Switching to root privileges using xffm
John Shane
jslists at mtwafrica.org
Wed Mar 3 17:22:22 CET 2004
Thanks, Brian. That makes sense. I'll work on it. My first attempt
using <#smbmount //Samba.share /mount.point -o rw> hasn't worked. I
still get "permission denied". So I've not yet mounted it with the
correct permissions but I see what I have to do. Thanks. John
On Wed, 03 Mar 2004 04:03:06 -0500
"Brian J. Tarricone" <bjt23 at cornell.edu> wrote:
> John Shane wrote:
>
> >Hi all, Is there a quick way to switch to root privileges from a
> >normal user when using xffm? I find myself needing this when I want
> >to rename a file on an smbmount. I scan documents on a network
> >scanner that are dropped into a directory on a Samba server. I can
> >quickly launch xffm with a right click of the mouse and see the
> >scanned files but it's only at a
> >user level. To rename files I have to start a terminal,
> >switch to root and then start xffm. I'm hoping there's a quicker way
> >but I haven't found it yet. Any suggestions or have I missed the
> >answer in the manuals?
> >
> i don't believe it's possible to do this... however, the real solution
>
> is to mount the shares such that they're writeable by a normal user
> (see 'man smbmount' - the -o options for smbmount can be applied as -o
>
> options to 'mount' as well). that's assuming, of course, that you
> have the ability to do so (if you have root on the machine, you
> should).
>
> -brian
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