I don't use libpam-mount but 'man 5 pam_mount.conf' tells me that it can
call mount.cifs as root (ie. implicit sudo), even defaults to this.  You
don't need to have your mount points in /etc/fstab if you are root, so
you should be fine. If libpam-mount is indeed broken by this change, you
should file a bug against libpam-mount.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/657900

Title:
  mount.cifs: permission denied: no match for /home/myuser/mydir/myshare
  found in /etc/fstab

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