On 3/2/2010 9:21 PM, Wes Barris wrote:
Dave Korn wrote:
<snip>
Do you *actually* own the files? What kind of drive is this; network or
local? NTFS or FAT?
This is a second drive in my XP system. The drive contains all of my
data. One of the folders/directories on this drive is what I use
as my home directory. It has an NTFS filesystem. I map my home
directory on this drive to a drive letter so it shows up in
Windows Explorer as a mapped network drive even though it is a disk
physically on the same system. This is a relatively new disk
(and computer). I copied my all of my data from my previous computer
onto this disk in this new computer.
I've always thought that I actually owned the files. The Windows
security tab says that I own them. It wasn't until I installed
Cygwin that I had any reason to believe otherwise.
I see that I can do a "chown -R wes" on a directory and it makes
me the owner as far as Cygwin is concerned. Windows Explorer
says that I am the owner before and after doing this. I can do
this to fix all of the files. It's just a bit curious to me that
Cygwin says I am not the owner but Windows does.
How was the data copied? By whom?
The simple answer to the question of why Cygwin doesn't know you're
the owner is likely to be that the SID of the owner of these files is
not listed in '/etc/passwd'. Get it in there using 'mkpasswd' and
Cygwin will show you that user as the owner. Since you changed the
owner already, this is likely moot at this point though.
--
Larry Hall http://www.rfk.com
RFK Partners, Inc. (508) 893-9779 - RFK Office
216 Dalton Rd. (508) 893-9889 - FAX
Holliston, MA 01746
_____________________________________________________________________
A: Yes.
> Q: Are you sure?
>> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
>>> Q: Why is top posting annoying in email?
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