Patrik Hasibuan wrote:
> of course the account is administrator because before doing what you
> told me, I did : " [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/> su Password: 
> suseonthelap:/ # ".
> 
> What I meant was, a normal user account (non administrator login
> account) can not write on "hda2" and "hda4" although I put "rw, acl
> ....." in the "/etc/fstab". That's what I am confused about. How can
> I make a normal user login account can use/write the space on the
> other partitions.
> 
> The error message is "permission denied".

Patrik,

I'm sorry if I seem to be making you do unnecessary things. I thought
that you had a technical problem that you hadn't explained very well, so
I was trying to get more information to understand it. But now I think
the problem is that you don't understand the principles of file
permissions in Unix/Linux, so I suggest you read up on that. One place
to start might be Chapter 7 of the Startup Guide:

<http://www.novell.com/documentation/opensuse102/pdfdoc/opensuse102_startup/opensuse102_startup.pdf>

I'm still not entirely sure what it is you want to do (you didn't
actually do what I asked last time, so I still don't have the
information :) But I suspect that to do what you want, you would have to
change the file permissions on those filesystems. That's a very bad idea
unless you really understand what you're doing, given that they are the
root filesystems of other operating systems.

Perhaps if you explain in detail what it is you want to do, we could
suggest the best way to do it.

Cheers, Dave
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