Debian :: Xfs Partition Can't Write Files Into It?

Apr 27, 2010

I have one partition with XFS, after load the X I went to nautilus and I tried to copy any file into that partition, but I only can read not write or execute. my questions are:1. what parameters should change in fstab to change this? the current parameters are "defaults 0 0"

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Ubuntu :: Share Files - Read & Write - In EXT4 Partition

May 2, 2011

Recently i formatted my HDD into 5 partition namely :-

1) Win Vista
2) Ubuntu /
3) Home
4) Swp
5) EXT4 (Purpose is to share files between ubuntu and vista)

I'm wondering if its possible to install Virtual Box on both OS but pointing only to 1 virtual machine.

Also if its possible to permanently mount the shared partition on both OS.

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Debian :: Mount HFS+ Partition In Read/write Mode

Aug 25, 2010

I have installed Debian on My Macbook Pro.

I want to be able to write to the HFS+ partition. I have disabled journaling on the HFS+ partion.

I have the following in my fstab:

But it still mounts as read-only.

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Debian :: No Write Access To RAID Partition Over Samba?

Aug 9, 2011

I have recently installed Debian on my NAS server. I have also configured Samba for sharing the home directory of a nas user i.e. /home/nas To this directory I have read/write from a windows machine using the nas user credentials. When I mount my RAID partition /dev/md0p1 to the /home/nas directory, I then realize that all content in this directory (files and subfolders) is only owned by the root user. When trying to access from the windows machine the /home/nas directory, I do not have any write access, only read. I have tried both the nas and the root user credentials.

I have also attempted the change the ownership of the mounted RAID partition to the nas user with the -R recursive option, but I get for the internal files/subfolders an error "operation not supported".

How can I overcome this problem? - Is there something not done properly in the /dev/md0 array definition (i.e. ARRAY /dev/md0 level=raid1 num-devices=2 UUID=bddf8b69:c97967b5:cb104784:7fef7cc3 )?- Is there something not done properly in the /dev/md0p1 mounting (i.e. mount /dev/md0p1 /home/nas)?- Should I do any extra configuration before the mounting etc? I would really appreciate any kind of help I could get.

Some background info

b) After OS boot, when I do a:
# cat /proc/mdstat,
I get:
Personalities : [raid1]
md0 : active (auto-read-only) raid1 sda1[0] sdb1[1]
4200896 blocks
unused devices: <none>

[Code]...

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Debian :: Don’t Have Write Permissions To Edit Files

Apr 13, 2016

I got Whonix set up, and everything in place to be running correctly and I was on cloud nine. The only problem I'm having is that whenever I try to go in and change my index.html files in /var/www/, or really do anything (add new file/folder, save or delete a file) I get the message that I don't have the right permission to do anything other than open and close the folders and files.

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Debian Configuration :: Give Application Write Access On Folder And Its Files

Mar 23, 2011

is there a way to give an application (controlaula) write access to a folder /var/lib/monitorprofe and files on that folder.

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General :: Write A Shell Script Which Will Simultaneously Collect OS User Information And Write In An Individual Text Files?

Feb 17, 2010

I want to write a shell script which will simultaneously collect OS user information and write in an individual text files.Can anyone tell me the syntax of the script.N.B. The user name will be mentioned in an array within the shell script.

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Debian :: Move Files From Old Partition?

Aug 21, 2010

Had a bit of a partition nightmare during an install, involving my home directory.

My partitioning looks like this and my install is still completing:

sda1=/boot
sda2=/
sda3=swap
sda4=/home

My old home partition and data is located in a partition that I preserved, called /homebak and is on sdb.

Once my install is complete, what is the best way to move the data from /sdb1 (homebak) to my newly created /home?

For the record, I tried to copy the partition during set-up, but something wasn't happy.

I've got my important files backed-up, but would prefer not to lose about 5 gigs of music and video.

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Debian :: Tranferring My Settings - . Files - To Another Home Partition

Feb 28, 2011

I am trying to copy my hidden files in /home/myusername to another partition. I have also edited /etc/fstab to reflect the change. After reboot, when kdm appears and I try to log into kde, the latter complains that it has no write permissions to write to /home!

The commands I used, are:

To create a directory myusername in the new partition:

To copy the contents of my previous /home/myusername with the new partition mounted on /mnt:

Does anyone know what may be wrong. I am having the impression that it may be because I was root when I used cp and it messed some file permissions, but should it?

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Debian :: Using The Same NTFS Partition For Linux And Windows Files

Apr 15, 2015

I have installed Debian as a second OS alongside Win XP, and now I have Win XP on C drive (if viewed from XP), NTFS, my data files (mainly texts and graphics) on D drive (NTSF), and Debian on ext3. Debian sees and opens files on D.

1. If I read-write from-on this D partition from both OSes, is there a chance the data will be corrupted?
2. If I open a Windows-created TXT, GIF, JPG, HTML or other not-proprietary format file from Debian, edit it and save (just SAVE, not SAVE AS) - will this file remain readable from Windows?

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Ubuntu :: How To Write To An Hfs+ Partition

May 24, 2010

I only have an ubuntu machine here, but I wish to transfer some files to her mac via my external hard drive. I only have an ubuntu machine here. I managed to make an hfs+ partition on my external hard drive using gparted after installing hfsprogs. I tried changing the permissions with chmod. The ls -l command yields:ls -l /dev/sdc1 brwxrwxrwx 1 root disk 8, 33 2010-05-24 10:53 /dev/sdc1

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Debian :: Libgdu-WARNING : Partition /org/freedesktop/UDisks/devices/sdb7 Is A Logical Partition But No Extended Partition Exists

May 27, 2011

I installed Debian stable and I see these errors in the xsession error file

/etc/gdm3/Xsession: Beginning session setup...
GNOMEKEYRINGCONTROL=/tmp/keyring-j0E6Br
SSHAUTHSOCK=/tmp/keyring-j0E6Br/ssh
GNOMEKEYRINGCONTROL=/tmp/keyring-j0E6Br

[code]....

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Fedora :: Make 11 To Write The Hfs+ Partition?

Jul 19, 2009

Is there a way to make fedora 11 can write the hfs+ partition? Beside fedora i have mac os x, and usually i use third partition(fat) as medium to transfer file from fedora to mac.

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Ubuntu :: Can't Write On Secondary Partition?

Jul 24, 2010

I have a second 8GB partition but for some reason I cant write in it at all. I formated it but still doesn't let me write in it. I tried doing this:Quote:sudo chown -R username:username /media/BTBut this is what I get:Quote:

chown: changing ownership of `/media/sda2/FOUND.000/FILE0000.CHK': Operation not permitted
chown: changing ownership of `/media/sda2/FOUND.000': Operation not permitted
chown: changing ownership of `/media/sda2': Operation not permitted

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Ubuntu :: Unable To Write To Partition?

Aug 6, 2011

I recently installed ubuntu 11.04. After installation, I created two ext4 partitions in my hard drive. My problem is that I can't create any files in these partitions. These partitions are not automatically mounted at boot time, but once I try to access them , they get mounted. I thought all this was managed by /etc/fstab file but I can't see any entry for these partitions there. So, I created an entry for both these partitions in fstab file with the following options: auto,user,exec,rw,suid,dev However, now when i boot, i see that there are two partitions already mounted as earlier and there are two more in the Places menu. I am not able to mount them since they are already mounted. And I still can't create any files in those partitions.

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Slackware :: Can't Write To Partition Table?

Jan 19, 2010

I am currently running Linux Mint 8 on a Thinkpad T60p and I decided to free up 20 GB, formatted to EXT4 for Slackware.ed G-Parted)I was able to install Slackware with VirtualBox with my Linux Mint host and I was able to follow through with a full installation without any problems.However when I tried to install it on a real partition I got the below notification: "You will not be able to write the partition table.

Note: Sector size is 2048 (not 512)Device contains neither a valid DOS partition table, nor Sun, SGI or OSF disklabel.Building a new disklabel with disk identifier 0xf4252222.Changes will remain in memory only, until you decide to write them.After that, of course, the previous content won't be recoverable.Warning: Invalid flag 0x0000 of partition table will be corrected by (w)rite"

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OpenSUSE :: Unable To Write To Ntfs Partition?

Jul 4, 2010

I am unable to write to ntfs partition.

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Ubuntu Installation :: Unable To Write To Partition?

Jan 17, 2010

I used gparted to format and merge two partitions to a single 150gig partition. However, after mounting the partition (and entering my password) I am unable to write any files to it.I tried looking at its permissions. Both its owner and group is root.Could anyone help me by telling me how I could change this through gparted, the terminal, or any other way?

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Ubuntu :: Can't Write To A Partition That Was Created During Installation

Mar 4, 2010

I just finished installing Karmic Koala on my computer a little while ago... and I chose to partition the drive manually. My computer has 2 hard drives:

Here's the HDD which boots first and has Grub and Ubuntu on it:

[URL]

And my second HDD which has Windows and a backup partition called "datas":

[URL]

And here's a copy of my /etc/fstab file:

Code:

# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
#
# Use 'blkid -o value -s UUID' to print the universally unique identifier
# for a device; this may be used with UUID= as a more robust way to name
# devices that works even if disks are added and removed. See fstab(5).

[code]....

The ext3 partition on the 250GB drive called "datas" is an old partition that I created while I was still using Intrepid... and it works just fine. However the partition called "archives", which I created during the installation of Karmic, doesn't seem to work properly. For some reason I can't write any files or folders on it. Why is that?

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Ubuntu :: Remove Write Protection From Partition?

May 15, 2010

I'm trying to create a bootable HFS+ partition. I've succeeded in creating the HFS+ partition in Windows using Mac Drive 8, but need to set the partition to "Active" to be able to install an OS on it. The issue lies that when I try to set it to active in windows disk management it tells me that the media has been write protected by Mac Drive. I want to either set the partition as active (or at least disable write protection to allow me to set it as active in windows) or find another means of creating an HFS+ partition, which I know gparted claims to do but I can't manage to enable it. I'm currently running Windows 7 but I have Ubuntu 9.04 Live CD to use if necessary.

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Ubuntu :: Read Write A Ntfs Partition?

Mar 13, 2011

I was wondering if anyone knows how to read write a ntfs partition on thats on a separate linux machine ?

Is that even possible from one linux machine to another ?

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Ubuntu / Apple :: Read Or Write To Mac Partition?

May 16, 2011

Is there an easy way to read/write to a mac partition inside ubuntu 11?

Any graphical ways to mount / umount?

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Red Hat / Fedora :: Unable To Write To NTFS Partition

Jan 8, 2010

In one of our client system there is a partition which shows NTFS and other partitions are ext3...the partition which shows NTFS is a seperate HDD...The NTFS partition has been mounted...but we are not able to write anything to it...but we checked in /etc/fstab....it shows 'ro' so we changed to defaults....after making chnages when we tried to remount using the command mount -o remount /partition.it shows the device is already been in use try using the command fuser or lsof.we tried fuser /partition and then killed that process..still same error.....I would also like to know is there a way that we convert the NTFS partition to ext3 without losing the datas.

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Ubuntu :: Make USB Partition Write Protected

Nov 18, 2010

I have a USB stick of 8GB with two partition. Can I make one partition write protected? How?

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General :: How To Read - Write On NTFS Partition

Aug 27, 2010

All my important data like ebooks and some programs are in a ntfs partition...when i login to my redhat i am unable to access that partition..

How to access(r/w) that partition in linux(Red Hat)?

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CentOS 5 :: Write Grub Into A Root Partition Instead Of MBR

Aug 29, 2011

Howto write Grub into a root partition instead of MBR on Centos 5.6 using CentOS-5.6-i386-LiveCD?

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OpenSUSE Install :: Mount And Write Into Ntfs Partition?

May 31, 2010

I've dual boot: opensuse 11.2 and Windows XP. Howto mount and write to ntfs partition using /etc/fstab?

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Ubuntu :: Read Write Access To Fedora Partition?

Jul 1, 2011

On opening nautilus,it shows the XP ad Fedora partitions.Clicking on them mounts the partition.However,XP partitions are mounted in Read/write mode,whereas Fedora partition is mounted only in Read mode.What changes should i need to make in /etc/fstab to enable Read/Write access to Fedora partition as well?

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Hardware :: Ext3 Partition On External HDD Have No Write Access?

Apr 15, 2010

I have an Iomega External Hard Drive 1TB. Problem: Unable to write to Ext3 Partition. How I got here: Started off with going into windows and shrinking it's current NTFS partition down by 50GB. Then used an Ubuntu LiveCD to gain access to GParted and with that 50GB free I formatted it with an Ext3 system. It does this no problems. I then can't write anything to this partition? I've tried doing "chmod 777 /dev/sdb2" but it says Operation not Permitted.

EDIT: Need to be able to use it on YDL 6.2 on my PS3, YDL doesn't have NTFS write support and I want to transfer files larger than 4GB rendering Fat32 useless. No I'm not able to re-size or compress this large file.

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General :: Mounting Ext2 Partition With Write Permissions?

Oct 25, 2009

I need to mount my ext2 partition with write permissions for an average user. Right now, I can only write to the volume using sudo or the root account.

/etc/fstab:

Code:

# Filesystem: Mountpoint: Type: Options: Dump: FSCK:
/dev/sda1 / ext4 defaults 1 1
/dev/sda5 swap swap defaults 0 0

[code]....

can't add the options uid=500,gid=500 to the ext2 volume because it says "bad option" I have 1 question. If you have a volume listed in /etc/fstab, and you try to mount it with different options than the ones listed in fstab, will it mount with the new options, or the fstab options?(e.x. if I try to mount /dev/sda6 with: mount-o auto,user,exec,rw,async. Will it mount with async or sync?)

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