On 2020-04-09 03:20, George N. White III wrote:
On Wed, 8 Apr 2020 at 15:54, Bob Goodwin <bobgoodwin@fastmail.us mailto:bobgoodwin@fastmail.us> wrote:
On 2020-04-08 12:05, George N. White III wrote: > CHeck that your "id" include the fuse group. ° I guess that means I need to add bobg to the fuse group. /n the past I would manage to muddle through using the user-group gui, now I am lost. I see commands like groupadd fuse but not sure of how to use them. Presently I see: $ id uid=1000(bobg) gid=1000(bobg) groups=1000(bobg),10(wheel) context=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0. c1023 Do I need to see "fuse" in the groupe there and how do I accomplish that? /It has been a while since I used afp, so things may have changed. First check that installing afp did create a fuse group and not something else (like "afp"), then use "usermod -a -G fuse" to add yourself to the fuse group.
There is no group "fuse" on the system.
[egreshko@f31k ~]$ grep fuse /etc/group [egreshko@f31k ~]$