on Mon, Oct 21, 2002, Rich (deblists@osg.saic.com) wrote: > Howdy all, > > I want to change the default permissions of files in a FAT partition. > I understand that FAT file systems have no concept of permission or > ownership. When I mount the partition ownership is set to root and > permissions are set to 755. This means that only root can write to it. > I'd like it to be writable by ordinary users. > I've tried fiddling the permissions of the mount point, and options to > the mount command, but have had no luck. Anyone know how to make my > FAT partition writable? My suggestion: - Create a 'fatuser' group, or equivalent. Add your user to this. This group will have write permissions for vfat partitions. - man mount. Note mount options for fat & vfat. I use the following options to modify the the default permissions and umask for my Samba-mounted shares at work: uid=1000,auto,gid=smbuser,fmask=0640,dmask=075 ...the arguments for vfat are similar, though may differ. Peace. -- Karsten M. Self <kmself@ix.netcom.com> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/ What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? KQED FM: The bright spot on the dial: http://www.kqed.org/fm/
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