Dear DDs & D-friends, what is the standard/canonical way of handling device permissions in Debian ("etch" in my case) on desktop PCs running a GUI?
It seems that users have to be added to group "audio" in order to be able to access audio devices, group "video" to access video devices, "cdrom" to access cdrom, and so on. Or did I miss some setting during installation of etch? Having to add users to particular groups is not reasonable in a desktop setting. There, one would like to have the current user at the console (logged in via gdm or similar) to be the one with exclusive rights on local devices (fixed ones like audio and video as well as variable ones like external usb devices). Part of the problem can be solved by using libpam-permdev: it handles well fixed builtin devices like audio, video, cdrom, but fails with dynamic devices like usb sticks (the pam module is only active during login and therefore misses dynamic devices plugged in during the session). Moreover, since the module is not installed automatically with gdm, it doesn't seem to be the intended solution. For dynamic devices I haven't found a solution yet. Autodetection and automounting of e.g. usb sticks works with gnome, if there are entries in /etc/fstab. However, such entries are not reasonable since one doesn't know in advance which devices are plugged in in which order. I found some hints on the web how to use udev hooks and events, but I suppose there are already ready-to-use solutions somewhere hidden in Debian. I'd appreciate any hints. Thanks in advance, and thanks for reading this far, Gernot -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]