Am 2017-04-09 15:10, schrieb Hendrik Boom:
I don't know how gvfs does it, but it can be done with a user file system.
It happens all the time when I use sshfs.  An ssh file system allows
only the user
who mounted it to access it. Since sshfs, once it gains control, can do as it
pleases, if can simply refuse to allow opeations under whatever
criteria are coded
into it.

Ok, mounts are something special. Maybe its the same as with nfs mounts. Through nfs user root is matched as user nobody and has no special rights on network filesystems. Thats normal. Backups can exclude mounted filesystems. But the .gvfs directory is a normal directory in the local filesystem, and root has no access to it. Thats not normal.

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