home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- id m0twtBS-0007qXa; Wed, 13 Mar 96 09:13 MST
- Sender: owner-executor
- Received: from ardi.com by ftp.ardi.com
- (Smail3.1.29.1 #3) id m0twtAv-0007qBn; Wed, 13 Mar 96 09:13 MST
- Path: sloth.swcp.com!tesuque.cs.sandia.gov!ferrari.mst6.lanl.gov!newshost.lanl.gov!ncar!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!news.msfc.nasa.gov!sgigate.sgi.com!imci3!imci4!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!newsflash.concordia.ca!feed.umontreal.ca!news.polymtl.ca!von-neumann!coyote
- From: coyote@info.polymtl.ca (Vincent Cojot (Gosseyn SandPath))
- Newsgroups: comp.emulators.mac.executor
- Subject: Photoshop 3.0: disk locked...
- Date: 12 Mar 1996 07:10:19 GMT
- Organization: Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal
- Lines: 29
- Message-ID: <4i380r$7uo@service.polymtl.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: von-neumann.info.polymtl.ca
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
- To: executor@ardi.com
- X-MailNews-Gateway: From newsgroup comp.emulators.mac.executor
- Sender: owner-executor@ardi.com
- Precedence: bulk
-
-
- Hi everyone,
-
- I am trying to use Photoshop 3.0 under executor/Linux, and I have
- run into a small problem: Photoshop wants "/" as a virtual memory/swap
- device.
-
- Is there a way to change this behaviour? Under Unix, only the user
- "root" can write to "/" meaning that I must be root to run photoshop or
- give write permissions to "/" to my user accounts (which I don't really
- want to).
-
- I noticed others here who were using Photoshop 3.0 and I wonder if
- they have the same dilemma/problem.. Anyone car to shed some light on
- this? Is there any way to force Photshop to page to "/tmp" for example and
- not "/" or the startup disk... ?
-
- --
- ,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,
- Vincent S. Cojot, Computer Engineering.
- Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Comite Micro-Informatique.
- coyote@step.polymtl.ca, coyote@info.polymtl.ca
-
- They cannot scare me with their empty spaces
- Between stars - on stars where no human race is
- I have it in me so much nearer home
- To scare myself with my own desert places. - Robert Frost
-
-
-
-