Basically there are two main ways that you can set your NTFS partitions read-only in GNU/Linux. First way is editing your "fstab" files by hand which is not that hard but it certainly ain't that interesting either.
The second option is to find a "decent" GUI that lets you configure the settings that comes with the never ntfs-3g project. If you don't know what that is, then in the past as said before, GNU/Linux had a bad reputation of being notorious while dealing with NTFS file systems, so they created a new project called "ntfs-3g" for letting GNU/Linux users deal with NTFS file-systems better.
Was it successful?, well I for sure won't be trying it find out, because in the past I almost lost my entire HDD data, but that's a long time ago and from the things that I hear these days, ntfs-3g is really good at what it does.
Still if you want to manually/easily change read/write permissions in NTFS partitions in Ubuntu, then I highly recommend you to give a try for this excellent tool called "NTFS-Config".
As said there isn't much to talk about. Once installed it'll detect all your mounted NTFS partitions and let you enable/disable read/write permissions, graphically that is.
In Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal, you can install NTFS-config by issuing the below command in your Terminal.
sudo apt-get install ntfs-configThis should install it but after installing I couldn't run it. It gave me the following error.
Traceback (most recent call last):Now our only hope is to contact the developer and beg for a new relea... I'm just kidding, you can easily fix it :P. As you can see, I've bold the important one here. So, all we gotta do is create that missing directory, manually.
File "/usr/bin/ntfs-config", line 102, in <module>
main(args, opts)
File "/usr/bin/ntfs-config", line 75, in main
app = NtfsConfig()
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.7/NtfsConfig/NtfsConfig.py", line 56, in __init__
os.mkdir(HAL_CONFIG_DIR)
OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/etc/hal/fdi/policy'
Again open your Terminal and enter the below commands.
sudo mkdir /etc/halNow you should be able to run NTFS-config in Ubuntu 11.04 Natty without any issues whatsoever. Oh, btw, after installing you can run it from the main menu: "System" -> "Administration" -> "NFTS Configuration Tool" or
sudo mkdir /etc/hal/fdi
sudo mkdir /etc/hal/fdi/policy
Simply open your Terminal and enter the below command.
sudo ntfs-configEnjoy it. And I'd really like give some extra credit to the developer, who ever you are, this is bloody useful :).
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