Συντάκτης: Hendrik Boom Ημερομηνία: Προς: dng Αντικείμενο: Re: [DNG] For all you automounter programmers
On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 01:27:08PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote: > On Wed, 27 Apr 2016 08:25:02 -0400
> fsmithred <fsmithred@???> wrote:
>
> > On 04/26/2016 09:32 PM, Steve Litt wrote:
> > > On Tue, 26 Apr 2016 18:19:32 -0400
> > > fsmithred <fsmithred@???> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > >> I like pmount for mounting usb devices. It's pretty smart. For
> > >> removable devices, you don't need to list them
> > >> in /etc/pmount.allow, and it handles encrypted filesystems
> > >> (cryptsetup/luks).
> > >
> > >
> > > Ahh, now I remember. Pmount isn't an AUTOmounter, you still must
> > > tell it which device to mount. It doesn't mount the second you plug
> > > in your thumb drive.
> > >
> > > Therefore: pmount, when combined with the inotifywait automounters
> > > we've all made, should be perfect.
> > >
> > > Those pmount automounter commands should run as the user who plugs
> > > in the thumb, so rather than running straight from the init, they
> > > should probably run when you log in, and if there's already a copy
> > > running when you log in, it does nothing.
> > >
> > > SteveT
> > >
> >
> > That's pretty much what my usb-mounter does. Inotifywait runs when
> > you log into the desktop, and when you plug in a thumb drive, it pops
> > up a window showing you the partitions on that device. You then
> > choose one to mount, and the script runs pmount in your name.
>
> That sounds *perfect* to me, always assuming the "window" is a CLI
> question and answer i X isn't running. Where's the source code? I'd like
> to start using it.
>
> Somebody suggested we package an automounter for Devuan. What you
> describe sounds like the right thing.
>
>
> > Bypassing the popup window and automounting would be a simple edit,
>
> My no-user-confirmation version was problematic and vaguely disturbing.
> I'd leave the user in the loop.
>
> > as would making it work without a gui.
>
> Yes. This being Devuan, some facility for asking and recieving an
> answer should be provided even if X isn't runnnig.
If X isn't running on the local screen, is what I suspect you mean.
Assuming the cocept is a "local screen" is well-defined.
It might not be ideal to post the mount on the screen of someone who
has logged in remotely by ssh -X. But what if one ssh -x's in from a
user that *is* on the local screen? etc., etc.
Being able to ask what's been plugged in recently with a CLI command
might also be useful.
>
> > I don't know what happens if
> > there are multiple users logged in at the same time, but that might
> > be an edge case.
It should certainly take account of who is logged in locally, ane whose
virtul X terminnal is actually on the screen. I once had a system that
would automount plugged-in USBs for the first user it found in the
/etc/p0assword file (starting at UID 1000, of course), whether s/he/it
was logged in at the momet or not. This was *always* the wrong choice.
I had to become root to unmount; only after that could I become mysseld
and mount again.