I have the 'noauto' option in my line in fstab for sshfs, which means no automount on boot. ;) And to be able to automount you would also have to work with keys, see here under 'Automating the Connection': http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/8904 I have looked at the man page of sshfs and there it states that you can also use an umask option to specify permissions. 'sshfs [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/media/music2 /home/val/media/user_home/ -o umask=007' mounts the remote directory with read-write-execute permissions for user and group. Creating a file in the local folder respects this umask and on the server then group and owner are as expected for me for this file but group and owner and other permissions' are not.
Bye, signor_rossi. -- signor_rossi ------------------------------------------------------------------------ signor_rossi's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=11941 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=40283 _______________________________________________ unix mailing list [email protected] http://lists.slimdevices.com/lists/listinfo/unix
