Hi,
I am using GhostBSD which as you know is based on FreeBSD. I have a SSD on which GhostBSD is installed & I also have a spinning HDD with only 1 partition which I use to store data. When I was using Linux the data partition was EXT4 but later I backed up all data & formatted it to UFS because I thought its better to use a filesystem which FreeBSD supports fully.
The data partition is getting auto mounted but I can't write anything to it. Under Linux I used to use the command "chown" to gain write permission so decided to try it under FreeBSD too & it works but temporarily. What happens is after I use the chown command I gain write permission but as soon as I reboot the partition becomes read only again.
This is the command I using (after every reboot)
Please tell me how to make the permission to persist.
I am using GhostBSD which as you know is based on FreeBSD. I have a SSD on which GhostBSD is installed & I also have a spinning HDD with only 1 partition which I use to store data. When I was using Linux the data partition was EXT4 but later I backed up all data & formatted it to UFS because I thought its better to use a filesystem which FreeBSD supports fully.
The data partition is getting auto mounted but I can't write anything to it. Under Linux I used to use the command "chown" to gain write permission so decided to try it under FreeBSD too & it works but temporarily. What happens is after I use the chown command I gain write permission but as soon as I reboot the partition becomes read only again.
This is the command I using (after every reboot)
Code:
sudo chown -R bsd /media/ada0p1/
Please tell me how to make the permission to persist.