

The characters are bucolic, extremely sad, even motionless. 'Das Boot' in its effort of being objective and trying to go deep into the characters psicology results in a chaotic atmosphere. VSCode tries to create the 5 dot-files in the same folder with the same naming for the current user whenever it tries to launch a shell integrated zsh terminal. But in comparison with 'The Enemy Below' we can find that, as a war epic and a naval drama, 'The Enemy Below' runs more than the German movie. Ultimately this means that the issue is related to access to the files in the directory: /tmp/vscode-zsh/ It prints a similar error for the following dot-files files. Led by the young commander Hoffmann, 40 men are heading towards their fi. '/data/home/pens/.vscode-server/bin/da76f93349a72022ca4670c1b84860304616aaa2/out/vs/workbench/contrib/terminal/browser/media/shellIntegration-rc.zsh'Įrror: EPERM: operation not permitted, copyfile It is Autumn 1942 in occupied France and the U-612 is bracing for its maiden voyage. Das Boot ('The Boat' German pronunciation: das bot) is a 1981 feature film directed by Wolfgang Petersen, adapted from a novel of the same name by Lothar.

The is the output generated in the Log (Window) Output pane of VSCode: EPERM: operation not permitted, copyfile Meanwhile, I can easily create a bash based terminal and write $ zsh afterwards: I'm connecting to the instance using AWS SSM through the Remote SSH extension (see more detail about how here: ) which is working fine, but zsh shell integration fails with the message Shell integration failed to activate: VSCode SSH Remote connected to AWS EC2 instance running Ubuntu 20.04 (ARM64) Das Boot is 'wicked good' as they used to say in Mass, but Jan you have to appreciate America Hollywood is our propaganda machine and propaganda always distorts the truth U-571 is the quintessential American U boat movie- after all Civil Air Patrol United States Air Force Auxiliary sank two (2) U Boats and those combat reports read just.
