On 26/11/14 21:27, Chris Bannister wrote: > On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 02:46:24PM +1100, Scott Ferguson wrote: >> >> In which case I'd "recommend":- >> *1.* uncommenting the user_allow_other line in /etc/fuse.conf >> >> *2.* changing the fstab line to:- >> LABEL=WinBackup /media/WinBackup ntfs-3g >> uid=1000,gid=1000,permissions,auto,noatime 0 0 >> >> *3.* check that you are a member of the "disk" group (as a "user":- >> groups |grep disk >> if you aren't, become one (as "root")[*1]:- >> gpasswd -a $YourUsername disk >> >> [*1] "groups" won't show your changed group membership until after >> you've logged out, and logged back in. You can use the following if you >> need to double-check:- >> grep disk /etc/group > > I vaguely remember reading somewhere (may have been on this list) that > putting anybody in the disk group is a big no no, I think it was to do > with security.
*It is* (shoot foot material). So is setting ntfs-3g setuid. Which is another practise used for what the OP wanted to achieve - in the way he wanted to do it. Like sudo no password it's a common practise - in hindsight I should have refused to help with that option (I did suggest udev) - and there are other ways. > > Whether I'm misremembering or not it would be nice to get it cleared up. You didn't misremember it - unfettered access to raw disks is not good practise. I was wrong. Following those instructions could have caused the OP to inadvertently break Windows. 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/5475bb29.6000...@gmail.com