On Tue, 28 Dec 2021 10:31:48 +0200
shimi wrote:
> > //pi/PI-PUBLIC /mnt/PI-PUBLIC cifs
> > user,credentials=/etc/samba/auth.pi.solomon 0 0
> >
> >
> CIFS file ownership is root unless you also specify in your mount
> command -o uid= (or equivalent
> uid=user in fstab options column)
THANK YOU!!
I though of using some tool, but since I'm dealing with one directory,
it seems like overkill and one line of rsync should solve the problem,
although I'll probably add a few lines of "sanity" checks and logging
:-)
On Tue, 28 Dec 2021 10:49:43 +0200
Rabin Yasharzadehe wrote:
> In that case us
In that case use tools like SyncThing, which let you have a sync folder
across several computers.
and all the syncing is done in the background (almost live).
--
Rabin
On Tue, 28 Dec 2021 at 09:37, Shlomo Solomon
wrote:
> On Tue, 28 Dec 2021 09:05:59 +0200
> borissh1...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> >
On Tue, Dec 28, 2021 at 5:59 AM Shlomo Solomon
wrote:
> I think the relevant line in my /etc/fstab is the equivalent of what
> you suggested, but for some reason, all files "seem" to be owned by
> root, rather than the actual owner, so I use smb:// or fish:// in KDE
> Dolphin and then I can acces
On Tue, 28 Dec 2021 09:05:59 +0200
borissh1...@gmail.com wrote:
> file locks that are so needed for binary files), or just to work
> locally and then overwrite the original file. Multi connection edits
> over the network is a guarantee for a headache later.
Thanks. Although not really a "solution
On Monday, 27 December 2021 18:01:14 IST Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> I have a shared disk on my Raspberry Pi accessed on my several
> computers as PI-PUBLIC. I access the drive using smb:// or fish://
> or directly from the /mnt defined in /etc/fstab and can read, write,
> delete files from KDE program
I think the relevant line in my /etc/fstab is the equivalent of what
you suggested, but for some reason, all files "seem" to be owned by
root, rather than the actual owner, so I use smb:// or fish:// in KDE
Dolphin and then I can access files properly.
The fstab line is:
//pi/PI-PUBLIC /mnt/PI-P
Do you have this problem when accessing the files when the share is mounted
using simply the mount command ?
> mount -t cifs //pi/public /mnt
I know I had this problem, when Gnome/Mate mounted the shares via fuse or
gvfs which not all applications know how to work with.
--
Rabin
On Mon, 27 Dec
I have a shared disk on my Raspberry Pi accessed on my several
computers as PI-PUBLIC. I access the drive using smb:// or fish://
or directly from the /mnt defined in /etc/fstab and can read, write,
delete files from KDE programs - for example Kwrite, Okular, etc.
I have 2 related(??) problems sav