsoft hackers. =+If Bill Gates got a dime for every time Windows crashes... ...oh, wait. He does. THAT explains it! =+in a world with out fences, who needs gates. =+=