perhaps the /srv directory is a special one ? Also administrator cannot
make directory inside it ?

On Sun, Jan 7, 2018 at 8:44 PM, Angelo Moreschini <mrangelo.fed...@gmail.com
> wrote:

> wait ...  I checked better  and I saw the directories doesn't exits in
> /srv...
>
> trying to create now but I didn't have success.. :
>
> [angelo_dev@localhost srv]$ sudo mkdir BKx_programming
>
>
> *mkdir: cannot create directory ‘BKx_programming’: Permission denied*
> that is funny ... How it can be ?     I used  privileges of SU..
>
> On Sun, Jan 7, 2018 at 8:17 PM, stan <stanl-fedorau...@vfemail.net> wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 7 Jan 2018 17:58:07 +0200
>> Angelo Moreschini <mrangelo.fed...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > Hi Francis,
>> >
>> > I followed your procedure,
>> >
>> > I can see the partitions by nautilus as is the standard, but still I
>> > cannot see them from the command line ..:
>> > ====
>> > [angelo_dev@localhost ~]$ ls /srv/BKx_programming
>> > ls: cannot access /srv/BKx_programming: *No such file or directory*
>> > ====
>> > (the output about the service is :)
>> > -----------
>> > [angelo_dev@localhost ~]$ sudo systemctl status autofs
>> > [sudo] password for angelo_dev:
>> > ● autofs.service - Automounts filesystems on demand
>> >    Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/autofs.service; enabled)
>> >    Active: active (running) since Sun 2018-01-07 17:36:34 IST; 16min
>> > ago Process: 1202 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/automount $OPTIONS --pid-file
>> > /run/autofs.pid (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> >  Main PID: 1220 (automount)
>> >    CGroup: /system.slice/autofs.service
>> >            └─1220 /usr/sbin/automount --pid-file /run/autofs.pid
>> > =====
>> >
>> > what to say ??
>>
>> From the article you linked.  Perhaps this is the reason you don't see
>> them from the command line.
>> """
>> Please note, although our drive is now listed as an active mount point
>> the disk is not mounted yet! autofs only waits for user to access
>> specified mount point directory and once that happens it will mount the
>> filesystem.
>>
>> Example:
>>
>> $ cd /media/
>> $ ls
>> $ cd Iomega
>> $ ls
>> lost.dir  music  picture  ps3  video mystuff
>> $ cd ..
>> $ ls
>> Iomega
>>
>> From the output above you can see that Iomega directory was created
>> only when I tried to access it. Every time you now plug in you USB
>> external disk you can instantly access it via some sort of Desktop or
>> Bookmark shortcut. I hope this helps !
>> """
>>
>> Try doing a cd into the directory, and then doing an ls.
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>
>
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