Am Montag, 19. Januar 2015 20:49 CET, "Carlos E. R." <robin.listas@telefonica.net> schrieb:
On 2015-01-19 17:53, Aaron Digulla wrote:
Am Montag, 19. Januar 2015 17:44 CET, Koenraad Lelong <> schrieb:
Is this the way to go or am I missing something ?
Yes, the approach is correct.
Chowning the disk mount point, when mounted, can also work (some say, maybe dependent on desktop, dunno). But I'm not sure if the mountpoint can be a volatile one for this to work.
That only works if you do a chown -R but that would change the owner of every file. That said: If only a single users uses this drive, then that's probably the correct thing to do. Note that the ownership of the root note on the drive will become the owner of the mount point, no matter what permissions the underlying folder had before. The mount point "hides" or "overrides" the underlying folder as long as it exists. If you umount, the folder becomes visible again. Regards, -- Aaron "Optimizer" Digulla a.k.a. Philmann Dark "It's not the universe that's limited, it's our imagination. Follow me and I'll show you something beyond the limits." http://blog.pdark.de/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org