Tim: >> What's "/u"? How do you mount it? Darryl: > /u is data on an ext3 filesystem - nothing special. It is mounted on > boot via /etc/fstab entry: > $ grep /u /etc/fstab > /dev/sdb1 /u ext3 noatime,nodiratime 1 2 > > /var is a separate filesystem too and it doesn't show up on the desktop > so I'm hoping there is a table of excludes somewhere that I can add /u to. I'm guessing the /u is a USB-connected external drive? If so, you might need to play with HAL rules regarding removeable media. It's a very long time since I've customised such rules, and I don't have any custom ones stored on a current machine, and the methodology has changed since I did it, so you'd be better googling for some help on that. Once mounted, just type mount into the console, and see what parameters each device has been mounted with. Your external drives will probably have some extra parameters, see if you can find out more about them. A couple of my internal hard drive mounts: /dev/sdb6 on / type ext3 (rw) /dev/sdb2 on /home type ext3 (rw) A USB flash drive mount: /dev/sdc on /media/BLUELEGEND type vfat (rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=hal,shortname=lower,uid=500) Of particular note is probably the uhelper parameter. > /dev/sda is another filesystem that I don't want on the desktop, If you have several you don't want showing, you might find it easiest to just turn off using Nautilus to draw the desktop. It'll be blank, then, regardless. >> Here, all that shows up on the desktop are three icons for opening "my >> computer" (opens a browser starting at /), the user's home (opens >> starting in ~/), a trashcan (~/.Trash/). >> >> The desktop displays what's held in ~/Desktop/ (if it's empty, and it is >> by default, nothing else shows). >> >> And, if and when I plug in a USB flash drive, or insert a disc into the >> CD drive, an icon pops up on the desktop. > I don't want that either and have this command from a previous question > pertaining to FC6: > gconftool-2 --set --type=boolean /apps/nautilus/desktop/volumes_visible false > Hopefully this is "global" for all users. Easy enough to test, create another user and have a look. But gconf editing edits the current user's settings, in my experience; and doing it as root just affects the root's settings. > This machine is going to be handling 10-12 users on diskless > workstations via LTSP so all the auto icon stuff isn't desired. I would > have liked to use CentOS or RHEL but neither support the on board NIC > and the standalone atl1 driver wasn't behaving on CentOS. Are you on the CentOS lists, as well? If you really want to use it, I'd suggest trying to resolve it, there. Rather than use Fedora when you preferred something else. It's possible someone might help you work out how to take what's supported in Fedora and do the same on CentOS. -- [tim@bigblack ~]$ uname -ipr 2.6.22.1-33.fc7 i686 i386 Using FC 4, 5, 6 & 7, plus CentOS 5. Today, it's FC7. Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list