On 08.11.13 23:42, Yves Dorfsman wrote:
On 2013-11-08 12:39, Frank Thommen wrote:
[...]
On 11/08/2013 03:21 PM, Smith, David wrote:
The first use case that comes to mind, is people using RHEL or CentOS as
their desktop OS. They'll probably need to mount disks and create file
systems (think flash drives, maybe CDs and DVDs). The relevant
commands are
all in /sbin.

But then again, you'll need to be root to run mount [...]

man fstab

Look for the option "user".

That's only for explicitely specified fstab entries and not a general permission for mounting arbitrary filesystems on arbitrary paths

frank
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