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asm0dey2011-09-06 09:39:47
linux
asm0dey, 2011-09-06 09:39:47

One profile for two Linux systems?

Hello comrades!
For the sake of interest, I installed two systems for myself - Fedor 15 and Ubuntu 11.04.
It so happened historically that my profile is stored on a separate partition, which I simply pick up as / home as I demolish / install systems. There is only one profile, and I use it. And everything was fine while the system was one. Now, when there are two, every time you log in to a system other than the previous one, the machine swears like this:
Could not update ICEauthority file /home/profile/.ICEauthority
Saves sudo chown -R profile:group.
But doing it every time is tedious and time consuming. Is there some way to avoid the problem?
Thank you!

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3 answer(s)
F
fkvf, 2011-09-06
@asm0dey

I can be wrong.
In /etc/password make users the same uid and gid - it seems to help

F
fkvf, 2011-09-06
@fkvf

Different distributions use different numbers for users.
For example, on OpenSuse, the user uid starts from 1000.
In Redhat-like user uids from 500.
You need to follow :)

V
Vlad Zhivotnev, 2011-09-06
@inkvizitor68sl

Autostart in Linux in /etc/rc.local, if anything. But in this case it was right to change the view, yes

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