On 5/30/2013 3:38 PM, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 05/30/2013 03:34 PM, Hans Witvliet pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: Brian K. White
To: opensuse@opensuse.org Subject: Re: [opensuse] Why is not /media a tmpfs any more in 12.3? [Was: What is it with this behaviour in 12.3?] Date: Wed, 29 May 2013 12:01:08 -0400 On 5/29/2013 11:49 AM, Andrey Borzenkov wrote:
Final answer is - GNOME3 does not provide any way to customize mount options. Even with obscure and undocumented dconf invocation ... it simply does not pass mount options to udisks2.
Since Gnome 3 doesn't provide it, you must be wrong for wanting it. All hail Gnome 3.
-----Original Message-----
But ..... perhaps somebody finds "another" obscure desktop environment which does provide that info.
So there might still be hope! (for some, at least ;-)
Perhaps it is not Gnome3's job to provide that ability but instead it is the job of Yast to do so.
Not Gnome's job to mount things? Blaspheme! Next you'll be saying maybe init shouldn't also be cron and xinetd and syslog and udev and that system management should be implemented in human-readable, run-time/emergency editable, run-time/emergency debuggable, infinitely flexible, future-proof shell scripts, that have already been written even! Or that it's not the boot loaders job to try to activate fancy graphics cards before the user has been given any option to say "no that will break the serial console please don't do that" and that the graphics are not more important than robust access to booting! Or that maybe dbus isn't the most efficient thing to have init depend on! -- bkw -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org