How To Make files in ` usr local` Writable For Homebrew? I've been trying to get homebrew working nicely, but it appears everything inside usr local isn't writable, and everything falls over It keeps telling me to recursively chown usr local, and I t
USB drive (Fat32) stuck on read-only. Unable to erase or partition I bought a SanDisk USB drive about a month ago It's currently formatted as MS-DOS (Fat32), and it's stuck on read-only and I'm not sure how to fix it (and there is no physical switch on the usb) In
Have I corrupted my sudoers file? Cannot use sudo command at all But although invoking sudo no longer responds with sudoers d is world writable, it now simply hangs I think the problem is now with the etc sudoers, but the permissions on etc seem to be messed up
How to make Homebrew directories writeable by multiple users? I respond by running the two commands, and that solves the issue for my current user, but it is tedious and needs to be redone after switching back to the other user Is there a way for me to make these directories writable by both users?
Error: usr local must be writable! (update homebrew) I ran: brew update in terminal (Mac OS) output: Error: usr local must be writable! Anyway, as you can probably tell I am new to working with this I searched this expecting it to be a common ques
Can I mount the root (system) filesystem as writable in Big Sur? After updating to big sur, I can no longer mount the root as writable (even with SIP disabled): sudo mount -uw mount_apfs: volume could not be mounted: Permission denied mount: failed with 66
How to force a readonly volume to remount as read-write? I managed to delete some files to free up space on the device by connecting it to my NAS, where it was mounted as writable Doesn't really answer my question, however it solved my problem