1

I'm attempting to add myself to a group vboxshare such that my user can access a virtual box shared directory under /media. Seems easy enough.

A quick google search gives a good looking answers: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ubuntu-add-user-to-group/

(username: allusers)
usermod -a -G vboxsf allusers

Ok, did it, but no bueno, what'd I miss here? Groups have never been a fluently intuitive concept to me in linux. I do see vboxsf as a group in 2 of the 3 commands I presume to use to see what groups are assigned to me.

allusers@vbubuntu:/media$ ll
total 16
drwxr-xr-x   4 root root   4096 May 21 14:03 ./
drwxr-xr-x  23 root root   4096 May 25 23:38 ../
drwxr-x---+  2 root root   4096 May 20 20:21 allusers/
drwxrwx---   1 root vboxsf 4096 May 31 12:20 sf_tempshare/

allusers@vbubuntu:/media$ cd sf_tempshare/
bash: cd: sf_tempshare/: Permission denied

allusers@vbubuntu:/media$ groups
allusers adm cdrom sudo dip plugdev lpadmin sambashare

allusers@vbubuntu:/media$ groups allusers
allusers : allusers adm cdrom sudo dip plugdev lpadmin sambashare vboxsf

allusers@vbubuntu:/media$ id allusers
uid=1000(allusers) gid=1000(allusers) groups=1000(allusers),4(adm),24(cdrom),27(sudo),30(dip),46(plugdev),108(lpadmin),124(sambashare),999(vboxsf)
1
  • 1
    Default group is vboxusers
    – user107425
    Jun 2, 2014 at 22:19

1 Answer 1

4

Log out and then back in.

Group changes need a fresh login to take.

1
  • Ahh, I didn't know what to search for to find that answer. Thanks! Jun 3, 2014 at 0:00

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .