Yeah I got it to work with permissions. For some reason it didn't work
the first couple of times I tried it that way but I may have had a
different disk plugged in or msstyped something.
Thanks
Tom
On Sat, 16 Apr 2011, Geoff Shang wrote:
On Fri, 15 Apr 2011, Tom Masterson wrote:
Note that teh combination of uid, gid, and umask work on most drives but I
do have one exteranl drive that is ext3 that I am still trying to find the
answer to how to make it writable by either a group or all users other than
root.
You should be able to deal with this in the filesystem itself. Just set file
and directory permissions appropriately.
The reason why VFAT is such an issue is that it doesn't support the concept
of the owner of a file, so an owner and group have to be mapped to it. The
default is whoever mounted the filesystem.
Geoff.
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