Chances are that they aren't. Have a look in /etc/passwd and see what the UID 
is for your regular user. Or, alternatively, just use the other option 'user' 
in /etc/fstab. Options like defaults,user,noauto are probably a good idea.

Cheers,
Gareth

ps. as far as login managers go, there might be a file on redhat systems (from 
memory, I don't use it ;) in somewhere like /etc/X11 called 'prefdm' 
(something like /etc/X11/prefdm I *think*, you might have to search for it, 
not sure... somewhere under /etc though, I'm fairly sure) which is actually a 
symlink to your *dm of choice (kdm / gdm / xdm) - if it points to gdm, try 
changing it to point to kdm (wherever it resides), that might do the trick. 
Just a thought.


On Monday 27 January 2003 22:21, Robert Fisher wrote:
> /dev/hda2 /home/robert/storage        vfat    uid=500,gid=500,umask=007 0 0
>
> in the fstab file got the partition mounted OK but still no user write
> access.
>
> How do I know if these uid's are correct?
>
> Any more ideas?
>
> On Mon, 2003-01-27 at 19:53, Col wrote:
> > I use
> > /dev/hda1   /mnt/c  vfat    user,noauto 0 0
> > when I want to manually mount
> >
> > or
> > /dev/hda1   /mnt/c  vfat    uid=500,gid=500,umask=007 0 0
> > (adjust user and group id accordingly)
> >
> >
> > Col.
> >
> > Robert Fisher wrote:
> > > I am sure I have done this before but at the moment I am having
> > > trouble.
> > >
> > > I can use the following command (as root) to see my fat32 partition but
> > > only root has write access.
> > >
> > > mount /dev/hda2 /home/robert/storage -t vfat
> > >
> > > or in fstab...
> > >
> > > /dev/hda2         /storage                vfat    rw 0 0 0
> > >
> > > How do I get user write access to the fat32 drive?
> > >
> > > Robert

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