I've been using Sonarr for about 6 months now and just started getting the following message. "Download client Deluge places downloads in the root folder /mnt/Downloads/Torrents. You should not download to a root folder.". Unless I'm missing something it makes no sense since for external drives the default mount point for them is /run/media which is a root folder. So I don't get why when I have moved my mounts to /mnt/ it makes any difference.

Once mounted it has permissions dr-xr-xr-x however once mounted the directory is of root ownership and chown user /home/user/Test has no effect. This means I cannot make or change files in it as a normal user.


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Is it possible to mount container top level folder to a folder on host?

like this;

docker run -it -v /root/any/folder:/ --name test1 ubuntu:16.04

I tried it but failed. Is there any way to do that?

which is not what bind mount is for. Other goal could be creating an empty image without filesystem (from scratch), starting a container and mounting the filesystem from the host. I did something similar in my latest tutorial but I mounted a file not the root filesystem.

trying to mount a volume to my container from the docker run command.It seems like the folder is always created as root instead of the container user. This makes it so that I'm lacking rights on the folder(cant create or write files for logging).

Here we can see that only the owner has write-rights. And root is the owner.I would expect(I want) jboss to be the owner of this folder. Or at least that all users have read/write rights given the :rw option in the -v parameter

Yes, the root folder that sonarr is trying to find is deleted. The intended folder has been changed for all series on the series editor to the targetted root folder, however sonnar is not recognizing it. To my understanding, permissions are often the cause. I have set the permissions on sonarr to 755.

I have a drive mounted and want to share the partition's root directory. Otherwise I have to set up a whole bunch of separate shares, or move all the root folders into a subfolder. Is sharing the root directory possible?

I have managed to share a drive root before by using a / as the path, but I have also had it go sideways or even be intermittent in it's functions. Making/sharing a folder with everything moved into it is by far a better solution.

Above's mount procedure is not permanent, I use a script to mount it whenever I need it. However, you can also make the mount permanent if you like (e.g. System preferences / Users&Groups / Login Items / + / Select any root folder within (!) the NFS share / Add).

Hi

Normally the mount point is in control by root:root, files/folders under the mount point can be owned by users etc. Did you edit the mount point to allow for the user group to own the mountpoint, eg defaults,users?

Before macOS 10.15 Catalina, you could create paths at the root of the local drive. 10.15 now prevents access to this location. See "About the read-only system volume in macOS Catalina." We recommend the /Users/Shared base path for compatibility with all MacOS versions.

Thank you for the response......Yes i want to access it in linux and i should be able to change the permissions of the folders which i am not able to do ...I am getting permission denied...The security style which is currently set is ntfs ....but have given access to the server Allow root access...Still root cannot change the permission.

There are lot of AD groups which has access to the folder whre in windows users get access to the folders via that.....My question Is it possible to change the permissions of the folder from linux by root even if it is having security style as ntfs...

Luckily, foldermount app has come to the rescue. With FolderMount, you have an independently-developed app from XDA that allows you to mount internal memory folders to external memory (sdcard partition) of your Android device.

All the sftp folders are located in a directory (/home/sftpfolder) and I would like to share sftpfolder and all subdirectories through samba.


I think I'm not able to do that because of permissions: SFTP requires some kind of access to the folders (home directory must be owned by root and sub dir by the user itself), on the other hand samba user need its own permissions.



I don't want other to manipulate files owned by root, I would like that a single user (the one who's granted samba access) could read/write/delete files owned by sFTP users but, in order to do so, I need the read access to the entire sftp directory because I would like to have just one share, and not as many shares as sFTP users.

Pretty complicated I think.

A user that can read/write/delete other users files, IS root.


Perhaps you can make some sort of group rights and set up folders that auto add the group membership to anything in them (sticky bit stuff I think).

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