Carlos E. R. said the following on 08/03/2010 09:12 AM:
On 2010-08-03 14:57, Anton Aylward wrote:
Junayeed Ahnaf Nirjhor said the following on 08/03/2010 08:48 AM:
On Tue, 03 Aug 2010 18:45:44 +0600, Anton Aylward <anton.aylward@rogers.com> wrote:
Carlos E. R. said the following on 08/03/2010 08:21 AM:
So guys I'm left in dark, alone. Won't anybody help me? :'(
1 Change your mount options 2 Change your permissions
That's not it.
To what would you change it? And how? Chmod does not work on a windows ntfs-3g mount. Try yourself.
I have (11.3) mount options rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev,allow_other,blksize=4096,default_permissions.
What exactly would you change?
Any one or more of a number of things. Mostly I don't have all drives and partitions mount as root at boot, I have ",user," or ",users," in there and mount them as "me" when I need them. Which, with windows isn't often. Which is why I don't mount that partition as a matter of course -that's ",noauto,". I can also set the ownership at mount time with ",uid=anton," and ",gid=users," then set the file and directory masks to allow user and group read and write. In this case I don't need the explicit ",noexec,nosuid,nodev,". As a matter of course I can also have my mount points access set so that non-root users can get in and edit. Yes, chmod doens't work on a ntfs mounted fs. That's why I would do all this BEFORE the mount. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org