The regular commands chown/chgrp should work.
Probalby you mean 999:999 caused by a default option "maproot" in
mfsexports.cfg (see: "man mfsexports.cfg").
If the root is to be the root on the MooseFS (what with the access to the
root on one of the computers and any account on the other computer connected
to the same MooseFS - gives you access to the root on the other compuer) you
should use: "maproot=0:0". If you mount with "nosuid,nodev" and if none of
programs is run under root witih MooseFS, there is no risk.
Kind regards
Michał Borychowski
From: yang xu [mailto:sky...@gm...]
Sent: Monday, April 12, 2010 5:39 PM
To: moo...@li...
Subject: [Moosefs-users] How to change the uid and gid of files stored in
MooseFS?
Well, thank you for creating such a good file system, the MooseFS is
really easy to use, however, I don't know how to set the uid and gid of each
file, the default are 999:999, now in my system, every client shared its
files with others, so how can I set the authority of those files, thank you!
XuYang from China.
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