On Sunday 23 August 2009 rcdawson@xxxxxxx wrote: > I am using Mandriva 2009.1. I found my self re-installing on a new > hard drive in order to get my video card to work. After the > re-install I reconnected the old drive (keeping the new drive in > place) and rebooted. My plan was to copy my old home directory. > After reboot I found the old hard drive had been mounted as two > "volumes" showing up in Dolphin. When I tried to open either of > those volumes I received a message > org.freedesktop.Hal.Device.PermissionDeniedByPolicy: > org.freedesktop.hal.storage.mount-fixed auth_admin_keep_always > <--(action,result). > > How do I get around this Policy? Would it apply to any hard drive > I install, or is it responding to the fact that Mandriva and KDE > are installed on the second disk? > > I suppose this is a matter of curisity more than necessity, at > least at the moment. I have copied my home to a USB drive, and > that mounts OK and is accessible. For future reference, however, > this would be useful information. Policy is that you must be root to mount a partition on an internal hard drive. The solution is to add the partition to /etc/fstab. You can use drakdisk (as root) to do this. Jim ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.