I can't think of any. But my question is: is there a reason to have
separate users 'dspace' and 'tomcat'? Unless you're doing something
fancy, I would just have an account for Tomcat and let DSpace's
files be owned by it.
The installation guide seems quite firm that there is a user named
'dspace', but that's not at all necessary. What *is* necessary is
that Tomcat have read access to DSpace's configuration and web
applications, and write access to the logs, assetstore, upload
directory, etc. So normally I just install Tomcat via the OS' package
manager and let the whole DSpace installation directory tree be owned
by whatever account the package manager created for Tomcat.
--
Mark H. Wood
Lead Technology Analyst
University Library
Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis
755 W. Michigan Street
Indianapolis, IN 46202
317-274-0749
www.ulib.iupui.edu