Re: pmount-hal not using labels on encrypted filesystems

2012-12-14 Thread Aidan Gauland
Michael Biebl bi...@debian.org writes: On 14.12.2012 05:06, Aidan Gauland wrote: How can I fix this? Given that HAL is deprecated, I suspect there is some other tool that serves the same purpose as pmount-hal that I should be using instead. yeah, hal is dead. You might try udisks --mount

Re: pmount-hal not using labels on encrypted filesystems

2012-12-14 Thread Michael Biebl
On 14.12.2012 10:00, Aidan Gauland wrote: Michael Biebl bi...@debian.org writes: On 14.12.2012 05:06, Aidan Gauland wrote: How can I fix this? Given that HAL is deprecated, I suspect there is some other tool that serves the same purpose as pmount-hal that I should be using instead. yeah,

Re: pmount-hal not using labels on encrypted filesystems

2012-12-14 Thread Michael Biebl
On 14.12.2012 17:12, Michael Biebl wrote: Try gvfs-mount -d /dev/foo. This should prompt you for the passphrase, unlock and mount the file system under /media/FS_LABEL Just in case: If you run that command from a session which has no running dbus session bus, change that command to:

Re: pmount-hal not using labels on encrypted filesystems

2012-12-14 Thread Aidan Gauland
Michael Biebl bi...@debian.org writes: udisks-daemon does handle luks/cryptsetup encrypted partitions but it seems the udisks command line tool is too limited. Try gvfs-mount -d /dev/foo. This should prompt you for the passphrase, unlock and mount the file system under /media/FS_LABEL Can

pmount-hal not using labels on encrypted filesystems

2012-12-13 Thread Aidan Gauland
When I mount a filesystem on an encrypted partition with pmount-hal, it just mounts it on /media/usbdisk instead of using the filesystem's label to name the mount point, as it does with unencrypted filesystems. For example, $ pmount-hal /dev/sdb1 Enter passphrase for /dev/sdb1:

Re: pmount-hal not using labels on encrypted filesystems

2012-12-13 Thread Michael Biebl
On 14.12.2012 05:06, Aidan Gauland wrote: How can I fix this? Given that HAL is deprecated, I suspect there is some other tool that serves the same purpose as pmount-hal that I should be using instead. yeah, hal is dead. You might try udisks --mount instead. -- Why is it that all of the