Masatran / Deepak, R. wrote:
Recently, I re-partitioned my flash drive. I made one FAT32 partition, and
one Ext3 partition. The problem is that when I transfer files from my laptop
to my work computer, the UIDs on the Ext3 partition are used for the
permissions, so I am not able to access the data. How can I fix this?
Both computers run Debian Lenny. The laptop runs Sawfish while the work
computer runs Gnome. I manually mount the flash drive in Sawfish, and I have
a FSTAB entry to allow this without Sudo. Gnome does an automatic mount. I
don't have superuser privilege on the work computer.
I am willing to use non-Ext3 filesystems, I just want RWX-RWX-RWX-style file
permissions.
Why so many difficult answers?
If you normally use ext3, use ext2(ext3 without journalizing) on your
flash drive.
Even Windows supports it.
--
.''`. Jens Van Broeckhoven
: :' : Debian GNU/Linux http://www.debian.org/
`. `' Free Software Foundation http://www.fsf.org/
`- Top-post-whole-quote-syndrome is evil!
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org