On 08/16/08 07:48, Paul Cartwright wrote:
On Sat August 16 2008, Ron Johnson wrote:What does "# tail-f /var/log/syslog" tell you when you insert the drive?ok, I inserted a brand new USB stick ( a nice new 4GB..) looked in syslog and it looks like this: Aug 16 08:39:12 paulandcilla kernel: [50428.685327] sdg: sdg1Aug 16 08:39:12 paulandcilla kernel: [50428.719914] sd 10:0:0:0: [sdg] Attached SCSI removable disk Aug 16 08:39:12 paulandcilla kernel: [50428.719914] sd 10:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg7 type 0but it didn't automount. what do I need to do to make it automount?
GNOME or KDE. Maybe Xfce. If you use some other WM, then look at autofs5 or maybe ivman.
I have 2 or 3 different USB sticks that I would like to automount, how do I find out or determine their UUID??BTW, GNOME & KDE automount such drives for you. Are you using something else? If so, in /etc/fstab I'd refer to that drive not as /dev/sda but by it's UUID.
# blkid /dev/sdg1
in the process of looking at what i do have mounted, I noticed a bunch of chroot stuff..paulandcilla:/var/log# mount (skip the normal mounted stuff)devpts-live on /home/live/chroot/dev/pts type devpts (rw) proc-live on /home/live/chroot/proc type proc (rw) sysfs-live on /home/live/chroot/sys type sysfs (rw) -------------------I was attempting to make a Debian ISO using someones web HOW-TO, but that was last week.. what have I done to my system, and how do I get rid of those mounted things??
That's a question for someone who's used chroot... ;) -- Ron Johnson, Jr. Jefferson LA USA "Do not bite at the bait of pleasure till you know there is no hook beneath it." -- Thomas Jefferson