Le mardi 28 février 2006 à 09:19 +0100, Rubén Rodríguez Pérez a écrit : > If I force downgrade the package (ONLY this package), and left all the rest > exactly like it is now, then I can see both removables and internal drives in > the desktop, nautilus and apps, and I dont even have to reboot, restart hald, > or even restart gnome. Thats what I (and I think _all_ users) I whant.
You are the only user that I know who wants to make a fixed, internal drive user-mountable. Well, now it seems it isn't user-mountable anymore. > In the examples, drive sda6 is mounted with this fstab line > /dev/sda6 /mnt/sda6 ext3 auto,gid=1000,umask=000 0 0 For heaven's sake, why do you want to make this drive visible in computer:/// ? It's a fixed drive, it is similar to /usr or /home if they are on separate partitions. Will we make /usr and /home available in computer:/// ? Of course not. > > * write a specific udev rule to make /dev/sda6 belong to "hal". > That's almost so stupid as adding hal to disk group. No. It doesn't give hal access to *all* your disks. Le mardi 28 février 2006 à 14:23 +0100, Rubén Rodríguez Pérez a écrit : > I think I've found the error. > /schemas/system/storage/display_internal_hard_drives is set to default=false > in schemas/system_storage.schemas > /schemas/system/storage/display_scsi_drives is set to false too. > > That way users have to open gconf-editor and modify the config by hand. > Both should be set to true. Of course they should not. I didn't know about these options, but it looks like *you* want to set them to true, and that will suit your needs. There's no way we can make this the default. Regards, -- .''`. Josselin Mouette /\./\ : :' : [EMAIL PROTECTED] `. `' [EMAIL PROTECTED] `- Debian GNU/Linux -- The power of freedom
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