On Mon, Apr 15, 2002 at 05:12:26PM -0400, Sean Middleditch wrote: > On Mon, 2002-04-15 at 16:54, David Odin wrote: > > Well, the main problem I have with supermount and not have with > > automount is the following: > > I'm a CS teacher, and the linux distribution in the computer room is > > mandrake. And, very often, a student use supermount to mount a floppy, > > do some stuff, but manage to log off with the floppy still mounted. > > Then, the next student using the same computer cannot use the floppy, > > since it is still mounted. Only root can unmount then, and that's very > > boring. > > Why is the floppy being mounted/unmounted at all?
This is the point: the floppy is mounted by supermount, and never unmounted! > If you hav supermount, the point is quite simply that you do not have to > mount/unmount once the device is mounted; you are mounting the device > itself, not the medium. > > If you don't want supermount in Mandrake, just remove the supermount > settings from /etc/fstab, unload the kernel module, and no student > should be able to mount w/ supermount anymore. > I don't have a Mandrake at home, thanks. In the computer classroom, I have the root passwd (I'm a teacher, not the admin), so i cannot edit /etc/fstab or whatever, and anyway, most of my student are unable to mount anything "by hand". Imho, the way to go is to use automount there. DindinX -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]