Re: Mount Permissions

2023-06-07 Thread David Wright
On Sun 04 Jun 2023 at 11:59:21 (-0400), ce wrote: > I have a mountpoint where all files under it have a group `fuse`. > > This is strange to me. > > As far as I can remember, Ubuntu doesn't do this. Is this a system that's been around since wheezy? Up until then, Debian had a system group

Re: Mount Permissions

2023-06-07 Thread Elena DP
I think you have a partition with filesystem btrfs that uses compression with lzop. Perhaps inside of it you have a file that is a compressed filesystem (that is fuse: *Filesystem in Userspace* ) what can you see when you type in $ cd /mnt/part2 $ ls -la El lun, 5 jun 2023 a las 6:32, ce ()

Re: Mount Permissions (btrfs subvolumes)

2023-06-05 Thread ce
On 6/5/23 7:23 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > You can run the command "mount" with no arguments to see the details of > each mounted file system.  You don't even have to be root.  I don't know > how btrfs subvolumes work, so I don't know whether they appear in the > output of mount, but you could

Re: Mount Permissions (btrfs subvolumes)

2023-06-05 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Sun, Jun 04, 2023 at 11:00:18PM -0400, ce wrote: > On 6/4/23 5:46 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > What kind of hardware is this file system on? > > > > What kind of file system is it? > > > > How did you mount it?  (Show the command you used, and any output that > > it produced.) > > > > What

Re: Mount Permissions

2023-06-04 Thread ce
On 6/4/23 5:46 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote: > On Sun, Jun 04, 2023 at 11:59:21AM -0400, ce wrote: > > I have a mountpoint where all files under it have a group `fuse`. > > You need to provide details, or else nobody can help you with anything. > > What kind of hardware is this file system on? > >

Re: Mount Permissions

2023-06-04 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Sun, Jun 04, 2023 at 11:59:21AM -0400, ce wrote: > I have a mountpoint where all files under it have a group `fuse`. You need to provide details, or else nobody can help you with anything. What kind of hardware is this file system on? What kind of file system is it? How did you mount it?

Mount Permissions

2023-06-04 Thread ce
I have a mountpoint where all files under it have a group `fuse`. This is strange to me. As far as I can remember, Ubuntu doesn't do this.

Re: external USB hard drive mount permissions

2017-09-04 Thread James H. H. Lampert
On 9/2/17, 6:01 AM, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote: On 02-09-2017 09:29, Federico Beffa wrote: I'm using Debian Stretch with Gnome. When I plug-in an external USB hard drive (ext4) it gets automatically mounted at /media/beffa/label. but the device is still only writable by root. How can I tell

Re: external USB hard drive mount permissions

2017-09-02 Thread Federico Beffa
Federico Beffa writes: > Hi, > > I'm using Debian Stretch with Gnome. When I plug-in an external USB > hard drive (ext4) it gets automatically mounted at /media/beffa/label. > However, the drive is read-only for the user owning the Gnome shell > (beffa). I've tried adding default

Re: external USB hard drive mount permissions

2017-09-02 Thread Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
On 02-09-2017 09:29, Federico Beffa wrote: > I'm using Debian Stretch with Gnome. When I plug-in an external USB > hard drive (ext4) it gets automatically mounted at /media/beffa/label. > > > but the device is still only writable by root. > > How can I tell the system to make it writable for the

external USB hard drive mount permissions

2017-09-02 Thread Federico Beffa
Hi, I'm using Debian Stretch with Gnome. When I plug-in an external USB hard drive (ext4) it gets automatically mounted at /media/beffa/label. However, the drive is read-only for the user owning the Gnome shell (beffa). I've tried adding default ACL entries to /media/beffa as follows # file: . #

Re: ntfs mount permissions

2004-05-11 Thread Micha Feigin
On Tue, May 11, 2004 at 03:15:12PM +0100, Matthew Kay wrote: Hi, I'm trying to mount my windows NTFS partition with this line in my fstab: /dev/hda1 /mnt/winntfs rw,auto,users,exec 0 0 Try /dev/hda1 /mnt/winntfs ro,auto,users,exec,umask=0222

ntfs mount permissions

2004-05-11 Thread Matthew Kay
Hi, I'm trying to mount my windows NTFS partition with this line in my fstab: /dev/hda1 /mnt/winntfs rw,auto,users,exec 0 0 It works fine with this or read-only (ro) option, for root, but I can't get it to stay user-readable. When I mount it as read-only I can't

Re: ntfs mount permissions

2004-05-11 Thread Alvin Oga
hi ya matt On Tue, 11 May 2004, Matthew Kay wrote: /dev/hda1 /mnt/winntfs rw,auto,users,exec 0 0 It works fine with this or read-only (ro) option, for root, root can do anything to itself, but necessarily to a remote partition on a different machine but I

Re: ntfs mount permissions

2004-05-11 Thread Paul E Condon
On Tue, May 11, 2004 at 03:15:12PM +0100, Matthew Kay wrote: Hi, I'm trying to mount my windows NTFS partition with this line in my fstab: /dev/hda1 /mnt/winntfs rw,auto,users,exec 0 0 It works fine with this or read-only (ro) option, for root, but I can't

mount permissions

2000-10-28 Thread Mr. Strockbine
when my FAT32 file systems are mounted at boot time the owner and group are root. As a regular user I can read files but not write them. I have the user option in my /etc/fstab file like so: /dev/hdc6 /matrox/mx6 vfat defaults,user 0 2 so I can `umount' and then `remount' as a regular user and

Re: mount permissions

2000-10-28 Thread Russ Pitman
Use 'noauto' as an option in your fstab entry-- see man fstab . On Fri, Oct 27, 2000 at 10:06:16PM -0700, Mr. Strockbine wrote: when my FAT32 file systems are mounted at boot time the owner and group are root. As a regular user I can read files but not write them. I have the user option in

Re: mount permissions

2000-10-28 Thread Ethan Benson
On Fri, Oct 27, 2000 at 10:06:16PM -0700, Mr. Strockbine wrote: when my FAT32 file systems are mounted at boot time the owner and group are root. As a regular user I can read files but not write them. I have the user option in my /etc/fstab file like so: /dev/hdc6 /matrox/mx6 vfat

Re: mount permissions

2000-10-28 Thread Shaul Karl
when my FAT32 file systems are mounted at boot time the owner and group are root. As a regular user I can read files but not write them. I have the user option in my /etc/fstab file like so: /dev/hdc6 /matrox/mx6 vfat defaults,user 0 2 so I can `umount' and then `remount' as a regular

/dev/hdc1 Mount Permissions

1998-02-01 Thread Art Lemasters
Now, for the reason this is coming from my M$ OS. I mounted a second, older hard drive to use as /home. Although I set permissions for the one user (me) with chown and chmod, I still do not have access to the device (/dev/hdc1 mounted in /home). Do any of you have any ideas as to the cause

Re: /dev/hdc1 Mount Permissions

1998-02-01 Thread Remco Blaakmeer
On Sun, 1 Feb 1998, Art Lemasters wrote: Now, for the reason this is coming from my M$ OS. I mounted a second, older hard drive to use as /home. Although I set permissions for the one user (me) with chown and chmod, I still do not have access to the device (/dev/hdc1 mounted in /home).

Re: /dev/hdc1 Mount Permissions

1998-02-01 Thread Art Lemasters
On 1 Feb 98 at 11:18, Remco Blaakmeer wrote: On Sun, 1 Feb 1998, Art Lemasters wrote: Now, for the reason this is coming from my M$ OS. I mounted a second, older hard drive to use as /home. Although I set permissions for the one user (me) with chown and chmod, I still do not have