Ah, but you can. The union root filesystem of the sandbox (the "/") is located at /mnt/fakeroot. Copy stuff to there and it will appear in sandbox; and vice versa. The "savefile" of the sandbox is located in /mnt/sandbox - you can copy files there too as long as you are aware of aufs rules.smokey01 wrote:How do I do any testing if I can't get the pet file I want to test inside the sandbox.
Sure it will. For seamonkey, just remove the /root/spot/.mozilla symlink from within the sandbox. I'm not sure why gftp won't work - try running it from terminal, do you see any error messages?Seamonkey won't let me download it as it doesn't work.
I even tried gFTP and it wouldn't connect.
Oh, so that's what you mean. I thought you were referring to the content of /mnt/home - what was my previous answer for. Of course it still works in 611. You need to include your savefile layer when starting up sandbox, though. By default sandbox starts up in "/" not in "/root", so you need to "cd /root" to see your files.When I went back and tried FD-600 I could see all of the contents of the /root directory. this means I can simply put the pet file in root then run sandbox and it will be seen. This is not the case with 611. In 611 you only see the pristine /root.
The "savefile" layer in sandbox.sh (mounted at /mnt/sandbox when sandbox is running) is a tmpfs, it will be destroyed when you exit. With rw-sandbox.sh, that "savefile" is really a file, all changes will be stored in that file and you load the changes again later by starting rw-sandbox and point it to the same file.Does everything in the temp layer get destroyed in both sandbox.sh and rw-sandbox.sh?
cheers!