File permissions change when transfering between external drives and laptop
I noticed a few years ago that when I transfer files back and forth between my laptop and my external drive all the files that I have transfered have changed permissions.
I format all my external drives as exFAT so I can use larger files.
Why does this happen?
Is there a better way to keep the file permissions intact when transfering files back and forth between external drives?
The test file: Fantastic Fungi (2019).mkv
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This is what the file permssions looks like before I transfer it to my external hard drive
ls -l
-rw-r–r-- 1 user user 577761580 May 2 2024 ‘Fantastic Fungi (2019).mkv’
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This is what the file permssions looks like after I transfer it back to my laptop
ls -l
-rwxr-xr-x 1 user user 577761580 May 2 2024 ‘Fantastic Fungi (2019).mkv’
When I right click file permissions dialogue box. The “Allow this file to run as a program” is ticked.
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The way have overcome this is to run a simple one liner to reset the permissions for directories and files.
Open a terminal in the directory of the folders and files you want to change
All directories will be 775. All files will be 664
find . -type d -exec chmod 0755 {} ;
find . -type f -exec chmod 0644 {} ;
Directory permission 0755 is similar to “drwxr-xr-x”
File permission 0644 is equal to “-rw-r–-r–-“.
-type d = directories
-type f = files
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Hey SteveTech
I dont use internal or external SSD’s.
It maybe because I am an old greybeard, but I prefer to suffer the slight loss in speed of a HDD, so I can dd/erase/wipe them and reuse them again and again.
Though I have been using “disktest” to erase SSD’s and HDD’s recently and it has been working great. Much faster than zeroing with dd /dev/zero, shred or wipe.
https://crates.io/crates/disktest
https://github.com/mbuesch/disktest
However, I digress, I had not heard of f2fs before.
Ive been having an intersting read online.
It appears that it is a default for android phones.
I do have a few SSD’s laying around from when I replace them with HDD’s. So I will test f2fs on one of those.
Thank you
Oh no worries!
Also hdparam/nvme-cli will let the drive erase itself, and should be faster than operating through a computer. Like it can take seconds on some SSDs since it wipes the chips in parallel, and some drives are self encrypting, so it just deletes the key, leaving the scrambled data. But those usually won’t work on USB drives.