On 07/15/2013 07:46 AM, Davide G. wrote:
Io uso Mate, ma a occhio penso i colpevoli da controllare siano udisks2 o gvfs.
Mettendo insieme le due cose potrebbe essere un parametro che gli passa il DE.


Se la versione di udisks2 è > 2.0.91:
c'è un parametro apposito di udisks2 che si puo' passare tramite una regola udev.

"you can tell udisks2 to automount in /media/ instead of /media/[username]/ by adding a udev rule that sets the environment var UDISKS_FILESYSTEM_SHARED. You can do this by adding a file called (eg) /etc/udev/rules.d/99-udisks2.rules that contains:

ENV{ID_FS_USAGE}=="filesystem", ENV{UDISKS_FILESYSTEM_SHARED}="1"

I think udev monitors the /etc/udev/rules.d folder to detect changes, but if not, you can force it to reload its rules with "sudo udevadm control --reload". Note though that the new mount location doesn't seem to take effect until you physically remove and plug the external drive back in."

Fonte: http://askubuntu.com/questions/214646/how-to-configure-the-default-automount-location

Ciao,
N


--
+---------------------+
| Linux User  #554252 |
+---------------------+


--
Per REVOCARE l'iscrizione alla lista, inviare un email a debian-italian-requ...@lists.debian.org con oggetto "unsubscribe". Per
problemi inviare un email in INGLESE a listmas...@lists.debian.org

To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-italian-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: http://lists.debian.org/ks0c49$gk9$1...@ger.gmane.org

Reply via email to