Well. I have the same problem and I am running
SER as root. If I have to stop SER I have to use killall
ser.
I checked the permissions of /var/run and they are
dtwxr-xr-x so to me seems to be OK.
Any other idea?
Thanks
Juan
What did u run it as ? Root ? If not , then probably
when u start ser , it cant write to /var/run/ser.pid , which is the default path
and requires root permission.
Sam
I cannot control SER via serctl stop/start due to the fact that when it runs
via this command it is not finding a ser.pid. I have searched for ser.pid on my system and it is
not there (was just making sure that serctl was not looking in the wrong
spot for the PID file). Any suggestions??
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