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OK, gurus. Here's a fun one.

I have an old 3.5" drive from a buddy's iMac. The machine died but I was able to pull the drive and connect it to my Ubuntu machine. I see all of the folders but some of them have that damned little red X on them telling me I don't have the required permissions to access them. How do I; 1) force a permissions change, or 2) force the copy process anyway so I can give him the files on a thumb drive?

Thanks!

OK, gurus. Here's a fun one. I have an old 3.5" drive from a buddy's iMac. The machine died but I was able to pull the drive and connect it to my Ubuntu machine. I see all of the folders but some of them have that damned little red X on them telling me I don't have the required permissions to access them. How do I; 1) force a permissions change, or 2) force the copy process anyway so I can give him the files on a thumb drive? Thanks!

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

Read-only file system

God dammit! I asked you to check if your Mac volume was mounted as read/write! lol

You have to unmount and remount it with write enabled.

[–] 0 pt

God dammit! I asked you to check if your Mac volume was mounted as read/write! lol

You have to unmount and remount it with write enabled.

I know, and that's where I'm struggling right now.

[–] 0 pt

Use the following command to find your USB disk mountpoint

mount -v | grep "/" | awk '{print "\nPartition identifier: " $1 "\n Mountpoint: " $3}'

Paste the results here and I'll give you the right command to remount it with write enabled.

[–] 1 pt

Use the following command to find your USB disk mountpoint

mount -v | grep "/" | awk '{print "\nPartition identifier: " $1 "\n Mountpoint: " $3}'

Paste the results here and I'll give you the right command to remount it with write enabled.

Redacted: Partition identifier: /dev/sda2 Mountpoint: /media/bernardo/Macintosh