On Fri, Aug 10, 2018 at 10:38:52AM +0200, Hiltjo Posthuma wrote: > On Fri, Aug 03, 2018 at 01:44:39PM +0200, Rudolf Sykora wrote: > > Hello! > > > > I run > > > > doas sshfs syk...@pc109.fzu.cz: /home/ruda/mnt/fzu -o uid=1000 -o gid=1000 > > > > But then the mount point is owned (after the mounting) by root: > > > > drwx------ 1 root wheel 512 Aug 3 13:22 fzu > > > > Hence I cannot enter the directory as the usual (and wanted) user 'ruda'. > > > > 1) doas chmod 777 fzu does not help (does nothing) > > 2) doas chown ruda:ruda fzu gives permission denied > > > > What can I do? > > > > Thanks > > Ruda > > > > Hi, > > I have the same issue here. > > chmod 777 changes the permisions, but seems to reset them automatically after > a > second or so. > > The umask 0000 suggestion doesn't work either unfortunately. > > On 6.3 this problem doesn't occur, but on -current it does. I'll try to bisect > it later. > > -- > Kind regards, > Hiltjo >
I figured it out and it doesn't seem like a bug, just a changed behaviour. The following commit changed it: CVS revision 1.47: http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/lib/libfuse/fuse.c?rev=1.47&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup or git commit: commit 0f4d2db5a50672bad418a08041219503c0deeced Author: helg <h...@openbsd.org> Date: Tue Jun 19 13:01:34 2018 +0000 Changes the default mount behaviour so only the user that mounts the file system can access it unless the allow_other mount options is specified. The allow_other mount option makes the file system available to other users just like any other mounted file system. ok mpi@ So the solution is to use the option: -o allow_other, for example: sshfs -o allow_other user@host:dir /mnt/mount I hope this helps someone. -- Kind regards, Hiltjo