Thank you for taking the time to report this bug and helping to make
Ubuntu better. However, I am closing it because the bug has been fixed
in the latest development version of Ubuntu - Lucid Lynx. It won't be
fixed in previous versions of Ubuntu because the package doesn't fit the
requirements for
Scratch that! I'm still having the same problem.
I thought it was saving, but what actually happened is that the mount
got drop between the time I opened it and saved it. So when I saved it,
after executed newgrp fuse, it saved the file to the mount point that
was empty.
Any help would be appreci
After reading Damian Eads's post carefully, I noticed that I didn't
execute this command:
newgrp fuse
After performing this command, I was able to save files on the remote
file system.
Note: At one time, that step wasn't necessary for me, but not it is for
some reason.
Why isn't adding my usern
I'm using sshfs with Ubuntu 9.04 64 bit.
I'm successfully mounting the remote file system, but when I try to
update a file on the mounted remote file system (with gedit), I get the
attached permissions error saying I don't have permission to save the
file (see attachment).
I'm mounting the remote
yea...I remebered that too but even then it does not work
peter
--- Darwin Award Winner schrieb am Fr,
24.4.2009:
Von: Darwin Award Winner
Betreff: [Bug 123501] Re: sshfs : : Permission denied
An: pet_muell...@yahoo.de
Datum: Freitag, 24. April 2009, 17:52
At a minimum, any fuse packages
At a minimum, any fuse packages should trigger one of those little
system-notification-area-lightbulb-info-popups that says "Remember to
add yourself to the fuse group."
--
sshfs : : Permission denied
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/123501
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Is this still an issue in Intrepid or Jaunty?
** Changed in: sshfs-fuse (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
--
sshfs : : Permission denied
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/123501
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--
You can use "sshfs -o allow_other [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
/home/user/otherlinux"
--
sshfs : : Permission denied
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/123501
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(OT) Damian: Does newgrp actually work that way for you? It has never
worked thus for me, but I wasn't sure at the time of your comment, so I
did not reply. I had occasion to use newgrp yesterday, however, so I
tried it without logout -- and got the same behavior I always have,
which is that it c
The user does not need to log out after adding themselves to the fuse
group in order to invoke sshfs. Simply type 'newgrp fuse', which will
change the user's current group to fuse. Then type 'id' to verify the
current group id has been changed as requested. Now, you can try
mounting a remote direct
I found that in 7.04, simply adding current user to fuse is not enough.
the /dev/fuse default owner/group is root:root. So in short, after sshfs
was installed, we need to perform the following steps in order to make
it work.
1. add user to fuse group.
2. make sure /dev/fuse group belongs to fuse
Today i was playing around with encfs and to get encfs working it was
necessary to do a "sudo addgroup user fuse"...and then after a while i
found out that i have a connection with sshfs...but i was not knowing
why...your answer explains now everything :-)
but anyway sshfs shoud work "out off th
You will have to add yourself to the 'fuse' group before you can mount
fuse filesystems (including sshfs). You can do this either through the
"Users and Groups" utility, or by running 'sudo adduser fuse'
at a prompt. Once you have done this, log out and back in (sorry,
that's a limitation of Uni
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