I'm seeing similar behavior, but the behavior depends on the command being used, i.e. if I use 'cd' the trailing slashes are appended to a directory name as they were in 10.10, but if I use 'ls' or 'less', they aren't.
I have 2 boxes with 11.04 installed, one is x86 and the other x86_64, both have the same behavior.
I don't see a change with the super-user account, but I don't have the super-user account enabled. Instead, I've been getting to a root shell with the 'sudo -s' command.
Last, I have the same policy set up as reported previously, i.e.
I'm seeing similar behavior, but the behavior depends on the command being used, i.e. if I use 'cd' the trailing slashes are appended to a directory name as they were in 10.10, but if I use 'ls' or 'less', they aren't.
I have 2 boxes with 11.04 installed, one is x86 and the other x86_64, both have the same behavior.
I don't see a change with the super-user account, but I don't have the super-user account enabled. Instead, I've been getting to a root shell with the 'sudo -s' command.
Last, I have the same policy set up as reported previously, i.e.
waltman@ waltman- laptop: ~$ apt-cache policy bash bash-completion us.archive. ubuntu. com/ubuntu/ natty/main i386 Packages dpkg/status us.archive. ubuntu. com/ubuntu/ natty/main i386 Packages dpkg/status
bash:
Installed: 4.2-0ubuntu3
Candidate: 4.2-0ubuntu3
Version table:
*** 4.2-0ubuntu3 0
500 http://
100 /var/lib/
bash-completion:
Installed: 1:1.3-1ubuntu3
Candidate: 1:1.3-1ubuntu3
Version table:
*** 1:1.3-1ubuntu3 0
500 http://
100 /var/lib/