Dave Burns wrote:
man page on find -prune was not clear to me, but I tried all combos I can think of, nothing works as I'd wish:
...
[tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns -name .gvfs -prune find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns -prune -name .gvfs [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns \( -prune -name .gvfs \) [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns \( -name .gvfs -prune \) find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied
You need to tell find what to do with files not named .gvfs: find /users/tburns -name .gvfs -prune -o -print
And now that I've logged out & back in and .gvfs is mounted again, I can test the other suggested workaround involving remount. This also does not work for me, though I may be giving the wrong form of mount command: [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo mount -o remount -o exec -o suid -o rw /users/tburns/.gvfs [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns/.gvfs find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied
I'm not sure what was mounted in the examples mentioned earlier. My understanding of FUSE is that the process providing the FS is the one that must perform the mount. Remounting manually should mount nothing.
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