read and write permission for FAT32 partition in Ubuntu












14















This is a strange problem. I have the following partition table



   Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/sda1 * 1 13 102400 7 HPFS/NTFS
Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
/dev/sda2 13 5737 45978624 7 HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda3 5738 10600 39062047+ 83 Linux
/dev/sda4 10601 19457 71143852+ 5 Extended
/dev/sda5 10601 11208 4883728+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sda6 11209 15033 30720000 b W95 FAT32
/dev/sda7 15033 19457 35537920 7 HPFS/NTFS


I dual boot Win7 (sda2) and Ubuntu (sda3) and wanted to use the FAT32 partition to share files across two OS's.



I followed some online tutorial and have done these:



sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32
sudo mount /dev/sda6/ /media/FAT32


after I mounted the file, I can only read but not be able to write to it.



I checked the file permission, it becomes:



drwxr-xr-x


but after I unmounted the it then becomes



drwxrwxrwx


and I can read and write to it.



I don't know where I've down wrong.










share|improve this question















migrated from stackoverflow.com Dec 7 '09 at 12:46


This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.























    14















    This is a strange problem. I have the following partition table



       Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
    /dev/sda1 * 1 13 102400 7 HPFS/NTFS
    Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
    /dev/sda2 13 5737 45978624 7 HPFS/NTFS
    /dev/sda3 5738 10600 39062047+ 83 Linux
    /dev/sda4 10601 19457 71143852+ 5 Extended
    /dev/sda5 10601 11208 4883728+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris
    /dev/sda6 11209 15033 30720000 b W95 FAT32
    /dev/sda7 15033 19457 35537920 7 HPFS/NTFS


    I dual boot Win7 (sda2) and Ubuntu (sda3) and wanted to use the FAT32 partition to share files across two OS's.



    I followed some online tutorial and have done these:



    sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
    sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32
    sudo mount /dev/sda6/ /media/FAT32


    after I mounted the file, I can only read but not be able to write to it.



    I checked the file permission, it becomes:



    drwxr-xr-x


    but after I unmounted the it then becomes



    drwxrwxrwx


    and I can read and write to it.



    I don't know where I've down wrong.










    share|improve this question















    migrated from stackoverflow.com Dec 7 '09 at 12:46


    This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.





















      14












      14








      14


      5






      This is a strange problem. I have the following partition table



         Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
      /dev/sda1 * 1 13 102400 7 HPFS/NTFS
      Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
      /dev/sda2 13 5737 45978624 7 HPFS/NTFS
      /dev/sda3 5738 10600 39062047+ 83 Linux
      /dev/sda4 10601 19457 71143852+ 5 Extended
      /dev/sda5 10601 11208 4883728+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris
      /dev/sda6 11209 15033 30720000 b W95 FAT32
      /dev/sda7 15033 19457 35537920 7 HPFS/NTFS


      I dual boot Win7 (sda2) and Ubuntu (sda3) and wanted to use the FAT32 partition to share files across two OS's.



      I followed some online tutorial and have done these:



      sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
      sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32
      sudo mount /dev/sda6/ /media/FAT32


      after I mounted the file, I can only read but not be able to write to it.



      I checked the file permission, it becomes:



      drwxr-xr-x


      but after I unmounted the it then becomes



      drwxrwxrwx


      and I can read and write to it.



      I don't know where I've down wrong.










      share|improve this question
















      This is a strange problem. I have the following partition table



         Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
      /dev/sda1 * 1 13 102400 7 HPFS/NTFS
      Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
      /dev/sda2 13 5737 45978624 7 HPFS/NTFS
      /dev/sda3 5738 10600 39062047+ 83 Linux
      /dev/sda4 10601 19457 71143852+ 5 Extended
      /dev/sda5 10601 11208 4883728+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris
      /dev/sda6 11209 15033 30720000 b W95 FAT32
      /dev/sda7 15033 19457 35537920 7 HPFS/NTFS


      I dual boot Win7 (sda2) and Ubuntu (sda3) and wanted to use the FAT32 partition to share files across two OS's.



      I followed some online tutorial and have done these:



      sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
      sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32
      sudo mount /dev/sda6/ /media/FAT32


      after I mounted the file, I can only read but not be able to write to it.



      I checked the file permission, it becomes:



      drwxr-xr-x


      but after I unmounted the it then becomes



      drwxrwxrwx


      and I can read and write to it.



      I don't know where I've down wrong.







      ubuntu mount fat32






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 2 at 15:36









      Etherealone

      164113




      164113










      asked Dec 5 '09 at 15:36









      DeanDean

      200137




      200137




      migrated from stackoverflow.com Dec 7 '09 at 12:46


      This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.









      migrated from stackoverflow.com Dec 7 '09 at 12:46


      This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
























          9 Answers
          9






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          16














          Try mounting with rw and specify the type:



          mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx


          where uid and gid are that of your user account.






          share|improve this answer


























          • The umask has effect when creating new files.

            – geek
            Dec 7 '09 at 17:05











          • user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

            – quack quixote
            Dec 7 '09 at 19:03











          • yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

            – John T
            Dec 8 '09 at 0:02






          • 1





            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

            – chefarov
            Dec 18 '17 at 8:57





















          1














          For FAT filesystems, read/write availability is governed by the mount options.



          Consult the manpage for mount and read about uid and gid mount options for FAT.






          share|improve this answer































            1














            Have you tried writing to the files with a sudo command? That should work with your current setup.



            To get file writes for your normal user working, you need to use the uid and gid options to mount, to set the owner of files on the partition to your current userID. You probably also want either umask or dmask and fmask options.



            Your mount command would look like this:



            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=022
            # assuming your user's UID is 1000, GID is 1000
            # umask=022 sets permission mode 755 for all files on the partition





            share|improve this answer































              1














              You have the wrong order on the commands you want:



              sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
              sudo mount /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32
              sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32


              What is happening is that /media/FAT32 represents different directories before and after the mount. Before it's the directory you made, and which you chmod'ed 777. After, it's the root directory of the filesystem in /dev/sda6.






              share|improve this answer































                1














                If you simply forget about command line and mount with Nautilus, it should set it as you want.



                From the terminal, the permissions of the folder before mounting doesn't matter. It's the mount options that count. Try:



                mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx,umask=133,dmask=022


                This will set files to rw-r--r-- and folders to rwxr-xr-x.



                If you want other user/group and permissions, for instance to copy files from fat32 to the ext4 partition with the desired attributes, better consult the mount manpage. Roughly you put on umask the opposite of what you would put on chmod.






                share|improve this answer

































                  0














                  Sometimes I lost the windows disk from Linux and I solved using mount with "-o force", as this example:



                  sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /media/win -o force


                  In your case, being FAT32 you should read about, but my be this tip help. Anyway, try at your own risk!






                  share|improve this answer

































                    0














                    I had exactly the same problem and the only thing that actually worked is:



                    sudo mount -t vfat  /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,umask=0000


                    See also that answer






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                      – Eildosa
                      Jan 6 '15 at 12:40











                    • Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                      – lauhub
                      Jan 6 '15 at 14:31






                    • 1





                      for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                      – Eildosa
                      Jan 6 '15 at 15:32



















                    0














                    Without manually mount, an fstab line do the trick,



                    UUID=1DD9-0D44 /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G vfat rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,user 0 0



                    (uid,gid are of your user, /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G must be pre-created)



                    but note, mount -a seems not applying properly to test the new fstab line, so a full reboot helps.






                    share|improve this answer































                      0














                      Very important repair/check the disk under windows before using it on linux, by default fat/ntfs drivers disable write if they find errors on the disk



                      chkdsk d: /f 


                      Then



                      sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)


                      as motioned before






                      share|improve this answer























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                        9 Answers
                        9






                        active

                        oldest

                        votes








                        9 Answers
                        9






                        active

                        oldest

                        votes









                        active

                        oldest

                        votes






                        active

                        oldest

                        votes









                        16














                        Try mounting with rw and specify the type:



                        mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx


                        where uid and gid are that of your user account.






                        share|improve this answer


























                        • The umask has effect when creating new files.

                          – geek
                          Dec 7 '09 at 17:05











                        • user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

                          – quack quixote
                          Dec 7 '09 at 19:03











                        • yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

                          – John T
                          Dec 8 '09 at 0:02






                        • 1





                          sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

                          – chefarov
                          Dec 18 '17 at 8:57


















                        16














                        Try mounting with rw and specify the type:



                        mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx


                        where uid and gid are that of your user account.






                        share|improve this answer


























                        • The umask has effect when creating new files.

                          – geek
                          Dec 7 '09 at 17:05











                        • user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

                          – quack quixote
                          Dec 7 '09 at 19:03











                        • yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

                          – John T
                          Dec 8 '09 at 0:02






                        • 1





                          sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

                          – chefarov
                          Dec 18 '17 at 8:57
















                        16












                        16








                        16







                        Try mounting with rw and specify the type:



                        mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx


                        where uid and gid are that of your user account.






                        share|improve this answer















                        Try mounting with rw and specify the type:



                        mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx


                        where uid and gid are that of your user account.







                        share|improve this answer














                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer








                        edited Dec 8 '09 at 0:03

























                        answered Dec 7 '09 at 15:32









                        John TJohn T

                        142k20293329




                        142k20293329













                        • The umask has effect when creating new files.

                          – geek
                          Dec 7 '09 at 17:05











                        • user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

                          – quack quixote
                          Dec 7 '09 at 19:03











                        • yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

                          – John T
                          Dec 8 '09 at 0:02






                        • 1





                          sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

                          – chefarov
                          Dec 18 '17 at 8:57





















                        • The umask has effect when creating new files.

                          – geek
                          Dec 7 '09 at 17:05











                        • user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

                          – quack quixote
                          Dec 7 '09 at 19:03











                        • yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

                          – John T
                          Dec 8 '09 at 0:02






                        • 1





                          sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

                          – chefarov
                          Dec 18 '17 at 8:57



















                        The umask has effect when creating new files.

                        – geek
                        Dec 7 '09 at 17:05





                        The umask has effect when creating new files.

                        – geek
                        Dec 7 '09 at 17:05













                        user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

                        – quack quixote
                        Dec 7 '09 at 19:03





                        user and auto are options for the fstab entry; they aren't very useful on the commandline.

                        – quack quixote
                        Dec 7 '09 at 19:03













                        yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

                        – John T
                        Dec 8 '09 at 0:02





                        yeah i just translated one of my fstab entries to a command line. Left in some bits that aren't useful but they aren't exactly harmful either.

                        – John T
                        Dec 8 '09 at 0:02




                        1




                        1





                        sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

                        – chefarov
                        Dec 18 '17 at 8:57







                        sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)

                        – chefarov
                        Dec 18 '17 at 8:57















                        1














                        For FAT filesystems, read/write availability is governed by the mount options.



                        Consult the manpage for mount and read about uid and gid mount options for FAT.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          1














                          For FAT filesystems, read/write availability is governed by the mount options.



                          Consult the manpage for mount and read about uid and gid mount options for FAT.






                          share|improve this answer


























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            For FAT filesystems, read/write availability is governed by the mount options.



                            Consult the manpage for mount and read about uid and gid mount options for FAT.






                            share|improve this answer













                            For FAT filesystems, read/write availability is governed by the mount options.



                            Consult the manpage for mount and read about uid and gid mount options for FAT.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Dec 7 '09 at 14:48









                            geekgeek

                            6,20231616




                            6,20231616























                                1














                                Have you tried writing to the files with a sudo command? That should work with your current setup.



                                To get file writes for your normal user working, you need to use the uid and gid options to mount, to set the owner of files on the partition to your current userID. You probably also want either umask or dmask and fmask options.



                                Your mount command would look like this:



                                sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=022
                                # assuming your user's UID is 1000, GID is 1000
                                # umask=022 sets permission mode 755 for all files on the partition





                                share|improve this answer




























                                  1














                                  Have you tried writing to the files with a sudo command? That should work with your current setup.



                                  To get file writes for your normal user working, you need to use the uid and gid options to mount, to set the owner of files on the partition to your current userID. You probably also want either umask or dmask and fmask options.



                                  Your mount command would look like this:



                                  sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=022
                                  # assuming your user's UID is 1000, GID is 1000
                                  # umask=022 sets permission mode 755 for all files on the partition





                                  share|improve this answer


























                                    1












                                    1








                                    1







                                    Have you tried writing to the files with a sudo command? That should work with your current setup.



                                    To get file writes for your normal user working, you need to use the uid and gid options to mount, to set the owner of files on the partition to your current userID. You probably also want either umask or dmask and fmask options.



                                    Your mount command would look like this:



                                    sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=022
                                    # assuming your user's UID is 1000, GID is 1000
                                    # umask=022 sets permission mode 755 for all files on the partition





                                    share|improve this answer













                                    Have you tried writing to the files with a sudo command? That should work with your current setup.



                                    To get file writes for your normal user working, you need to use the uid and gid options to mount, to set the owner of files on the partition to your current userID. You probably also want either umask or dmask and fmask options.



                                    Your mount command would look like this:



                                    sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=022
                                    # assuming your user's UID is 1000, GID is 1000
                                    # umask=022 sets permission mode 755 for all files on the partition






                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Dec 7 '09 at 19:00









                                    quack quixotequack quixote

                                    35.2k1087119




                                    35.2k1087119























                                        1














                                        You have the wrong order on the commands you want:



                                        sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
                                        sudo mount /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32
                                        sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32


                                        What is happening is that /media/FAT32 represents different directories before and after the mount. Before it's the directory you made, and which you chmod'ed 777. After, it's the root directory of the filesystem in /dev/sda6.






                                        share|improve this answer




























                                          1














                                          You have the wrong order on the commands you want:



                                          sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
                                          sudo mount /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32
                                          sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32


                                          What is happening is that /media/FAT32 represents different directories before and after the mount. Before it's the directory you made, and which you chmod'ed 777. After, it's the root directory of the filesystem in /dev/sda6.






                                          share|improve this answer


























                                            1












                                            1








                                            1







                                            You have the wrong order on the commands you want:



                                            sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
                                            sudo mount /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32
                                            sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32


                                            What is happening is that /media/FAT32 represents different directories before and after the mount. Before it's the directory you made, and which you chmod'ed 777. After, it's the root directory of the filesystem in /dev/sda6.






                                            share|improve this answer













                                            You have the wrong order on the commands you want:



                                            sudo mkdir /media/FAT32
                                            sudo mount /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32
                                            sudo chmod 777 /media/FAT32


                                            What is happening is that /media/FAT32 represents different directories before and after the mount. Before it's the directory you made, and which you chmod'ed 777. After, it's the root directory of the filesystem in /dev/sda6.







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered May 15 '10 at 20:51









                                            jnevesjneves

                                            31114




                                            31114























                                                1














                                                If you simply forget about command line and mount with Nautilus, it should set it as you want.



                                                From the terminal, the permissions of the folder before mounting doesn't matter. It's the mount options that count. Try:



                                                mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx,umask=133,dmask=022


                                                This will set files to rw-r--r-- and folders to rwxr-xr-x.



                                                If you want other user/group and permissions, for instance to copy files from fat32 to the ext4 partition with the desired attributes, better consult the mount manpage. Roughly you put on umask the opposite of what you would put on chmod.






                                                share|improve this answer






























                                                  1














                                                  If you simply forget about command line and mount with Nautilus, it should set it as you want.



                                                  From the terminal, the permissions of the folder before mounting doesn't matter. It's the mount options that count. Try:



                                                  mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx,umask=133,dmask=022


                                                  This will set files to rw-r--r-- and folders to rwxr-xr-x.



                                                  If you want other user/group and permissions, for instance to copy files from fat32 to the ext4 partition with the desired attributes, better consult the mount manpage. Roughly you put on umask the opposite of what you would put on chmod.






                                                  share|improve this answer




























                                                    1












                                                    1








                                                    1







                                                    If you simply forget about command line and mount with Nautilus, it should set it as you want.



                                                    From the terminal, the permissions of the folder before mounting doesn't matter. It's the mount options that count. Try:



                                                    mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx,umask=133,dmask=022


                                                    This will set files to rw-r--r-- and folders to rwxr-xr-x.



                                                    If you want other user/group and permissions, for instance to copy files from fat32 to the ext4 partition with the desired attributes, better consult the mount manpage. Roughly you put on umask the opposite of what you would put on chmod.






                                                    share|improve this answer















                                                    If you simply forget about command line and mount with Nautilus, it should set it as you want.



                                                    From the terminal, the permissions of the folder before mounting doesn't matter. It's the mount options that count. Try:



                                                    mount -t vfat /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=xxx,gid=xxx,umask=133,dmask=022


                                                    This will set files to rw-r--r-- and folders to rwxr-xr-x.



                                                    If you want other user/group and permissions, for instance to copy files from fat32 to the ext4 partition with the desired attributes, better consult the mount manpage. Roughly you put on umask the opposite of what you would put on chmod.







                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    edited Aug 20 '10 at 7:42

























                                                    answered Aug 18 '10 at 12:44









                                                    user39559user39559

                                                    1,6981415




                                                    1,6981415























                                                        0














                                                        Sometimes I lost the windows disk from Linux and I solved using mount with "-o force", as this example:



                                                        sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /media/win -o force


                                                        In your case, being FAT32 you should read about, but my be this tip help. Anyway, try at your own risk!






                                                        share|improve this answer






























                                                          0














                                                          Sometimes I lost the windows disk from Linux and I solved using mount with "-o force", as this example:



                                                          sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /media/win -o force


                                                          In your case, being FAT32 you should read about, but my be this tip help. Anyway, try at your own risk!






                                                          share|improve this answer




























                                                            0












                                                            0








                                                            0







                                                            Sometimes I lost the windows disk from Linux and I solved using mount with "-o force", as this example:



                                                            sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /media/win -o force


                                                            In your case, being FAT32 you should read about, but my be this tip help. Anyway, try at your own risk!






                                                            share|improve this answer















                                                            Sometimes I lost the windows disk from Linux and I solved using mount with "-o force", as this example:



                                                            sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /media/win -o force


                                                            In your case, being FAT32 you should read about, but my be this tip help. Anyway, try at your own risk!







                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                            edited Aug 13 '11 at 6:01









                                                            Tom Wijsman

                                                            50.3k23164247




                                                            50.3k23164247










                                                            answered Dec 5 '09 at 15:47







                                                            Germán Arduino






























                                                                0














                                                                I had exactly the same problem and the only thing that actually worked is:



                                                                sudo mount -t vfat  /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,umask=0000


                                                                See also that answer






                                                                share|improve this answer


























                                                                • I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 12:40











                                                                • Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                                                                  – lauhub
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 14:31






                                                                • 1





                                                                  for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 15:32
















                                                                0














                                                                I had exactly the same problem and the only thing that actually worked is:



                                                                sudo mount -t vfat  /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,umask=0000


                                                                See also that answer






                                                                share|improve this answer


























                                                                • I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 12:40











                                                                • Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                                                                  – lauhub
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 14:31






                                                                • 1





                                                                  for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 15:32














                                                                0












                                                                0








                                                                0







                                                                I had exactly the same problem and the only thing that actually worked is:



                                                                sudo mount -t vfat  /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,umask=0000


                                                                See also that answer






                                                                share|improve this answer















                                                                I had exactly the same problem and the only thing that actually worked is:



                                                                sudo mount -t vfat  /dev/sda6 /media/FAT32 -o rw,umask=0000


                                                                See also that answer







                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:16









                                                                Community

                                                                1




                                                                1










                                                                answered Dec 17 '14 at 8:19









                                                                lauhublauhub

                                                                1679




                                                                1679













                                                                • I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 12:40











                                                                • Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                                                                  – lauhub
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 14:31






                                                                • 1





                                                                  for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 15:32



















                                                                • I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 12:40











                                                                • Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                                                                  – lauhub
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 14:31






                                                                • 1





                                                                  for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                                                                  – Eildosa
                                                                  Jan 6 '15 at 15:32

















                                                                I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                                                                – Eildosa
                                                                Jan 6 '15 at 12:40





                                                                I did this, the usb key is still write protected

                                                                – Eildosa
                                                                Jan 6 '15 at 12:40













                                                                Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                                                                – lauhub
                                                                Jan 6 '15 at 14:31





                                                                Did you try chmod 777 /media/FAT32 ?

                                                                – lauhub
                                                                Jan 6 '15 at 14:31




                                                                1




                                                                1





                                                                for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                                                                – Eildosa
                                                                Jan 6 '15 at 15:32





                                                                for some reason removing ",umask=0000" worked

                                                                – Eildosa
                                                                Jan 6 '15 at 15:32











                                                                0














                                                                Without manually mount, an fstab line do the trick,



                                                                UUID=1DD9-0D44 /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G vfat rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,user 0 0



                                                                (uid,gid are of your user, /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G must be pre-created)



                                                                but note, mount -a seems not applying properly to test the new fstab line, so a full reboot helps.






                                                                share|improve this answer




























                                                                  0














                                                                  Without manually mount, an fstab line do the trick,



                                                                  UUID=1DD9-0D44 /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G vfat rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,user 0 0



                                                                  (uid,gid are of your user, /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G must be pre-created)



                                                                  but note, mount -a seems not applying properly to test the new fstab line, so a full reboot helps.






                                                                  share|improve this answer


























                                                                    0












                                                                    0








                                                                    0







                                                                    Without manually mount, an fstab line do the trick,



                                                                    UUID=1DD9-0D44 /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G vfat rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,user 0 0



                                                                    (uid,gid are of your user, /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G must be pre-created)



                                                                    but note, mount -a seems not applying properly to test the new fstab line, so a full reboot helps.






                                                                    share|improve this answer













                                                                    Without manually mount, an fstab line do the trick,



                                                                    UUID=1DD9-0D44 /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G vfat rw,noatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,user 0 0



                                                                    (uid,gid are of your user, /media/exthd/TERABYTE_G must be pre-created)



                                                                    but note, mount -a seems not applying properly to test the new fstab line, so a full reboot helps.







                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                    answered Feb 11 '18 at 13:03









                                                                    Angelo DureghelloAngelo Dureghello

                                                                    1




                                                                    1























                                                                        0














                                                                        Very important repair/check the disk under windows before using it on linux, by default fat/ntfs drivers disable write if they find errors on the disk



                                                                        chkdsk d: /f 


                                                                        Then



                                                                        sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)


                                                                        as motioned before






                                                                        share|improve this answer




























                                                                          0














                                                                          Very important repair/check the disk under windows before using it on linux, by default fat/ntfs drivers disable write if they find errors on the disk



                                                                          chkdsk d: /f 


                                                                          Then



                                                                          sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)


                                                                          as motioned before






                                                                          share|improve this answer


























                                                                            0












                                                                            0








                                                                            0







                                                                            Very important repair/check the disk under windows before using it on linux, by default fat/ntfs drivers disable write if they find errors on the disk



                                                                            chkdsk d: /f 


                                                                            Then



                                                                            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)


                                                                            as motioned before






                                                                            share|improve this answer













                                                                            Very important repair/check the disk under windows before using it on linux, by default fat/ntfs drivers disable write if they find errors on the disk



                                                                            chkdsk d: /f 


                                                                            Then



                                                                            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /media/FAT32 -o rw,uid=$(id -u),gid=$(id -g)


                                                                            as motioned before







                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                                            answered Jul 16 '18 at 2:17









                                                                            intikaintika

                                                                            744316




                                                                            744316






























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