Obligatory DO NOT RUN THIS ON YOUR COMPUTER (or anyone else’s).
You’d think with fully open permissions, everything would work better, but many programs, including important low level things, interpret it as a sign of system damage and will refuse to operate instead.
If you do run it, you’d better have a backup or something like Timeshift to bail you out, and even if you do have that, it’s not worth trying it just to see what will happen.
It’s not quite as bad as deleting everything because you can boot from external media and back up non-system files after the fact, but the system will almost certainly not work properly and need to be repaired.
One of our servers is a rotting carcass being kept alive by our collective prayers. It runs Windows 7 and custom software whose developer is dead and the source is missing, nothing has been updated for over a decade, and it has its own independent UPS because once it goes down, it has an extremely slim chance of recovering, and we’re afraid to test it. It controls the card entry system into the building, including the server room. Boss doesn’t want to replace it because we’d have to replace all of the terminals and controllers too, and it hasn’t catastrophically failed yet.
You’re right. It’s not a pet. It’s like one of the Saw movies: if it dies, we’re all fucked.
Obligatory DO NOT RUN THIS ON YOUR COMPUTER (or anyone else’s).
You’d think with fully open permissions, everything would work better, but many programs, including important low level things, interpret it as a sign of system damage and will refuse to operate instead.
If you do run it, you’d better have a backup or something like Timeshift to bail you out, and even if you do have that, it’s not worth trying it just to see what will happen.
It’s not quite as bad as deleting everything because you can boot from external media and back up non-system files after the fact, but the system will almost certainly not work properly and need to be repaired.
You have been warned.
New guy at work ran this to try to fix permissions on his home folder, accidentally ran it on root (both would have been bad)
Several highly paid and experienced Linux admins finally just gave up and deleted the server and built a new one from the backups.
Which, honestly, is the better way to go. Treat your compute resources like cattle, not pets.
One of our servers is a rotting carcass being kept alive by our collective prayers. It runs Windows 7 and custom software whose developer is dead and the source is missing, nothing has been updated for over a decade, and it has its own independent UPS because once it goes down, it has an extremely slim chance of recovering, and we’re afraid to test it. It controls the card entry system into the building, including the server room. Boss doesn’t want to replace it because we’d have to replace all of the terminals and controllers too, and it hasn’t catastrophically failed yet.
You’re right. It’s not a pet. It’s like one of the Saw movies: if it dies, we’re all fucked.
So… the dead server controls who is even able to enter the building? Wow. That is one big juggernaut of a problem heading for you.
Typically a brick can control who can enter the building. Security man the doors for a few days until the new system is in.