
On 27 April 2012 15:13, Jason White <jason@jasonjgw.net> wrote:
Toby Corkindale <toby.corkindale@strategicdata.com.au> wrote:
Try adding this parameter to the mount.cifs command: -o uid=colinfee
Yes, try it without specifying gid or any other options.
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Tried it, same result. However if I specify the uid and gid as the numeric value it works! ~$ sudo mount.cifs //ad.monash.edu/home/my-server-name/colinfee/home/colinfee/ad-home -ocredentials=/home/colinfee/. smb/ad-credentials,uid=1000,gid=1000 ~$ ls -ald ad-home/ drwxr-xr-x 6 colinfee colinfee 0 Apr 16 16:42 ad-home/ According to man mount.cifs uid=arg sets the uid that will own all files or directories on the mounted filesystem when the server does not provide ownership information. It may be specified as either a username or a numeric uid. When not specified, the default is uid 0. The mount.cifs helper must be at version 1.10 or higher to support specifying the uid in non-numeric form. See the section on FILE AND DIRECTORY OWNERSHIP AND PERMISSIONS below for more information. ...and ~$ sudo mount.cifs -V mount.cifs version: 5.3 -- Colin Fee tfeccles@gmail.com