this post was submitted on 29 Sep 2024
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sudo chown -R youruser:youruser /path/to/mountpoint
Will make all the files in the path owned by you. Be careful if you have more complex permissions on there they will be lost.
Will try tomorrow when I get up.
Would /dev/sda suffice as mounting point or?
Haven't set any permissions outside standard given ones by usage.
Thanks for answering.
/dev/sda is the whole raw disk - you typically don't want to directly interact with /dev/sda, unless you are partitioning or overwriting it. There are a few layers between that device and the files:
You'll need to find where that ext4 filesystem is mounted, and run the chown command on that. You can run
lsblk
and see a tree of the above hierarchy, with the ext4 filesystem's mountpount shown in the right-hand column.You need the mount point not the device. Probably something like
/media/Files
This is where ACL permissions would help. He could give his new id ACL permissions to the files and that wouldn't mess with the current permissions.
From the root/beginning subdir: sudo setfacl -R -m u:{replace with your new id}:rwx .