[openFate 305075] Allow to set the owner of a partition
Feature added by: Arvin Schnell (aschnell@novell.com) Feature #305075, revision 1 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: New Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister (sven.burmeister@gmx.net) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system-partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell(aschnell@novell.com) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister(sven.burmeister@gmx.net) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Gerald Pfeifer <gp@novell.com> Feature #305075, revision 4 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: New Priority Requester: Desirable SLED-11: New Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell <aschnell@novell.com> (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. + #4: Gerald Pfeifer <gp@novell.com> (2008-07-22 17:21:39) (reply to #2) + hjjhjkhkj jkhkj #3: Guy Lunardi <glunardi@novell.com> (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Gerald Pfeifer <gp@novell.com> Feature #305075, revision 5 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: New Priority Requester: Desirable SLED-11: New Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell <aschnell@novell.com> (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. - #4: Gerald Pfeifer <gp@novell.com> (2008-07-22 17:21:39) (reply to #2) - hjjhjkhkj jkhkj #3: Guy Lunardi <glunardi@novell.com> (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Matthias Eckermann <mge@novell.com> Feature #305075, revision 7 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: New Priority Requester: Desirable SLED-11: New Priority Requester: Desirable + SLES-11: Rejected by Matthias Eckermann <mge@novell.com> + reject date: 2008-08-01 02:40:00 + reject reason: No priority for SLES. But this is be different for + openSUSE and SLED. + Priority + Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell <aschnell@novell.com> (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi <glunardi@novell.com> (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Stefan Behlert <behlert@novell.com> Feature #305075, revision 8 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition - openSUSE-11.1: New + openSUSE-11.1: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable - SLED-11: New + SLED-11: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable SLES-11: Rejected by Matthias Eckermann <mge@novell.com> reject date: 2008-08-01 02:40:00 reject reason: No priority for SLES. But this is be different for openSUSE and SLED. Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell <aschnell@novell.com> (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi <glunardi@novell.com> (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Stanislav Visnovsky <visnov@novell.com> Feature #305075, revision 9 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable - SLED-11: Evaluation + openSUSE-11.2: New Priority Requester: Desirable + SLED-11: Rejected by Stanislav Visnovsky <visnov@novell.com> + reject date: 2008-08-12 14:50:35 + reject reason: Postponing. + Priority + Requester: Desirable + SLED-11-SP1: New + Priority + Requester: Desirable SLES-11: Rejected by Matthias Eckermann <mge@novell.com> reject date: 2008-08-01 02:40:00 reject reason: No priority for SLES. But this is be different for openSUSE and SLED. Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell <aschnell@novell.com> (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi <glunardi@novell.com> (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Michael Loeffler <michl@novell.com> Feature #305075, revision 11 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition - openSUSE-11.1: Evaluation + openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Loeffler <michl@novell.com> + reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 + reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable - openSUSE-11.2: New + openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable SLED-11: Rejected by Stanislav Visnovsky <visnov@novell.com> reject date: 2008-08-12 14:50:35 reject reason: Postponing. Priority Requester: Desirable SLED-11-SP1: New Priority Requester: Desirable SLES-11: Rejected by Matthias Eckermann <mge@novell.com> reject date: 2008-08-01 02:40:00 reject reason: No priority for SLES. But this is be different for openSUSE and SLED. Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell <aschnell@novell.com> (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister <sven.burmeister@gmx.net> (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi <glunardi@novell.com> (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Carlos Lange (cflange) Feature #305075, revision 12 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Loeffler <michl@novell.com> reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Interested: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) + Interested: Carlos Lange (cflange) Interested: JP Rosevear (jproseve) Interested: Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Karsten König (remur) Feature #305075, revision 16 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Loeffler <michl@novell.com> reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Interested: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) Interested: Carlos Lange (cflange) Interested: JP Rosevear (jproseve) + Interested: Karsten König (remur) Interested: Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Ludwig Nussel (lnussel) Feature #305075, revision 18 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Loeffler <michl@novell.com> reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Interested: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) Interested: Carlos Lange (cflange) Interested: JP Rosevear (jproseve) Interested: Karsten König (remur) + Interested: Ludwig Nussel (lnussel) Interested: Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/?rm=feature_show&id=305075
Feature changed by: Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) Feature #305075, revision 34 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable + Projectmanager: Important Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) Feature #305075, revision 36 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable - openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation + openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) + reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 + reject reason: No resources for 11.2. Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important + openSUSE-11.3: Evaluation + Priority + Requester: Desirable + Projectmanager: Important Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Juergen Weigert (jnweiger) Feature #305075, revision 38 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 reject reason: No resources for 11.2. Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important openSUSE-11.3: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 + Documentation Impact: + ? Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) Feature #305075, revision 45 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 reject reason: No resources for 11.2. Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important openSUSE-11.3: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important + Info Provider: (Novell) Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Documentation Impact: ? Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). + #7: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2010-11-05 17:18:08) + Please reject for openSUSE 11.3 since this product is released. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) Feature #305075, revision 46 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 reject reason: No resources for 11.2. Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important - openSUSE-11.3: Evaluation by engineering manager + openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) + reject date: 2011-03-15 16:55:13 + reject reason: 11.3 is done Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important Info Provider: (Novell) Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Documentation Editor: (Novell) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Documentation Impact: ? Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). #7: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2010-11-05 17:18:08) Please reject for openSUSE 11.3 since this product is released. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Rajko Matovic (rajko_m) Feature #305075, revision 47 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 reject reason: No resources for 11.2. Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) reject date: 2011-03-15 16:55:13 reject reason: 11.3 is done Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important + openSUSE Distribution: Unconfirmed + Priority + Requester: Mandatory Info Provider: (Novell) Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Documentation Editor: (Novell) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Documentation Impact: ? Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). #7: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2010-11-05 17:18:08) Please reject for openSUSE 11.3 since this product is released. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Rajko Matovic (rajko_m) Feature #305075, revision 48 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 reject reason: too late for 11.1 Priority Requester: Desirable openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 reject reason: No resources for 11.2. Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) reject date: 2011-03-15 16:55:13 reject reason: 11.3 is done Priority Requester: Desirable Projectmanager: Important - openSUSE Distribution: Unconfirmed + openSUSE Distribution: New Priority Requester: Mandatory Info Provider: (Novell) Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Documentation Editor: (Novell) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Documentation Impact: ? Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). #7: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2010-11-05 17:18:08) Please reject for openSUSE 11.3 since this product is released. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
Feature changed by: Rajko Matovic (rajko_m) Feature #305075, revision 49 Title: Allow to set the owner of a partition - openSUSE-11.1: Rejected by Michael Löffler (michl19) - reject date: 2008-09-11 09:51:23 - reject reason: too late for 11.1 - Priority - Requester: Desirable - openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Christoph Thiel (cthiel1) - reject date: 2009-06-03 08:33:29 - reject reason: No resources for 11.2. - Priority - Requester: Desirable - Projectmanager: Important - openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Stefan Behlert (sbehlert) - reject date: 2011-03-15 16:55:13 - reject reason: 11.3 is done - Priority - Requester: Desirable - Projectmanager: Important openSUSE Distribution: New Priority Requester: Mandatory Info Provider: (Novell) Requested by: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Product Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Project Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Engineering Manager: (Novell) Documentation Editor: (Novell) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: If a user buys a new external harddrive and partitions it via YaST he will not be able to write on it, since the filesystem is owned by root. A normal user would need to know about how to use konsole and which command to use in order to change the owner. It would be a lot easier, if the user could change the owner within the partitioning module. Of course this should not be possible for system- partitions such as / and /usr etc, yet /windows and /media, as well as /home/xyz/ should be fine. Relations: - Allow to set the owner of a partition (novell/bugzilla/id: 406559) https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=406559 Documentation Impact: ? Discussion: #1: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2008-07-15 08:32:00) Do you want to set gui and uid in /etc/fstab? #2: Sven Burmeister (rabauke) (2008-07-15 08:56:26) I'm not sure which is the best approach. Either the user could do something that replaces "chown user:group ." on the new partition or some predefined gui/uid to select from, because the normal user has no idea about those and the numbers that go with them. The goal is that a user that knows the root password can not only partition a new harddrive via GUI but also make it accessible (rw) to users without having to know anything about fstab-syntax and options. #3: Guy Lunardi (glunardi) (2008-07-18 15:15:27) Sven, this is a very valid use case and thank you for entering it. External storate is going to become more and more prominent. With the storage on devices shrinking (on Netbooks or laptops with SSD). If a somewhat advanced users knows that he wants to re-partition his new external drive, he will find the partitioner (Microsoft made this very accessible). The user will expect features such as automouting to continue to work and also that their regular user account can write to it. This happened to me a few days ago actually. Bought an external hard- drive to test backup solutions with, I used the YaST2 partitioner to format the whole drive to EXT3 (to test dirvish with full attributes backup). When I was done (after gnome-volume-manager tried to remount the usb mass storage 2 times and interupted Yast...) I could not write to the logical partition with my user I had just created. (openSUSE 11.0). #7: Arvin Schnell (aschnell) (2010-11-05 17:18:08) Please reject for openSUSE 11.3 since this product is released. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305075
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