http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic. ... &start=180
Same as musher0 had in first post on above page when he installed BlueFish, I have with dpupbuster64 after instaling daisy-player. On boot before desktop loads get "immediate abort PAM failure"....
I dont suppose there is a way to repair it? I can boot dpupbuster64 to desktop if I dont use the save file. I know my fault not making a backup but got lazy. Wasnt thinking installing daisy-player using package manager would royally screw things up like this.
"immediate abort PAM failure" flashing furiously
mouldy Mate,
Anything unusual in your daisy-player install log? It's in ~/.packages.
How about the contents of /etc/pam.d?
Maybe one of its deps overwrote a lib in /lib/security?
Depending on your answers you might be able to copy the originals out of a live boot..
Anything unusual in your daisy-player install log? It's in ~/.packages.
How about the contents of /etc/pam.d?
Maybe one of its deps overwrote a lib in /lib/security?
Depending on your answers you might be able to copy the originals out of a live boot..
>>> Living with the immediacy of death helps you sort out your priorities. It helps you live a life less trivial <<<
There is no "~/.packages"
There is no "/lib/security"
There is a /lib/i386-linux-gnu/security and a /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/security. I tried copying contents of live one. Nothing.
There is no ~/.packages. There is a /root/pkg and a /root/.pkg
I replaced /etc/pam.d in original with one from live. No difference.
Its annoying, but my fault for not having a current backup.
There is no "/lib/security"
There is a /lib/i386-linux-gnu/security and a /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/security. I tried copying contents of live one. Nothing.
There is no ~/.packages. There is a /root/pkg and a /root/.pkg
I replaced /etc/pam.d in original with one from live. No difference.
Its annoying, but my fault for not having a current backup.
That .pkgs folder would probably have it.
Then there's /var/log/messages.. Maybe something listed here?
If it's a save file you're running you could perhaps try a "purge" before abandoning your setup.
Then there's /var/log/messages.. Maybe something listed here?
If it's a save file you're running you could perhaps try a "purge" before abandoning your setup.
>>> Living with the immediacy of death helps you sort out your priorities. It helps you live a life less trivial <<<