Arch is mounting / as read-only post-install

Okay, so I have no idea what I'm missing (I've done several Arch installs.) Machine is i686, no unusual hardware, and it's had Arch installed on it in the past. I run through the configuration, partitions, packages, etc., and when I reboot, Arch mounts my root as read-only..
Any ideas as to why this would be happening?

I understand, and thanks for your help. Fortunately I had just installed the system and didn't have anything valuable on it; Arch installs so fast that I figured it would be faster for me to run the install again and verify that my fstab was correct rather than try and chroot in

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  • All USB drives mount as read only for user

    I have searched a bunch and thee results I find seem to be irrelevant to my situation. Most relate to a single USB media that is a problem and won't read or write.
    On a new Arch install on a new computer (my third base system install). Running Gnome.
    All USB mass storage devices mount as read only for the logged in user. Root has write permissions and I can mkdir no problem. It is not an issue with the USB drive itself as this occurs with multiple USB media (I've tested several SD cards on a reader and at least two drives, all the media works correctly on my existing installations)
    I'm posting the contents of my /etc/group file in case there's an obvious error there I don't see, and my dmesg output upon plugging in the drive. User name is changed in the group file posted to "archie"
    This is a single-user system.
    /ect/group
    root:x:0:root
    bin:x:1:root,bin,daemon
    daemon:x:2:root,bin,daemon
    sys:x:3:root,bin
    adm:x:4:root,daemon
    tty:x:5:
    disk:x:6:root
    lp:x:7:daemon
    mem:x:8:
    kmem:x:9:
    wheel:x:10:root,archie
    ftp:x:11:
    mail:x:12:
    uucp:x:14:archie
    log:x:19:root
    utmp:x:20:
    locate:x:21:
    rfkill:x:24:
    smmsp:x:25:
    http:x:33:
    games:x:50:
    lock:x:54:
    uuidd:x:68:
    dbus:x:81:
    network:x:90:
    video:x:91:
    audio:x:92:
    optical:x:93:
    floppy:x:94:
    storage:x:95:
    scanner:x:96:
    power:x:98:
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    systemd-journal:x:190:
    archie:x:1000:
    avahi:x:84:
    polkitd:x:102:
    rtkit:x:133:
    gdm:x:120:
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    kvm:x:78:
    ntp:x:87:archie
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    [ 968.044188] usb 4-3: new high-speed USB device number 4 using ehci-pci
    [ 968.170628] usb-storage 4-3:1.0: USB Mass Storage device detected
    [ 968.171435] scsi7 : usb-storage 4-3:1.0
    [ 969.174450] scsi 7:0:0:0: Direct-Access Generic USB SD Reader 1.00 PQ: 0 ANSI: 0
    [ 969.175068] scsi 7:0:0:1: Direct-Access Generic USB MS Reader 1.03 PQ: 0 ANSI: 0
    [ 969.939417] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] 15572992 512-byte logical blocks: (7.97 GB/7.42 GiB)
    [ 969.941028] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Write Protect is off
    [ 969.941037] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 03 00 00 00
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    Last edited by hooya (2014-04-27 03:10:49)

    I am also having the same problem. Root can read and write to automounted drives, but my user cannot. I've tried with a variety of drives, I am assuming they are being automounted by root instead of the logged-in user somehow. (I am running x directly, and am not using a display manager, if that has anything to do with it).
    When I look at how it is mounted it is as follows:
    /dev/sdc1 on /run/media/myuser/drivename type vfat (rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,fmask=0022,dmask=0077,codepage=437,iocharset=iso8859-1,shortname=mixed,showexec,utf8,flush,errors=remount-ro,uhelper=udisks2)

  • [kinda solved, hd broken]Salvaged hard drive mounted as read-only

    My old netbook died recently (if a guy in a shady computer store in Edinburgh tells you that "this adapter will surely work" -- what ever you do, don't believe him). Got a new netbook, and an external usb hd case for the old hard drive in the hope of salvaging it.
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    Last edited by caligo (2010-07-19 20:09:01)

    karol wrote:'mount: /dev/sdd2: cannot read superblock' is quite different from mounting read-only - I'd call it read ... NOT!
    I hope you have some sort of backup.
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    itsbrad212 wrote:# fsck /dev/sdd2
    results in
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    Okay, I have a general log, but I'm not completely sure what all information you need. Ask and you will receive.
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    Install ntfs-3g
    Last edited by Rojikku (2014-07-02 02:06:18)

    lsblk -f: http://pastebin.com/KeHpDtF6
    Anything I could say would be repetitive of the data. >>; But for record purposes, btrfs and the external is ntfs.
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  • [solved] External drive automatically mounted as read-only

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    I don't know whether it is relevant to this problem, but I have systemd and polkit installed as well... Does anybody has an idea of where the problem could come from ?
    Thanks for your help !
    Last edited by sclarckone (2012-12-13 21:45:04)

    Check out following file :
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    <description xml:lang="da">Montér en enhed</description>
    <message>Authentication is required to mount the device</message>
    <message xml:lang="da">Autorisering er påkrævet for at montere et fil system</message>
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  • External drives mount as read only

    I am running OS X 10.6, on a MacPro. Something happened recently to make my external hard drives mount as read only. The only way I've found to be able to fix them is to run Disk Utility every time I start up my computer. Does anyone have an solution to this?
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    Message was edited by: HeatherK

    You might give this a try:
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    That obsolete volume format is no longer fully supported in Mavericks. You can read it, but you can't write to it.

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    Last edited by nawitus (2009-06-23 20:57:47)

    It seems that laptop-mode remounted the partitions as read-only, because of bug in laptop-mode(?). I disabled that daemon, and now boot works. After that I can boot normally even with laptop-mode daemon, but now I'm afraid of booting without the power cord as that can break the system..

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    Solved!
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  • USB flash storage mounted as read-only filesystem

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  • Filesystem mounts as read only after boot

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  • Root is mounted as read-only

    Hello,
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    none                   /dev/pts      devpts    defaults            0      0
    none                   /dev/shm      tmpfs     defaults            0      0
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    /dev/dvd               /media/dvd  auto    ro,user,noauto,unhide   0      0
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