On Sat, Nov 1, 2008 at 6:00 PM, Joe Smith <jes@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Can you just skip the .gvfs items specifically, by name, with -prune? man page on find -prune was not clear to me, but I tried all combos I can think of, nothing works as I'd wish: [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns|wc -l find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied 8620 [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns -name .gvfs -prune find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns -prune -name .gvfs [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns \( -prune -name .gvfs \) [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns \( -name .gvfs -prune \) find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied Note that without the -prune, over 8000 lines get output. No combination including -prune ever generated a single line of non-error output. Which means I don't understand what -prune is doing, or is supposed to be doing. .gvfs is empty, so there should be lots of output even if it got pruned. And now that I've logged out & back in and .gvfs is mounted again, I can test the other suggested workaround involving remount. This also does not work for me, though I may be giving the wrong form of mount command: [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo mount -o remount -o exec -o suid -o rw /users/tburns/.gvfs [tburns@cod ~]$ sudo find /users/tburns/.gvfs find: /users/tburns/.gvfs: Permission denied One of the side-effects of killing my gvfs process was that my ssh-agent died, or at least stopped working. Otherwise I'd seriously consider just killing it as the most elegant workaround. Thanks for all the input. Dave -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines