Is there any option with mount command to give write permission to non-root user

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I have to add a new disk to few systems with same specs. I have followed many tutorials to create FS and mount. But I have facing one problem. I want my disk should be mounted at boot time and a specific user "user1" should be able to write in this disk. Is there any option available in mount options I know I can use chmod command for this purpose. Following was the statement that I have added in /etc/fstab



UUID=f548e157-333b-434a-8ad1-832a97c0d766  /mnt/ssd1      ext4    defaults        0       2


This statement mount the new disk at boot time but the "user1" cannot write in this mount point. My OS is Ubuntu 18.04.



Here are the few references that I have following but could not found the solution




  1. https://askubuntu.com/questions/251206/mount-usb-drive-with-write-permissions-for-everyone-or-specific-user

  2. https://askubuntu.com/questions/125257/how-do-i-add-an-additional-hard-drive

  3. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Fstab#Options










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  • See mount(8) - Linux manual page the section titled Non-superuser mounts. Beyond mounting, simple Unix filesystem permissions apply. As long as the user owns the file or directory or belongs to the group with read/write permission, the user will be able to write to the mount.

    – David C. Rankin
    3 mins ago


















0















I have to add a new disk to few systems with same specs. I have followed many tutorials to create FS and mount. But I have facing one problem. I want my disk should be mounted at boot time and a specific user "user1" should be able to write in this disk. Is there any option available in mount options I know I can use chmod command for this purpose. Following was the statement that I have added in /etc/fstab



UUID=f548e157-333b-434a-8ad1-832a97c0d766  /mnt/ssd1      ext4    defaults        0       2


This statement mount the new disk at boot time but the "user1" cannot write in this mount point. My OS is Ubuntu 18.04.



Here are the few references that I have following but could not found the solution




  1. https://askubuntu.com/questions/251206/mount-usb-drive-with-write-permissions-for-everyone-or-specific-user

  2. https://askubuntu.com/questions/125257/how-do-i-add-an-additional-hard-drive

  3. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Fstab#Options










share|improve this question























  • See mount(8) - Linux manual page the section titled Non-superuser mounts. Beyond mounting, simple Unix filesystem permissions apply. As long as the user owns the file or directory or belongs to the group with read/write permission, the user will be able to write to the mount.

    – David C. Rankin
    3 mins ago
















0












0








0








I have to add a new disk to few systems with same specs. I have followed many tutorials to create FS and mount. But I have facing one problem. I want my disk should be mounted at boot time and a specific user "user1" should be able to write in this disk. Is there any option available in mount options I know I can use chmod command for this purpose. Following was the statement that I have added in /etc/fstab



UUID=f548e157-333b-434a-8ad1-832a97c0d766  /mnt/ssd1      ext4    defaults        0       2


This statement mount the new disk at boot time but the "user1" cannot write in this mount point. My OS is Ubuntu 18.04.



Here are the few references that I have following but could not found the solution




  1. https://askubuntu.com/questions/251206/mount-usb-drive-with-write-permissions-for-everyone-or-specific-user

  2. https://askubuntu.com/questions/125257/how-do-i-add-an-additional-hard-drive

  3. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Fstab#Options










share|improve this question














I have to add a new disk to few systems with same specs. I have followed many tutorials to create FS and mount. But I have facing one problem. I want my disk should be mounted at boot time and a specific user "user1" should be able to write in this disk. Is there any option available in mount options I know I can use chmod command for this purpose. Following was the statement that I have added in /etc/fstab



UUID=f548e157-333b-434a-8ad1-832a97c0d766  /mnt/ssd1      ext4    defaults        0       2


This statement mount the new disk at boot time but the "user1" cannot write in this mount point. My OS is Ubuntu 18.04.



Here are the few references that I have following but could not found the solution




  1. https://askubuntu.com/questions/251206/mount-usb-drive-with-write-permissions-for-everyone-or-specific-user

  2. https://askubuntu.com/questions/125257/how-do-i-add-an-additional-hard-drive

  3. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Fstab#Options







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asked 14 mins ago









ShafiqShafiq

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  • See mount(8) - Linux manual page the section titled Non-superuser mounts. Beyond mounting, simple Unix filesystem permissions apply. As long as the user owns the file or directory or belongs to the group with read/write permission, the user will be able to write to the mount.

    – David C. Rankin
    3 mins ago





















  • See mount(8) - Linux manual page the section titled Non-superuser mounts. Beyond mounting, simple Unix filesystem permissions apply. As long as the user owns the file or directory or belongs to the group with read/write permission, the user will be able to write to the mount.

    – David C. Rankin
    3 mins ago



















See mount(8) - Linux manual page the section titled Non-superuser mounts. Beyond mounting, simple Unix filesystem permissions apply. As long as the user owns the file or directory or belongs to the group with read/write permission, the user will be able to write to the mount.

– David C. Rankin
3 mins ago







See mount(8) - Linux manual page the section titled Non-superuser mounts. Beyond mounting, simple Unix filesystem permissions apply. As long as the user owns the file or directory or belongs to the group with read/write permission, the user will be able to write to the mount.

– David C. Rankin
3 mins ago












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