On Thu, 2013-06-06 at 04:25 +0200, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2013-06-06 02:11, Anton Aylward wrote:
Patrick Shanahan said the following on 06/05/2013 02:23 PM:
And if you want it to be there after every boot, why that's what /etc/tmfiles.d is for!
But as Patrick says, it seems a strange request when its dealt with dynamically.
I think that he is doing tricks to make some external media be mounted always in the same folder. I think that the disk label (the filesystem label, actually) is used to name the automatically created mount point.
What I would do is rename all those disks to the same label, and thus they would appear automatically on the same directory.
Not the disk label. There are thousands of disks. Each driver bay has a unique SCSI ID. This way we can use any formatted disk. The bay it gets inserted into in the collection system starts it out in life without user intervention. Our system allows to detect if disks are inserted improperly in the analysis system. The only requirement a user has is: 1. Format a disk somehow. No fancy option or disk-specific options are needed. 2. In the collection system, insert it in the drive bay for the transducer of interest (label on computer tells the transducer). Any new disk can go anywhere as needed. 3. In the analysis system, insert the disk in a drive bay with the same label as the bay it was in in the collection system. If done improperly, the analysis software will complain and tell what is wrong. KISS was the guiding principle. Require as little from the user as possible. Yours sincerely, Roger Oberholtzer Ramböll RST / Systems Office: Int +46 10-615 60 20 Mobile: Int +46 70-815 1696 roger.oberholtzer@ramboll.se ________________________________________ Ramböll Sverige AB Krukmakargatan 21 P.O. Box 17009 SE-104 62 Stockholm, Sweden www.rambollrst.se -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org