On 07/14/2013 10:01 PM, T.C. Hollingsworth wrote:
> On Jul 14, 2013 1:45 PM, "Anthony" <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>  I want to execute a script every time a specific drive is mounted on
>> the system. I have a thumb drive that has a name I've given it. When
>> it's mounted, I want to copy the contents of my .gnupg directory to it
>> so I can always have a current backup of my keyring.
>>
>> From the research I've done, it looks like UDEV rules are the way to go
>> but, IIRC, Fedora doesn't use UDEV anymore. How can I accomplish this now?
> 
> I'm afraid you recall incorrectly. ;-)
> 
> Pretty much every distro uses udev nowadays and it's not going away
> anytime soon--it's part of systemd now.
> 
> And yes, a udev rule is the way to go.

Many thanks!


-- 
Anthony Papillion
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