It's not a good solution, but it simplified things for me...

I've got my smbfs drives marked as noauto, so everything boots nicely,
but them I've just set a script to run at startup that mounts the
drives. It probably possible to  make them user mountable, but I
wasn't in the mood to fiddle wth that so I'm using a script that runs
as root. It's nasty, but it works.

Hope it helps

On 5/25/06, javaJake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't think you can. Hopefully SOMEONE notices...
> :(
>
> --
> auto smbfs mount in /etc/fstab causes hald hang at boot
> https://launchpad.net/bugs/44874
>


-- 
O)-c

-- 
auto smbfs mount in /etc/fstab causes hald hang at boot
https://launchpad.net/bugs/44874

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