On Lu, 03 nov 14, 22:20:51, Charles Kroeger wrote:
Thanks Eric, you can learn a lot of useful stuff on this list if you just keep
poking it. Say something wrong get a clarification. That's good.
https://xkcd.com/386/
Kind regards,
Andrei
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On Sat, 01 Nov 2014 11:50:01 +0100
Andrei POPESCU andreimpope...@gmail.com wrote:
Why reboot, you can just use 'mount -a'?
By the way, 'auto' and 'rw' are default, no need to set them explicitly.
Thanks for this information
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On 03/11/14 07:13, Charles Kroeger wrote:
On Sat, 01 Nov 2014 20:10:01 +0100
Jonathan de Boyne Pollard j.deboynepollard-newsgro...@ntlworld.com wrote:
I see from other messages in this thread that I'm not the only person to
think it equally ludicrous to have a workflow that involves rebooting
On Mon, 03 Nov 2014 17:30:02 +0100
Peter Nieman gmane-a...@t-online.de wrote:
no one has mentioned autofs in this thread
No, but I will put it in my list of options for /etc/fstab entry. I assume
entries
like 'autofs' and 'nofail' will soon be obsolete when 'systemd-fstab-generator'
becomes de
On Mon, Nov 3, 2014 at 1:32 PM, Charles Kroeger
ckro...@frankensteinface.com wrote:
On Mon, 03 Nov 2014 17:30:02 +0100
Peter Nieman gmane-a...@t-online.de wrote:
no one has mentioned autofs in this thread
No, but I will put it in my list of options for /etc/fstab entry.
autofs isn't an
On Mon, 03 Nov 2014 21:00:02 +0100
Eric Sharkey e...@lisaneric.org wrote:
autofs isn't an option for /etc/fstab, it's a completely separate way
to specify mounts. For something like an sd card, you would add it to
something like /etc/auto.misc instead of /etc/fstab. autofs
filesystems are
On Sat, 01 Nov 2014 20:10:01 +0100
Jonathan de Boyne Pollard j.deboynepollard-newsgro...@ntlworld.com wrote:
I see from other messages in this thread that I'm not the only person to
think it equally ludicrous to have a workflow that involves rebooting
the entire machine just to mount and
On Sat, 01 Nov 2014 00:30:02 +0100
The Wanderer wande...@fastmail.fm wrote:
I suspect that /dev/sde1 exists, but /dev/sde1/ (with the trailing slash) does
not - i.e., /dev/sde1 is a device node, not a directory.
Yes, the extra forward slash was there (indicating a directory)..interesting.
On Vi, 31 oct 14, 14:10:20, Charles Kroeger wrote:
I have a line in my /etc/fstab file:
#/dev/sde1/ /media/lumix-photos vfat users,rw,auto,iocharset=utf8,umask=000
0
Anytime I want to add photos off the SD card in my camera, I comment out the
hashmark
add the SD card to the
On 11/01/2014 06:26 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Vi, 31 oct 14, 14:10:20, Charles Kroeger wrote:
I have a line in my /etc/fstab file:
#/dev/sde1/ /media/lumix-photos vfat users,rw,auto,iocharset=utf8,umask=000
0
Anytime I want to add photos off the SD card in my camera, I comment out
Charles Kroeger:
I think it's ludicrous that adding an SD card that even has its own
line in /etc/fstab, throws the whole system into 'emergency' mode.
I see from other messages in this thread that I'm not the only person to
think it equally ludicrous to have a workflow that involves
The Wanderer:
If the mount failing isn't that critical, then the right way to fix
the problem under systemd's apparent design would probably be to add
the noauto label to the fstab, so that the device will not mount
automatically on boot.
Actually, that's just the widespread NON-systemd
I have a line in my /etc/fstab file:
#/dev/sde1/ /media/lumix-photos vfat users,rw,auto,iocharset=utf8,umask=000
0
Anytime I want to add photos off the SD card in my camera, I comment out the
hashmark
add the SD card to the reader, and reboot the computer. The SD card is mounted
On 10/31/2014 at 02:10 PM, Charles Kroeger wrote:
I have a line in my /etc/fstab file:
#/dev/sde1/ /media/lumix-photos vfat users,rw,auto,iocharset=utf8,umask=000
0
Anytime I want to add photos off the SD card in my camera, I comment
out the hashmark add the SD card to the
On 31/10/14 21:31, The Wanderer wrote:
If the mount failing isn't that critical, then the right way to fix
the problem under systemd's apparent design would probably be to add the
noauto label to the fstab, so that the device will not mount
automatically on boot.
If there's a way to configure a
On 10/31/2014 at 06:33 PM, Martin Read wrote:
On 31/10/14 21:31, The Wanderer wrote:
If the mount failing isn't that critical, then the right way to
fix the problem under systemd's apparent design would probably be
to add the noauto label to the fstab, so that the device will not
mount
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