<<<Traditionally /tmp and /var/tmp have been 1777<<<
Ah yes thanks for pointing that out. Hope this helps someone down the line...perhaps the error detection could be more explicit in slurmctld?
On Sat, Feb 24, 2024, 12:07 PM Chris Samuel via slurm-users < slurm-users@lists.schedmd.com> wrote:
On 24/2/24 06:14, Robert Kudyba via slurm-users wrote:
For now I just set it to chmod 777 on /tmp and that fixed the errors. Is there a better option?
Traditionally /tmp and /var/tmp have been 1777 (that "1" being the sticky bit, originally invented to indicate that the OS should attempt to keep a frequently used binary in memory but then adopted to indicate special handling of a world writeable directory so users can only unlink objects they own and not others).
Hope that helps!
All the best, Chris -- Chris Samuel : https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.csamuel.org_&d=D... : Berkeley, CA, USA
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