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On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 11:40:10AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 10:32:29AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > I'm in a multi-boot environment, multiple installs of Debian.
> > I want all install to have read/write/execute permissions.
> > The partition will effectively be serving as a common scratch pad 
> > in order to exchange information. There is organically a single 
> > user, [*ME*] and there is *NO* networking of any sort whatsoever.
> 
> The simplest way would be to synchronize your UID across all your
> installed operating systems.  If your UID is, let's say, 1000 on every
> system, and the files on the partition are owned by user 1000, then
> user 1000 (you) will have ownership of the files whenever you mount
> the partition.
> 
> If that's not an option, then you'll need to use Unix permissions.
> If you can synchronize a *group* GID across all OSes, then you can
> just make the files and directories group-writable by that group.
> 
> Otherwise, you'll have to make everything world-writable.

Well, there's bindfs [1], where you can (via FUSE) mount a directory
somewhere else, and (among other things) map user/group IDs. Never
tried it, but it sounds like hellish fun. I'd prefer synchronizing
the IDs, though. But in a pinch...

There is a like-named Debian package.

[1] http://bindfs.org/docs/bindfs.1.html
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