Sshfs: Difference between revisions
From Andreida
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Latest revision as of 11:49, 16 February 2016
mount as user with sshfs
In many cases you will want to mount as user, not as root. Everything with "my" in the beginning has to be changed by you. The uid and gid are normally 1000, but perhaps you'll have to change them too. Just call "id" on the computer from which you want to call the script. If you don't use the uid/gid/idmap/workaround parameters you will have bad rights for some files.
#!/bin/bash sshfs myserver:mydirectory /home/myuser/mnt/myserver -o uid=1000 -o gid=1000 -o idmap=user -o workaround=rename
Unmount:
fusermount -u /home/myuser/myserver
mount as root via /etc/fstab
sshfs in /etc/fstab
sshfs#<user>@<server>:/home/<remote-path> /home/<local-path> fuse uid=1000,gid=1000,umask=022,allow_other 0 0
To check the connection, call as root
mount -a