Mail Archives: cygwin/2007/06/25/03:17:59
On 6/25/07, Brian Dessent <brian AT dessent DOT net> wrote:
> Thorsten Kampe wrote:
>
> > > The last solution I could think of was removing the umask 022 command from
> > > the /etc/profile. This (I think) would have the effect of making all new
> > > created files having 777 or 666 permissions. However, does this affect files
> > > created from scripts or other programs? Or is there another solution to my
> > > problem that I haven't thought of?
> >
> > Yeah, switch back to FAT. I had the same issue. NTFS without
> > permissions is senseless.
>
> It's not senseless. Even without permissions, NTFS has a lot more going
> for it than FAT, such as compression, hard links, non-insane timestamp
> accuracy, largefile support, ...
Yes, I was using it for the file compression. With my install of
cygwin, it almost halved the installation size, which is very useful
when you have a ton of programs on your usb and only 4gb to play
with...
>
> To the OP, I think you're looking for CYGWIN=nontsec.
>
Thanks that worked great! The only problem I had after that was that
existing NTFS permissions were still there, i.e opening a folder using
explorer would be refused when on a wrong computer. I fixed that by
moving all my files onto a fat partition, then back to my ntfs
partition.
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