Noob Part 2: Media automounting ...
Eli Crumrine
zybhjk at verizon.net
Tue Jun 20 05:24:16 CEST 2006
Jannis Pohlmann <jannis at xfce.org> | Mon, 19 Jun 2006 14:23:16 +0200
> On Mon, 19 Jun 2006 01:44:17 -0400, Eli Crumrine wrote:
>
> > "Bryan J. Smith" <b.j.smith at ieee.org> | Sun, 18 Jun 2006 19:58:12
> > -0400
> >
> > > Okay, now I really see how ignorant I am. I've really been doing
> > > too much server stuff and haven't been hacking the 'ole desktop --
> > > just using GNOME and not caring how it worked. I've started
> > > reading up on HAL as well as integration with udev, dbus and the
> > > various gnome-* components (-mount, -power, -volume-manager,
> > > etc...). Damn I've really let me desktop knowledge slip in this
> > > age of kernel 2.6 and "it just works."
> > >
> > > Anyhoo, I assume my older XFCE 4.2.3 install on Fedora Core 5 is
> > > not HAL-aware or doesn't have various support agents yet? If
> > > that is the case, based on what I read, I should just go ahead
> > > and create the /etc/fstab** or automount entries as I wish --
> > > correct?
> > >
> > > Any other insight, RTFM responses (especially if this is
> > > documented somewhere and I'm just an ignorant fool that didn't
> > > see this), etc... are always appreciated!
> > >
> >
> > That is correct - no xfce components use hal.
>
> This is wrong. Thunar makes use of HAL to display available devices.
> It doesn't mount devices automatically, though, you have to click on
> the devices in the sidepane to mount them and open them in Thunar.
I apologize, I don't use thunar and didn't think to look into that.
Will be more careful next time :).
--
Eli C.
2006:06:19
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