The only correct answer is udisksctl
This is what KDE Dolphin also uses. It can mount, unlock LUKS and more.
Mounts will be in /run/media/user
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The only correct answer is udisksctl
This is what KDE Dolphin also uses. It can mount, unlock LUKS and more.
Mounts will be in /run/media/user
Is it just me that dislikes when packages are mentioned instead of a series of terminal commands? I don't want to install a package. Why would I want to rely on a package and it's maintainer when I could write a shell script using the tools native to my OS?
Is this unreasonable or just unpopular?
That and every command preceded by sudo.
Just..
$ sudo su
..bam, no more sudo. And likely no more system within a few sessions 🫣
Solution? Just don't make mistakes. Ezpz. /s
sudo su -
I know you're joking anyways, but I always cringe when I see that. There's no need to invoke su
there. If you want a root shell, use sudo -s
or sudo -i
depending on what kind of shell you want.
Is it just me that dislikes when packages are mentioned instead of a series of terminal commands? I don’t want to install a package. Why would I want to rely on a package and it’s maintainer when I could write a shell script using the tools native to my OS?
Yes, that's just you and probably explains why you are on a programming Lemmy instance. Personally I like to use the terminal myself for reasons including starting some GUI applications but I am sure that most people ("normies") would run away screaming if the first moment they would spot a terminal. See, everyone has their own preferences :)
I have no critique of anyone's preference. I joined the linux board looking for discussions on novel ways to use the system.
Since I haven't found that here, I thought I'd add a comment to see if it's just me. And I wanted to check to see if there is an alternative forum for such conversations.
Maybe a shell, bash, scripting, or man page community. Idk.
Since I haven’t found that here, I thought I’d add a comment to see if it’s just me. And I wanted to check to see if there is an alternative forum for such conversations.
Maybe a shell, bash, scripting, or man page community. Idk.
Right. It's in my opinion not so easy to find communities or finding people wanting to share the same interests. How about these ?
Yeah the search tool isn't the greatest, tho I expect third party maps of communities will spring up at some point.
Thanks.
If you want to invent and maintain your wheel then go ahead.. but I think we have better things to do than maintaining half the code of an operating system.
Udisksctl has a variety of relevant features, and it works good, kind of.
Other commenter mentioned usbmount. Debian has a page on that https://wiki.debian.org/usbmount which mentions pmount. The latter is packaged for Debian.
Thanks a lot. That works.
I also use lxqt as a desktop environment and when I click on removable drives it uses the pmount command to present them in user space.
E: someone already said pmount. Good looking out lemmyreader
Thanks. I don't use lxqt as my DE though. I use a custom DE based on i3. I will look into it.
you can always gain 100 lbs and grow a bunch of body hair. the lxqt door remains open to you.
Maybe you are looking for a mount as USER type command
mount -t deviceFileFormat -o umask=filePermissions,gid=ownerGroupID,uid=ownerID /device /mountpoint
Thanks. I will try this method as well. For now, pmount seems to work fine.
Have you tried usbmount
?
This automatically mounts usb drives if they're vfat, ext4, or hfsplus. Options: sync,noexec,nodev,noatime,nodiratime
I believe it puts them in /media/run/DEVICE_NAME or something like that
Thanks for your response. But the Debian package is not maintained. Do you know of any other way?
udisksctl mount -b /dev/yourdisk
Probably already installed. If not, it's udisks2. Needs D-bus.
Chown?
Use fstab maybe