It is a HP v125w 4GB USB Flash Drive. When I plug it in, two different desktop icons appear. One leads to / mnt/sda1. The other leads to /media/MYDATA.
The file system is listed as vfat (whatever that is) On Feb 8, 6:14 pm, Shaun Marolf <[email protected]> wrote: > What brand of USB drive is this?? Sounds like it has a built in FS > controller for data security. > > On Tue, 2011-02-08 at 15:00 -0800, Dos-Man 64 wrote: > > No, it doesn't work. I used gksu nautilus and entered the password. > > Then I went to the file and right-clicked on it. I changed the > > permissions for all to read and write, but it immediately reverts back > > to read-only for everyone but the owner. > > > BTW, > > > Nautilus spat out an error message to the console via stdout or > > stderr. It says, > > > "Nautilus 7291 GNOMEUI-Warning ** Authentication rejected, reason: > > None of the authentication protocols specified are supported and host > > based authentication failed." > > > I'm not quite sure what that all means, but it doesn't sound > > promising ;) > > > Interestingly, I was able to create a new file on /media/MYDATA, but > > now that it is created, I'm not able to change the permissions for the > > new file. > > > On Feb 8, 5:09 pm, Shaun Marolf <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Tue, 2011-02-08 at 13:53 -0800, Dos-Man 64 wrote: > > > > I'm not saying that drives and their files shouldn't be initially > > > > mounted as read-only; I just want to know how to override this. > > > > > I've got a file here named pic1.png. It's on a 4 GIG removable hp > > > > flash drive. When I right-click on it, it says the owner has read and > > > > write priviledges. It also says that root and others have only read- > > > > only priviledges. I'm trying to change this, but it isn't letting me. > > > > > (btw, I'm in dreamlinux right now) > > > > In Linux root has full command over the system. Despite permission > > > settings root can always change them. So even if root is set to read > > > only if you access the file as root you can change its permissions. Use > > > the command gksu nautilus and give either your root or sudo password > > > when prompted, the go to the file to change permissions. > > > > --Shaun > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Linux Users Group. To post a message, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit our group at http://groups.google.com/group/linuxusersgroup
