Thansk for the answer. To be honest to you, I already checked all that. Both 
User1 and User2 folders have have exactly the same permission sets on Windows 
(they both herit them from the Documents folder). I did also tried to use the 
usermap file, but I must say that I didn't managed to do it. I didn't found the 
Windows zip file to download from the NTFS-3G website and the Linux one I 
didn't managed to understand once I launch it. I did some tests, and I think 
that I I can't find a way to do it this week I will end by recreate this 
folders. In my tests it worked well :( Best regards, Marc Le 2021-11-27 19:39, 
Chuck Zmudzinski <brchu...@netscape.net> a écrit : > > Read the ntfs-3 man 
page. > > Take a look at the man page for ntfs-3g, the section on > Access 
Handling and Security: > > From the ntfs-3g man page: > 
------------------------------------------------------------ > Access Handling 
and Security > By default, files and directories are owned by the effective > 
user and group of the mounting process, and ev‐ > erybody has full read, write, 
execution and directory browsing > permissions. You can also assign permissions 
> to a single user by using the uid and/or the gid options > together with the 
umask, or fmask and dmask options. > > Doing so, Windows users have full access 
to the files created by > ntfs-3g. > > But, by setting the permissions option, 
you can benefit from the > full ownership and permissions features as > defined 
by POSIX. Moreover, by defining a Windows-to-Linux > user mapping, the 
ownerships and permissions are > even applied to Windows users and conversely. 
> > If ntfs-3g is set setuid-root then non-root users will be also > able to 
mount volumes. > ------------------------------------------------------------ > 
> You use the defaults option when mounting. I do not know how that > affects 
access and security for ntfs-3g. I would suggest either using > uid and gid 
options when mounting instead, or using the > usermapping file that maps 
Windows users to Debian users. > > You need to check which user under Windows 
owns those folders, which Windows > users have write access to those folders, 
etc. > > As mentioned in the man page, there is a way to map Windows users to > 
Debian 11 users using the default .NTFS-3G/UserMapping file or a > custom 
usermapping file with the usermapping mount option. > > I used this feature a 
long time ago, and the format for the usermapping > file is documented in the 
ntfs-3g man page. > > As is said at the beginning of this reply, read the 
ntfs-3g man page! > > HTH, > > Chuck > > On 11/26/2021 3:29 AM, 
lists.deb...@netc.eu wrote: > > Hello to all, > > I have a dual boot PC with 
Windows 10 and Debian 11 > > This PC has 2 drives, one SSD that has both 
operating systems and a > > HDD where I store all other files (documents, 
music, images, ...) > > The goal is to share this HDD between Windows and 
Debian. To do it, I > > added the following line to the fstab file: > > > > 
UUID=ACB23705B236D414 /mnt/windows ntfs-3g defaults,umask=000 > > 0 0 > > > > 
the folders lount without any problem to /mnt/windows, all with the > > correct 
permission settings (rwx) : > > > > $ ls -l /mnt/windows/ > > total 80 > > 
drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4096 14 nov. 20:20 '$RECYCLE.BIN' > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root 
root 4096 24 nov. 15:59 CloudStation > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4096 21 nov. 
11:44 Documents > > -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 8192 25 juin 08:15 DumpStack.log.tmp 
> > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4096 22 nov. 20:41 Images > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 
4096 24 nov. 11:53 Music > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 8192 23 nov. 06:21 'System 
Volume Information' > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 40960 21 nov. 22:22 Downloads > 
> drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4096 21 nov. 19:44 Videos > > > > My problem is that 
in some sub folders, I'm not getting the write > > ("w") permission. For 
example on the "Documents" one: > > > > $ ls -l /mnt/windows/Documents/ > > 
total 117 > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 16384 24 nov. 15:59 User1 > > -rwxrwxrwx 1 
root root 0 26 nov. 2020 Default.rdp > > -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 432 11 mars 
2021 desktop.ini > > dr-xr-xr-x 1 root root 40960 24 nov. 15:59 User2 > > 
drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 16384 24 nov. 16:00 Public > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 
4096 24 nov. 15:59 User3 > > dr-xr-xr-x 1 root root 20480 21 nov. 12:05 Scan > 
> -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 18432 4 déc. 2016 Thumbs.db > > drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 
0 16 nov. 23:13 'Unified Remote' > > > > Most of the folders are OK, but I ave 
User2 and San that doesn't have > > the write ("w") permission... > > Do you 
have any idea on whats going on? > > Thanks in advance for all the help, > > 
Berst regards, > > Marc > >

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