On 26/11/14 08:03, Rick Macdonald wrote: > Well, many hours of googling, and running grep on my entire filesystem, > have failed me this time. > > I'm running up-to-date wheezy.
DE? > > How does one override or change to options fuse gives to ntfs-3g (if I > have that right)? > > I have an NTFS filesystem on a USB-connected hard drive. With nothing in > fstab, it gets auto-mounted as /media/WinBackup: > > syslog: > > Nov 25 12:56:17 timshel ntfs-3g[16915]: Version 2012.1.15AR.5 external > FUSE 29 > Nov 25 12:56:17 timshel ntfs-3g[16915]: Mounted /dev/sdg2 (Read-Write, > label "WinBackup", NTFS 3.1) > Nov 25 12:56:17 timshel ntfs-3g[16915]: Cmdline options: > rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks,uid=1000,gid=1000,dmask=0077,fmask=0177 > Nov 25 12:56:17 timshel ntfs-3g[16915]: Mount options: > rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks,allow_other,nonempty,relatime,default_permissions,fsname=/dev/sdg2,blkdev,blksize=4096 > > Nov 25 12:56:17 timshel ntfs-3g[16915]: Global ownership and permissions > enforced, configuration type 7 > > According to the fuse man page, /etc/fuse.conf only supports mount_max > and user_allow_other. > > I can mount it manually by adding the following entry to fstab (which > somehow inhibits the automount), but I'd much rather have it auto mount > whenever I plug it in. Without knowing more about your "Wheezy" the easiest option is probably to create a custom udev rule. > > LABEL=WinBackup /media/WinBackup ntfs > rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks,allow_other,nonempty,relatime,default_permissions,blkdev,umask=0000 > 0 0 What does "allow_other" do? Why "umask=0000" (instead of 0022)? Why not "uid=$username,gid=users" Do you want to retain and use standard Windows permissions? How many people will need access to the disk? > > Rick > > Kind regards -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/54750b1b.8060...@gmail.com