I am running Fedora Core 4. I am having the following problem when I plug in a USB
drive.
When I first plugged it in, a mountpoint was created, /media/usbdisk, but it was
not automounted. I had to mount it by first executing fdisk -l as root to get the
device assigned to the drive, /dev/sdc1, then executing mount /dev/sdc1 as an
ordinary user, so it would be writable.
But I found that each time I plugged in the drive again, it got assigned to a new
mountpoint, /media/usbdisk1, usbdisk2, usbdisk3, ... , and to a different device,
/dev/sdd1, sde1, sdf1, sdg1, sdh1, ...
Now I was dissatisfied with the label attached to the drive, "usbdisk". Tried to
label the drive, but could not do that under Linux. Plugged it in to a Windows XP
system, where I gave it the label USB-6-00. When I plugged it back in to the Linux
system, a mountpoint was created for it named /media/USB-6-00 . Okay so far,
except that the mountpoints /media/usbdisk, etc., were still there, and deleting
them and rebooting didn't get rid of them. No matter what I tried, a reboot or
service haldaemon restart recreated them all, even without the drive plugged in.
I also found that each time I plugged in the drive, I get a new mountpoint:
USB-6-001, USB-6-002, USB-6-003, ...
Now my firewire drive, labeled WD-120-00, always gets mounted on /media/WD-120-00
when I reboot. Yes, if I unplug it and plug it in again, I get a new mountpoint,
/media/WD-120-001, but it goes away when I reboot.
I can't get rid of those superfluous mountpoints. I delete them from /fstab and
mtab and try to use fstab-sync. I've tried to explore Hal and udev, but so far I
haven't been able to figure out how to
1. Get the same mountpoint back when I reboot, and preferably, when I plug the
drive in again.
2. Get rid of the superfluous mountpoints.
3. Assign the same device to the same drive, identified by its label. It is okay
to assign a new device and mountpoint if I plug in a different drive with a
different label, but the label should control the assignment.
Can someone provide a step-by-step howto for doing all this, without skipping
steps you might think obvious, but that may not be for a newcomer to Hal and udev.
Is there a convenient tool for configuring this kind of situation?
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