On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 2:22 PM, Sergey Manucharian <sergeym@rmico.com> wrote:
On Wed, 18 Feb 2009 11:03:08 +0100 <hollunder@gmx.at> wrote:
..........
An external drive can be rather reliably identified and always mounted at the same place using udev.
This is somewhat problematic on arch linux tough. For some reason the devices seem not to be created before mount runs although udev runs before it. This means that external drives do not get mounted along with all the other drives specified in fstab.
I personally wonder what the problem is since this method has worked on other distributions.
My workaround is simply another 'mount -a' in rc.local, at this point in boottime the devices are created.
Still this doesn't work reliably with one of my drives but this is a separate problem (slowness).
Philipp
Folks, you are discussing how to deal with "noob questions" etc., but nobody paid attention to the more "deep" meaning of the initial question arisen by Philipp.
I confirm the problem. So, how to mount an external HDD during the system start-up?
Cheers, Sergey
If it is always connected, I would put a line on /etc/fstab so it is mounted as any other ordinary partition. If it is not always connected, I would make a script and put it in /etc/rc.d. The script would be responsible to look if the disk is attached and mount it. It would be good to use some udev rules to make a fixed symlink for the disk, so the script has a fixed target to find. -- ------------------------------------------- Denis A. Altoe Falqueto ------------------------------------------- Emo Philips - "I was the kid next door's imaginary friend."