![]() ![]() As long as you are in sudo, you can do anything. The latest Linux 3.4, 3.5, 3.6 stable kernels have an EXT4 file-system bug described as an apparent serious progressive ext4 data corruption bug. I don't know all the details, but this should work. The output of getfacl will be (for example): # file. The + indicates that there is an ACL active on the file (or directory). You can only see your file ACL by doing: getfacl Īnd when you ls -l you will see: drwxr-xr-x+ 4 user user 4096 aug 31 03:40. There are no Linux filesystems that are really useful on removable media, but FAT and NTFS have the downside of not really supporting symlinks and execute flags, which is difficult for git repositories, for example. (Everyone can assume root on every system they own and hence filesystem permissions mean nothing).Ä®xtFS is just not meant for removable media. That's like saying: You can access these files if you call yourself John. The only downside is that you cannot actually normally see those permissions, which means you'd rather turn them off completely (hence, what is the use on a removal medium if you set permissions that everyone can circumvent anyway, right?). The -d flag means that the permissions will propagate to all newly created files (default). You can also extend it to users, in case you are on some other system which uses that group: setfacl -d -m g:users:rwX. Since most of your systems, you will have a user in the sudo group, particularly for removable media (and hence, local systems) you will always have access anywhere for anyone in that group (which is you). i checked the drivers seems like i had the latest. Will give rwX permissions to all people in the sudo group. when i have alot of tabs open in firefox ( 10 or so ) if i click on something thats like java based or something like that like when u click track a package for example, the pc froze and the fans ramped up and i get a blue screen with code : dcp watchdog violation : this happened twice already. ![]() The disks paths are available under the âDeviceIDâ columns. To unmount and detach the disk from WSL 2, run. To list the available disks in Windows, run: wmic diskdrive list brief. What this means is that ls -color (by default) will always display o:rwX in a block background, which is hideous and only meant to alert users to wrong permissions (when they are right for you).Ä«ut you can easily achieve universal (or near-universal) write permissions to your files by using access control lists. To mount a disk, open a PowerShell window with administrator privileges and run: wsl -mount .![]() There is a way to just grant everyone permissions without using the regular permissions, that will clutter your display (in a way). ![]()
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