On 07/30/2015 08:38 PM, g wrote:
On 07/30/15 20:16, jd1008 wrote: <>
So I tried as root, and it mounted OK: mount | grep sdc1 /dev/sdc1 on /sdc1 type fuseblk (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,user_id=508,group_id=508,allow_other,blksize=4096)
then as root I tried to copy a file to /sdc1:
# cp rpms.list /sdc1/ cp: cannot create regular file ‘/sdc1/rpms.list’: No such file or directory
So, what else need I do so that regular users can mount and write to usb sticks that are formatted as exfat FS?
do not have an answer for your question, but i do have a question about what you show above.
you show "/sdc1/" in command, while your 'mount"grep' shows "/dev/sdc1". are you working in "/dev" directory?
No!! I mount /dev/sdc1 on the directory /sdc1
with command "# cp rpms.list /sdc1/", is "rpms.list" in current directory?
Current directory (of the shell) happens to be other than /sdc1.
comment: when showing command lines, is best to 'drag and paste' than just write a command line. sometimes it helps to show full command line prompt.
just asking and trying to understand. :-)
No problem.
I think that there are quirks about the implementation of exfat as a user land driver (filesystem), instead of a kernel driver like ext[n].