On 9/28/06, Duff Mckagan
On 9/26/06, Carlos E. R.
wrote: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
The Tuesday 2006-09-26 at 13:10 +0100, James Watkins wrote:
I do this too, I always have done since I first ran into the problem that Duff is having now. But it always seems like a bodge to me, does anyone know if it is possible to allow unrestricted access to the root of a filesystem
Of course you can, provided you define the appropriate permissions.
But I very seldom use konqueror; if it can't, it is a bug.
I guess it really is a bug...
Wait, hold on! If by "root" you mean "/", then no, you can not. If you
mean the root of something mounted in /mnt/data (for instance), then yes, you can.
What exactly do you mean by that??
I forgot to tell you guys something that makes my point... I also have Slackware installed on this very same system. But it never exhibited a problem with the inability to create a new Directory/ File. The command entered to change the permissions on the mounted partition was the same everywhere. #chmod -R 777 /mnt/data After this, be it an arbitrary user or whoever...the user was able to write and read into this mounted XFS partition. Also, this partition is there in fstab and it automatically mounts at boot. The options are "default" . But as it turns out, the problem is only there in SuSE. A bug..maybe?? - --
Cheers, Carlos E. R. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76
iD8DBQFFGTvGtTMYHG2NR9URAsOFAJoC7+nW5q6y5l5GcBEfKUxf4ZRrJwCfV6Uu jWfav6lRvs44y90RDQj/N4o= =+bOx -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
-- Check the headers for your unsubscription address For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the archives at http://lists.suse.com Please read the FAQs: suse-linux-e-faq@suse.com