OSRealms -- Session 103
Session map
We traveled northeast for hours, doffing our armor to make better time
for Ygnas’ sake. To be honest northeast was the only real choice for miles.
Mountains blocked the north and south, and to the wet were salt plains.
At least in grasslands there would be a chance of water and game, not to
mention civilization. Eventually we came across a road, with diverging pathways
northeast, northwest, and southeast. We chose northeast again, passing through
a forest.
OSRealms -- Session 102
Session map
The grinding noise came from the two statues in the hallway. An expected they had animated.
As we heard their footsteps stomping towards us, I gave Morin my large sacks and a torch,
telling her to stuff anything valuable from the secret room into the sacks as
fast as she could while u-Heury and I tried to deal with the statues. u-Heury
set himself up by the door, planning to hold it closed as long as possible.
That would buy me some time to try other things. The most obvious, just closing
the secret door, did not work. Carefully
reviewing my instruction on Denara’s blessing of Hold Person suggested that
living iron statues
would not count as people. I expressed a certain doubt as to whether non-magical weapons
could even damage such creatures, but was interrupted by a smash as the door
broke down.
Out of the Abyss -- Session 20
Faran Magebane
We met with the wererats, and despite my best efforts to provoke a fight, ended up with an agreement in principle to mutually defend the city with the deep gnomes. However, the agreement hinged on our group tracking down the source of the ooze and slime invasion nearby. Information from the wererats indicated the pudding invasion had a leader; Speaker for Puddings, or Oozemaster, or God of Slime, or something. Our task was to conclude the invasion by finding and slaying this dessert wizard. That’s right up my alley.
OSRealms -- Session 101
Session map
The last two rats fell or fled as we tore apart their nest, finding a few gold
coins in the process, but with that Denara’s blessing faded away. We deferred
searching the rest of the nest immediately, though we did make an effort to
block the hole to the outside to prevent (or at least delay) reentry.
We chose to investigate the secret door in the back of the chamber. Turning the
brazier affixed to the wall did nothing, but Ygnas stuffed it with cloth and
lit it; this allowed a firm push to open the door itself, leading to a small
chamber with an obvious trapdoor. We set that aside for the moment and focused
on opening the coffer.
OSRealms -- Session 100
Session map
We had landed in thick forest, so u-Heury climbed a tree to look around. He saw a
few flying creatures in the distance and the cloest way out of the forest to the
northeast. We headed in that direction, briefly interrupted by a harpy
that
didn’t seem interested in us. The harpy eventually flew off, asnd we made it out
of the forest and approached one of several towers. Ygnas recognized the emblem
above the tower entrance as belonging to Kelguumer, a wizard famed for his
interest in insects.
OSRealms -- Session 99
A note from Feverborne brought me to Thatchem. He has been flirting with the new goddess of clensing lately, and frankly it seems to be good for him. I sense a new confidence and strength of will in his manner, though the world seeks to test his faith. While Cloacina is clearly no match for the significance of Denara, even a bathhouse must engage in commerce. Mmhmm. At any rate he had found mention of the floating tower my church had requested I investigate some time ago. Important note: this tower floats on air, the previous tower floats on water.
OSRealms -- Session 98
We found Thatchem to be very inviting. Their local temple even has a small shrine for the lesser known divinities. I made an appointment with the local priest (following the ritual clensing rites) and had a symbol of Cloacina the Clenser added, so those of my faith would have a place to express their veneration. It’s small, but a beginning.
At the inn, we met a man who calls himself Morrigyn and claims to be an adventurer who lost the rest of his party in Highfell. He mentioned dragons. Well, a dragon. I don’t think dragons count as vermin to be eradicated. He seemed to want to join us on an expedition there, perhaps to rescue his friends, perhaps simply to loot. He seemed competent and carried a nice blade, but I’m not here for Highfell. Perhaps one of the others will be interested.
OSRealms -- Session 97
Feverborne
I discussed the matter of what to do next with Forrest, and we decided to explore to the north where Verminbane and Cloacina sensed a threat. A town there known as Thatchem was reputed to be only a few miles away from the danger, so we planned to buy horses and scout the road there. Forrest agreed to lend me Verminbane for a week - whatever I chose to do with the blade during that time. Scouting out the threat that Cloacina sensed was the best use of that time, I felt, so we spent a day packing and preparing and then set off. Rowen and Ygnas joined us for the trip, Kiba staying behind to train Kiki.
OSRealms -- Session 96
Feverborne
The dwarves melted down the Squeeblade while I watched, after which the high priest thanked me for bringing it to him and conveyed an invitation to see the dwarven king after lunch. I accepted, and arranged to meet with Hammerick on the way out. Hammerick agreed to find Mindy a safe home with a dog just like Kiki.
The king asked us to explore the King’s Gate entrance to a dwarven city known as Dwarrowdeep. Just to scout the area around the entrance would be worth a hundred gold each. It sounded tempting, so we agreed, but with the caveat that we would need to return to Threshold to report to the church of Cloacina there and retrieve Verminbane.
find -exec
By Matthew Hunter
| Apr 2, 2023
|
One very useful command for locating files and performing operations on them is find with the exec option.
find [path] [arguments] -exec [command] {} ;
I’ve found this to be particularly useful when adjusting permissions to allow group owners to list a directory:
find [path] -type d -exec chmod g+x {} ;
The part that’s tricky to remember is the escaped semicolon, hence this post. Applying it only to directories avoids issues with normal files being treated as executable. The simpler option, chmod -R, would apply the +x to normal files.