Re: [gentoo-user] fstab mount /home by default

2021-01-17 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 01:22:22 -0700, the...@sys-concept.com wrote: > On my new installation, I have in my fstab: > /dev/sda5 /home ext4 > noatime 0 1 > > but on new installation /home doesn't mount by default, why? What does syslog say? Is it even trying to

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab mount /home by default

2021-01-17 Thread bobwxc
在 2021/1/17 下午4:42, Stefan Schmiedl 写道: "the...@sys-concept.com" , 17.01.2021, 09:34:  On 1/17/21 1:22 AM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote: On one of my system I have in fstab: /dev/sda4             /home           ext4            noatime         0 1 and /home is mounted by default On my new

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab mount /home by default

2021-01-17 Thread Stefan Schmiedl
"the...@sys-concept.com" , 17.01.2021, 09:34: > On 1/17/21 1:22 AM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote: >> On one of my system I have in fstab: >> /dev/sda4             /home           ext4            noatime         0 1 >> and /home is mounted by default >> >> On my new installation, I have in my

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab mount /home by default

2021-01-17 Thread thelma
On 1/17/21 1:22 AM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote: > On one of my system I have in fstab: > /dev/sda4 /home ext4noatime 0 1 > and /home is mounted by default > > On my new installation, I have in my fstab: > /dev/sda5 /home ext4

[gentoo-user] fstab mount /home by default

2021-01-17 Thread thelma
On one of my system I have in fstab: /dev/sda4 /home ext4noatime 0 1 and /home is mounted by default On my new installation, I have in my fstab: /dev/sda5 /home ext4noatime 0 1 but on new installation /home

[gentoo-user] fstab/mount riddle...how?

2015-08-02 Thread Meino . Cramer
Hi, ...still fiddling with Linux on my ASUS MeMO Pad 7... ;) Current status: SDCard: Back from extFAT (too slllooww) to FAT32 On this SDCard two file, each 4GB in sizse and formatted ext4 One conatins currently the complete Linux (used as chroot environment) The second one contains a

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab/mount riddle...how?

2015-08-02 Thread wabenbau
meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, ...still fiddling with Linux on my ASUS MeMO Pad 7... ;) Current status: SDCard: Back from extFAT (too slllooww) to FAT32 On this SDCard two file, each 4GB in sizse and formatted ext4 One conatins currently the complete Linux (used as chroot

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab/mount riddle...how?

2015-08-02 Thread wabenbau
meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, ...still fiddling with Linux on my ASUS MeMO Pad 7... ;) Current status: SDCard: Back from extFAT (too slllooww) to FAT32 On this SDCard two file, each 4GB in sizse and formatted ext4 One conatins currently the complete Linux (used as chroot

[gentoo-user] fstab cleanup

2014-05-21 Thread Stefan G. Weichinger
Do I still need these lines .. especially with a modern systemd/gnome3-environment? - # glibc 2.2 and above expects tmpfs to be mounted at /dev/shm for # POSIX shared memory (shm_open, shm_unlink). # (tmpfs is a dynamically expandable/shrinkable ramdisk, and will # use almost no memory if not

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab cleanup

2014-05-21 Thread Tom H
On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 6:32 AM, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote: Do I still need these lines .. especially with a modern systemd/gnome3-environment? # glibc 2.2 and above expects tmpfs to be mounted at /dev/shm for # POSIX shared memory (shm_open, shm_unlink). # (tmpfs is a

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab cleanup

2014-05-21 Thread Stefan G. Weichinger
Am 21.05.2014 15:31, schrieb Tom H: On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 6:32 AM, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote: Do I still need these lines .. especially with a modern systemd/gnome3-environment? # glibc 2.2 and above expects tmpfs to be mounted at /dev/shm for # POSIX shared memory

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab cleanup

2014-05-21 Thread Tom H
On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 1:53 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote: Am 21.05.2014 15:31, schrieb Tom H: On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 6:32 AM, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote: Do I still need these lines .. especially with a modern systemd/gnome3-environment? # glibc 2.2 and

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab cleanup

2014-05-21 Thread Mick
On Wednesday 21 May 2014 20:44:04 Tom H wrote: On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 1:53 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote: Am 21.05.2014 15:31, schrieb Tom H: On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 6:32 AM, Stefan G. Weichinger li...@xunil.at wrote: Do I still need these lines .. especially with a

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab cleanup

2014-05-21 Thread Stefan G. Weichinger
Am 21.05.2014 21:44, schrieb Tom H: The answer is no unless you want to apply different perms to /dev/shm. I don't have an idea why I should want to do that so I removed the line for now. Thanks. Stefan

[gentoo-user] fstab entries for /proc and tmpfs

2012-02-25 Thread William Kenworthy
just building a new qemu appliance and following the handbook it mentions the /proc an tmpfs file systems in fstab, but the stage template no longer has these entries - is the handbook out of date and openrc handles it? - or did I accidentally delete them? Do I still need those entries ... that

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab entries for /proc and tmpfs

2012-02-25 Thread Michael Hampicke
just building a new qemu appliance and following the handbook it mentions the /proc an tmpfs file systems in fstab, but the stage template no longer has these entries - is the handbook out of date and openrc handles it? - or did I accidentally delete them? Do I still need those entries ...

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab and cdrom question

2009-12-18 Thread Kyle Bader
I'm on the train so its hard to check the man pages but can't you use udevtrigger or a similar tool so rebooting isn't required? On 12/17/09, Nikos Chantziaras rea...@arcor.de wrote: On 12/17/2009 08:42 PM, Denis wrote: Hello folks, Quick question. My main HD is SATA and gets /dev/sda in

[gentoo-user] fstab and cdrom question

2009-12-17 Thread Denis
Hello folks, Quick question. My main HD is SATA and gets /dev/sda in fstab. My CDROM, which is the only device on the IDE bus, seems to be /dev/hda. That's what Audacious declared when it was looking for a CD to play. I had CDROM device forced to /dev/cdrom in Audacious, unwittingly, before

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab and cdrom question

2009-12-17 Thread Willie Wong
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 01:42:33PM -0500, Penguin Lover Denis squawked: My main HD is SATA and gets /dev/sda in fstab. My CDROM, which is the only device on the IDE bus, seems to be /dev/hda. That's what Audacious declared when it was looking for a CD to play. I had CDROM device forced to

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab and cdrom question

2009-12-17 Thread Denis
The default udev scripts should have been able to automatically create symlinks for optical devices in /dev. Whether yours is broken, you can find out by trying to ls -l /dev/cdrom :) It appears the links /dev/cdrom1 and /dev/cdrw1 are tied to /dev/hda. Is that the default behavior instead of

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-16 Thread Alex Schuster
Colleen Beamer writes: I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In fstab it is /dev/sdc1 and /dev/sdc2 because I've configured it to have two ext3 partitions. If the drive is not powered on when I boot and then, I turn it on, I have

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-16 Thread Stroller
On 16 Aug 2007, at 03:49, Colleen Beamer wrote: ... In fstab it is /dev/sdc1 and /dev/sdc2 because I've configured it to have two ext3 partitions. If the drive is not powered on when I boot and then, I turn it on, I have to reboot to get fstab to recognize it. No, you don't have to. `sudo

[gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Colleen Beamer
Hi, I have a situation that, before, kind of bugged me but I was able to deal with it. However, now I've added another wrinkle to the situation. I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In fstab it is /dev/sdc1 and /dev/sdc2 because I've

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Rumen Yotov
On (15/08/07 22:49) Colleen Beamer wrote: Hi, I have a situation that, before, kind of bugged me but I was able to deal with it. However, now I've added another wrinkle to the situation. I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Tim
Colleen Beamer wrote: Hi, I have a situation that, before, kind of bugged me but I was able to deal with it. However, now I've added another wrinkle to the situation. I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In fstab it is /dev/sdc1

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Ow Mun Heng
Colleen Beamer wrote: The wrinkle is that my son bought me a usbstick. I can mount it just fine. However, if my usb external hard drive is not powered on on boot, the stick is recognized at sdc1. If the usb drive is powered on then, the stick is recognized as sdd1. So, this means that

Re: [gentoo-user] FSTAB file

2006-09-18 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Sunday 17 September 2006 15:36, rob wrote: What do the 2 zerros at the end of the line mean and why is the / dira1 0 Not to be pedantic, but it's '0 1' for the / partition :-) Others have referred you to the man pages that describe these settings, but what isn't obvious

[gentoo-user] FSTAB file

2006-09-17 Thread rob
What do the 2 zerros at the end of the line mean and why is the / dira1 0 rob -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list

Re: [gentoo-user] FSTAB file

2006-09-17 Thread fire-eyes
rob wrote: What do the 2 zerros at the end of the line mean and why is the / dira1 0 rob dump and pass. The fstab man page will explain it -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list

Re: [gentoo-user] FSTAB file

2006-09-17 Thread Daniel Iliev
rob wrote: What do the 2 zerros at the end of the line mean and why is the / dira1 0 rob From `man fstab`: The fifth field, (fs_freq), is used for these filesystems by the dump(8) command to determine which filesystems need to be dumped. If the fifth

Re: [gentoo-user] FSTAB file

2006-09-17 Thread darren kirby
quoth the rob: What do the 2 zerros at the end of the line mean and why is the / dira1 0 rob fs_freq and fs_passno See man 5 fstab Though '/' should be '0 1'. fs_freq is all but obsolete -d -- darren kirby :: Part of the problem since 1976 :: http://badcomputer.org

[gentoo-user] fstab - partitions sometimes doesnt mount

2006-08-29 Thread Martins Steinbergs
hi i have starnge problem, these two partitions sometimes isnt mounted from fstab: /dev/hdb4 /mnt/hdb4 ext3noatime 0 0 /dev/hdb12 /usr/portage/distfiles ext3noatime 0 0 i cant find any errors, logs shows

[gentoo-user] fstab devmode

2006-08-27 Thread Joseph
Can someone refresh my memory? I'm trying to mount usb memory stick with permission 600 but it is not taking devmode=0600 The current command mounts it as 755 /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera auto noauto,rw,users,exec I've tried: /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera auto

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab devmode

2006-08-27 Thread Willie Wong
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 12:55:11PM -0600, Penguin Lover Joseph squawked: Can someone refresh my memory? I'm trying to mount usb memory stick with permission 600 but it is not taking devmode=0600 The current command mounts it as 755 /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera auto

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab devmode

2006-08-27 Thread Joseph
On Sun, 2006-08-27 at 16:53 -0400, Willie Wong wrote: On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 12:55:11PM -0600, Penguin Lover Joseph squawked: Can someone refresh my memory? I'm trying to mount usb memory stick with permission 600 but it is not taking devmode=0600 The current command mounts it as 755

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab devmode

2006-08-27 Thread Daniel Pielmeier
It is a usb stick so it has a vfat file system. However, I've reformat the stick with fdisk to ext2 filesystem. With vfat it has 978mb capacity now after formating is to ext2 it has a 913mb capacity. Is there a way to create dos (vfat) partition with Linux fdisk utility? As far as i know

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab devmode

2006-08-27 Thread Richard Fish
On 8/27/06, Joseph [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Yes, that is what I want it to do. Originally my 1Mb stick with dos partition had 978Mb on it. I've partitioned it to Linux partition and formated as ext2, the free disk space went down to 913Mb Try tune2fs -m 0 to set the reserved block percentage

[gentoo-user] fstab

2006-03-22 Thread contiemilio
Hi all. It's me, again. I have set my /etc/fstab following the instractions of the Handbook. In the example there is this entry: /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 /mnt/cdrom auto noauto,user0 0 To-day I discovered that there is no /cdroms subdirectory in /dev directory. Is it a bug either of

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab

2006-03-22 Thread Hemmann, Volker Armin
On Wednesday 22 March 2006 20:52, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi all. It's me, again. I have set my /etc/fstab following the instractions of the Handbook. In the example there is this entry: /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 /mnt/cdrom auto noauto,user0 0 To-day I discovered that there is no

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab

2006-03-22 Thread Keats
On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 20:52:43 +0100 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi all. It's me, again. I have set my /etc/fstab following the instractions of the Handbook. In the example there is this entry: /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 /mnt/cdrom auto noauto,user0 0 you have to know the device of

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab

2006-03-22 Thread AJ Spagnoletti
you have to know the device of your cdrom generaly it's a secondary master ide /dev/hdc so set fstab to : /dev/hdc /mnt/cdrom auto noauto,user0 0 -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list On my system (I am using udev) There are two symlinks created in /dev for my cdroms that

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab entry

2005-06-09 Thread Morgan Howe
Martins Steinbergs wrote: hi, what's wrong with these, users cant access partitions (Access denied to /mnt/win_j.), only root can go there. fstab /dev/hda1/mnt/win_cntfsdefaults,ro,user0 0 /dev/hdb8/mnt/win_jvfatdefaults,rw,user0 0 Martins