max wrote:
The OP said it was a USB drive. The problem is that the system has no way of knowing what is on the drive, and will cause the system to boot into the single user mode so you can fix the problem if the drive is not there.Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:Why would the box fail to boot? Assuming the drive does not contain any system files needed at startup shouldn't it just make a note of the missing drive in a log and keep going. You hinted at something related to it being a USB drive.....max bianco wrote:If you remove the noauto, the init scripts will try to mount the drive. The problem is, if the drive is not plugged in, the system will not be able to mount it, and may not boot. (It is a USB drive.) If there is an entry in /etc/fstab, then the hotplug auto-mounting will not work.2008/4/2 Mikkel L. Ellertson <mikkel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:max bianco wrote:FC6 would auto mount as well. But if you have an entry in /etc/fstab forI am not sure what his fstab should look like but as far as using the mount command I have always found that you have to be root or have permission explicitly granted. I plug in my external drive and it just automounts for me, i don't remember doing anything special to get this to work, but apparently this was not the case in FC6, i have never used FC6. Hopefully he will let us know what happened. Maxthe device, it will not get auto-mounted.shouldn't it mount if the "noauto" is removed from fstab? Max
Because options other then the default ones are wanted. The auto-mounting in FC6 does not support that very well. Even changing the mount point so it isn't off of /media can be a problem. I don't remember off hand how you did that in FC6. (Was FC6 using HAL?)If I remember correctly, auto-mounting in FC6 works better if the partition has a name. If the NTFS partition was names SHARED, then the drive partition would get mounted on /media/SHARED. This also works in later versions. Changing the permissions and mount options different than using fstab, and involves learning a different set of rules. But tools are being developed to make it easier.If FC6 supports automounting the drive then why was an entry in fstab needed in the first place?Am i missing something that should be obvious here? Max
Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!
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