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22:35
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Q: bash sh script with user permissions 755, cannot be run

FOPWhy can't run it? If I run it in the following way, it works: [usuario@MyPC ~]$ sh ./x11vnc.sh PORT=5900 First, the permissions, so that you can see that it is in 755. ls -l -rw-rw-rw- 1 usuario users 4485 dic 2 11:35 x11vnc.log -rwxr-xr-x 1 usuario users 117 nov 7 14:06 x11vnc.sh Second...

if this FS mounted with noexec?
FOP
FOP
Good question: - No. Show the FSTAB: UUID=16b711b6-789f-4c27-9d6c-d0f744407f00 /home/usuario ext4 auto,exec,rw,user,relatime 0 2
Does ls -l /bin/bash show the correct rights?
FOP
FOP
Thanks for your help @Fravadona. It seem to be ok: ls -l /bin/bash -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 948624 ene 8 2022 /bin/bash
What happens if you paste x11vnc -nap -wait 30 -noxdamage .... on the command line outside the script? Does it execute correctly? If it does, your problem appears to be your use of '~' in ~/x11vnc.sh. The '~' expansion is only replaced by /home/you in certain circumstances. Better to use $HOME in scripts instead. Also post the output of echo $SHELL
22:35
@DavidC.Rankin This is one of the circumstances where ~ should be replaced. Notice that the error message has the replacement.
FOP
FOP
If I paste this line, it works fine.
[usuario@MyPC ~]$ $HOME/x11vnc.sh -bash: /home/usuario/x11vnc.sh: Permiso denegado
[usuario@MyPC ~]$ echo $HOME = /home/usuario
echo $SHELL = /bin/bash
Okay, no strange shell, bash, so your tilde expansion at the command line should work fine.
I'd be looking at configured security extensions; SELinux &c, at this point.
Assuming if you run strace -s 2048 -f sh -c '~/x11vnc.sh' it's the execve() call that gets the permission failure?
That said... on a modern distro, the Right Way to make something auto-start with your desktop environment is a systemd user service, so you shouldn't need a shell script at all.
You said sh ./x11vnc.sh works. Does bash ./x11vnc.sh work? What about /bin/bash ./x11vnc.sh?
FOP
FOP
Sorry @CharlesDuffy, that's beyond me. I'm working on it
@DennisWilliamson, yes, bash ./x11vnc.sh and /bin/bash ./x11vnc.sh work fine
22:35
If you cp /bin/true ~/true and then run ~/true, does it succeed? If it fails in the same way, that's a pretty strong hint that there's something going on equivalent to the aforementioned noexec flag.
FOP
FOP
@CharlesDuffy. It can't be a service because it must be running only if that user start a kde-plasma session.
@FOP, ...so you support multiple distinct session types? But that doesn't mean you can't use a service; you can provide a service with an arbitrary command to run to decide if it's supposed to start. And user services by default only run when the user who owns it has a session going in the first place; that's how a lot of modern distros start up keychain services &c during session setup.
Check the shebang line in the script file (actually, check the whole file) to see if there are any stray characters. It's possible it has "DOS" line endings.
FOP
FOP
@CharlesDuffy - Yes, it fails in the same way, see: [usuario@MyPC ~]$ cp /bin/true ~/true [usuario@MyPC ~]$ ~/true -bash: /home/usuario/true: Permiso denegado
Given that -- I'm curious what the /proc/mounts entry for your home directory looks like; but really, this is something where you should talk to your friendly local sysadmin; it's the person who did the hardening who's best positioned to know where and how, and thus to undo it.
Note that system administration is generally outside Stack Overflow's scope. We're here for questions about writing code, not questions about OS configuration; Unix & Linux is a better place for the latter.
FOP
FOP
22:35
@CharlesDuffy, I am the administrator and root of this PC. This is a virtualization server. There are two disks, one for the whole system, and one just for that user. There are 2 users, that user in question does not have sudo permissions. the other one does, plus the third one is the root.
@CharlesDuffy This is the way i think. See the output of cat /proc/mounts - ....... /dev/nvme0n1p2 /boot vfat rw,relatime,fmask=0022,dmask=0022,codepage=437,iocharset=asc‌​ii,shortname=mixed,u‌​tf8,errors=remount-r‌​o 0 0 tmpfs /tmp tmpfs rw,nosuid,nodev,nr_inodes=1048576,inode64 0 0 /dev/md126p1 /home/usuario ext4 rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime 0 0 ...
@CharlesDuffy, the /dev/md126p1 has noexec and i don't know why. I have just discovered it. The fstab have exec, not noexec.

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