Difference between revisions of "Sudo"
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But if you work on your own computer, a possibility is to allow the instalation directory (generally <code>/usr/local/share</code>) a write access from your account (using <code>chown, chgrp</code> or <code>chmod</code> with <code>sudo</code>), and then, you will not have to use <code>sudo</code> any more for compiling a language pair. |
Latest revision as of 12:52, 3 May 2018
If you're working on language data, sudo
is pretty much only for running package managers like apt
(or port
or dnf
) and for running package setup scripts like https://apertium.projectjj.com/apt/install-nightly.sh
In general, don't use sudo
(and don't run as the root user) when building/compiling things
The only exception is sudo make install
, but when working on language data you should never have to do this.
But if you work on your own computer, a possibility is to allow the instalation directory (generally /usr/local/share
) a write access from your account (using chown, chgrp
or chmod
with sudo
), and then, you will not have to use sudo
any more for compiling a language pair.