Hi Michael, On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 22:28:06 +0100 Michael Stapelberg <stapelb...@debian.org> wrote:
> To debug this, use: > > systemctl status home-michele-Documents-Tempestus.automount resulting in: home-michele-Documents-Tempestus.automount Loaded: loaded (/etc/fstab) Active: active (waiting) since Mon 2014-02-03 23:07:16 CET; 37s ago Where: /home/michele/Documents/Tempestus > systemctl status home-michele-Documents-Tempestus.mount resulting in (after changing the path to rsa as you suggested): home-michele-Documents-Tempestus.mount - /home/michele/Documents/Tempestus Loaded: loaded (/etc/fstab) Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Mon 2014-02-03 23:08:21 CET; 6s ago Where: /home/michele/Documents/Tempestus What: mich...@thegate.doesntexist.com:/home/michele Process: 3367 ExecMount=/bin/mount mich...@thegate.doesntexist.com:/home/michele /home/michele/Documents/Tempestus -t fuse.sshfs -o noauto,comment=systemd.automount,_netdev,reconnect,users,uid=1000,gid=1000,idmap=user,allow_other,reconnect,IdentityFile=/home/michele/.ssh/id_rsa (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE) > > I can see two potential issues with your setup (after trying to > replicate it): > > 1) You specify IdentityFile=~/.ssh/id_rsa, but globs are not > necessarily processed, and even if they are, this will resolve > to /root/, not /home/michele, as you probably intended. Better use > the absolute path. no changes apparently. > > 2) When running that command as root (i.e. the mount call you can see > in systemctl status on the .mount unit), does SSH prompt you to accept > the host key or do you have /root/.ssh/known_hosts set up properly? > when I run the command as root it asks me for the password of user michele. If I understand correctly is the user root on my local machine connecting to the server as user michele. How can I solve this practically? Cheers Mike
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