Since fat doesn't support ownership the only thing you can do is change the uid or gid in the mount command from man mount: Mount options for vfat .. uid=value and gid=value Set the owner and group of all files. (Default: the uid and gid of the current process.) umask=value Set the umask (the bitmask of the permissions that are not present). The default is the umask of the current process. The value is given in octal. dmask=value Set the umask applied to directories only. The default is the umask of the current process. The value is given in octal. Present since 2.5.43. fmask=value Set the umask applied to regular files only. The default is the umask of the current process. The value is given in octal. Present since 2.5.43.
On Monday 16 August 2004 02:02, Amir Tal wrote: > debian sid, 2.6.7-1-k7 . > got an external 250gb hard drive with fat32 filesystem (created in Linux > with fdisk), connected via usb2. > the mount command is : > mount -t vfat -o rw,iocharset=iso8859-1,codepage=437 /dev/xxx /mnt/xxx > > root can cd into the directory, create files, delete files, modify what > he created., and chmod existing files. > on the other hand, he cannot chown existing files, but he can modify > them (edit and save). > the files were copied to the disk using my computer at work, running > windows 2000 server. files mode > is set to "-rwxr--r--" . > > what am i missing here ?? -- Haggai Eran [EMAIL PROTECTED] ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]