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What does 'script /dev/null' do?
What does 'script /dev/null' do?
Run bash script on startup in Linux Mint and open mate-terminal automaticallyttyUSB0 serial port crashes and locks, requires computer resetHow to make a comprehensive set of possibilities for defining GNU-screen “command characters”?How to switch to another screen to run git commands while resolving conflicts (blocking command)?Do I really need -dmS option in screen to run background job stably even log out?Screen session started from rc.local is not visible in screen -ls under rootSu as root and run command in one lineHow to send keystrokes before interactive shell to automate Linux serial port login with GNU screen?How to setup starting file location for a user using FTPDifference between >/dev/null 2>&1 & and </dev/null &>/dev/null &
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
Every time I log into a VM with root, su
into a user account, and try to use screen
it throws an error:
Cannot open your terminal '/dev/pts/0' - please check.
A Stack Overflow post said I needed to use script /dev/null
to fix it, and it works, but it still doesn't explain why I need to type script /dev/null
. I would like to understand what it does and why I need to type it.
terminal gnu-screen su pty typescript
New contributor
add a comment |
Every time I log into a VM with root, su
into a user account, and try to use screen
it throws an error:
Cannot open your terminal '/dev/pts/0' - please check.
A Stack Overflow post said I needed to use script /dev/null
to fix it, and it works, but it still doesn't explain why I need to type script /dev/null
. I would like to understand what it does and why I need to type it.
terminal gnu-screen su pty typescript
New contributor
add a comment |
Every time I log into a VM with root, su
into a user account, and try to use screen
it throws an error:
Cannot open your terminal '/dev/pts/0' - please check.
A Stack Overflow post said I needed to use script /dev/null
to fix it, and it works, but it still doesn't explain why I need to type script /dev/null
. I would like to understand what it does and why I need to type it.
terminal gnu-screen su pty typescript
New contributor
Every time I log into a VM with root, su
into a user account, and try to use screen
it throws an error:
Cannot open your terminal '/dev/pts/0' - please check.
A Stack Overflow post said I needed to use script /dev/null
to fix it, and it works, but it still doesn't explain why I need to type script /dev/null
. I would like to understand what it does and why I need to type it.
terminal gnu-screen su pty typescript
terminal gnu-screen su pty typescript
New contributor
New contributor
edited 8 hours ago
Jeff Schaller♦
44.7k1163145
44.7k1163145
New contributor
asked 9 hours ago
CJLCJL
535
535
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
You cannot open /dev/pts/0
because it's owned by root, and after you su-ed into another user you're no longer able to open it via its path, but you're still able to use it via the opened handle to it, which was inherited from the parent process.
script /dev/null
will create another pty, owned by the current user.
Anyways, that bug/limitation seems to have been fixed in recent versions of screen
(eg. 4.99.0), which will correctly send the handle to the current terminal via the SCM_RIGHTS
ancillary message on a unix domain socket, instead of sending just the name of the terminal and have the screen
server try to open it (and fail). Same thing with tmux
.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You cannot open /dev/pts/0
because it's owned by root, and after you su-ed into another user you're no longer able to open it via its path, but you're still able to use it via the opened handle to it, which was inherited from the parent process.
script /dev/null
will create another pty, owned by the current user.
Anyways, that bug/limitation seems to have been fixed in recent versions of screen
(eg. 4.99.0), which will correctly send the handle to the current terminal via the SCM_RIGHTS
ancillary message on a unix domain socket, instead of sending just the name of the terminal and have the screen
server try to open it (and fail). Same thing with tmux
.
add a comment |
You cannot open /dev/pts/0
because it's owned by root, and after you su-ed into another user you're no longer able to open it via its path, but you're still able to use it via the opened handle to it, which was inherited from the parent process.
script /dev/null
will create another pty, owned by the current user.
Anyways, that bug/limitation seems to have been fixed in recent versions of screen
(eg. 4.99.0), which will correctly send the handle to the current terminal via the SCM_RIGHTS
ancillary message on a unix domain socket, instead of sending just the name of the terminal and have the screen
server try to open it (and fail). Same thing with tmux
.
add a comment |
You cannot open /dev/pts/0
because it's owned by root, and after you su-ed into another user you're no longer able to open it via its path, but you're still able to use it via the opened handle to it, which was inherited from the parent process.
script /dev/null
will create another pty, owned by the current user.
Anyways, that bug/limitation seems to have been fixed in recent versions of screen
(eg. 4.99.0), which will correctly send the handle to the current terminal via the SCM_RIGHTS
ancillary message on a unix domain socket, instead of sending just the name of the terminal and have the screen
server try to open it (and fail). Same thing with tmux
.
You cannot open /dev/pts/0
because it's owned by root, and after you su-ed into another user you're no longer able to open it via its path, but you're still able to use it via the opened handle to it, which was inherited from the parent process.
script /dev/null
will create another pty, owned by the current user.
Anyways, that bug/limitation seems to have been fixed in recent versions of screen
(eg. 4.99.0), which will correctly send the handle to the current terminal via the SCM_RIGHTS
ancillary message on a unix domain socket, instead of sending just the name of the terminal and have the screen
server try to open it (and fail). Same thing with tmux
.
edited 7 hours ago
answered 9 hours ago
mosvymosvy
9,2671934
9,2671934
add a comment |
add a comment |
CJL is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
CJL is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
CJL is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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