![]() ![]() ![]() wp-content/themes/twentytwenty/comments.php: Cannot utime: Operation not permitted wp-content/themes/twentytwenty/readme.txt: Cannot utime: Operation not permitted wp-settings.php: Cannot utime: Operation not permitted Status: Downloaded newer image for wordpress:latest Rpi 3B+ with fresh new -raspios-buster-armhf-fullĬommands run in ssh as pi user: curl -fsSL -o get-docker.shĪfter new ssh login (tried also after reboot)ĭocker run wordpress (tried also with sudo: same result) $ docker run wordpress I'm trying to run wordpress with docker on my raspberry pi following this tutorial but I got permission related cannot utime errors (see below). If this still fails, would you please elaborate on why you asked about removing 6.0 drivers? Is this a purely new R21.Hi stackoverflow community, this is my first question and I hope that is placed in the right way. ![]() This error is interesting, I’m surprised to see it since it appears to be a normal rootfs subdirectory. So long as you are unpacking to a file system which understands linux and linux device special files this should work…the “–overwrite” may actually remove this error if you are unpacking to rootfs under something like ext4. “Operation not permitted” is a different story. In the case of unpacking from the correct location, the “–overwrite” would work and be desirable…there’s nothing to protect there and these are in fact the required versions. Some of the OpenGL related files (including OpenGL ES) probably have the non-accelerated original Ubuntu files in need of replacement. It is ok to overwrite those files so long as they are in the sample rootfs or at the root of the actual Jetson which has L4T R21.1 installed. Just to be clear, these commands should be run at the root of the sample rootfs (which should be a subdirectory to where flash.sh is). The “file exists” would tend to mean that either you’ve already unpacked these files once, or a file of the same name already exists in the subdirectory from where you ran the command. Sorry, to be explicit the above errors were created whilst using sudo, I also tried sudo -s This is one of the biggest causes of help messages for new users…either failure of using sudo or failure of an underlying file system not supporting the full range of linux files. Another cause would be if the underlying file system cannot contain device special files (e.g., a windows partition can’t handle specialized linux files). An obvious example is that only root can create device special files in /dev. So yes, operation not permitted occurs sometimes because of lack of sudo. Being in sudo -s removes all those individual sudo commands. I tend to pipe and redirect a lot because it gives me fine control, and so one would need sudo in each part of a compound command like “bunzip2 < 2 | tar -list”. This stays continuously in a root su shell, and does not exit after the first command. Tar: usr/lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/tegra-egl: Cannot utime: Operation not permitted ![]() Tar: usr/lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/tegra-egl/libGLESv1_CM.so.1: Cannot open: File exists Tar: usr/lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/tegra/libnvmmlite_image.so: Cannot open: File exists Is sudo needed: bunzip2 < …/nv_tegra/nvidia_drivers.tbz2 | tar xv ![]()
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