Package: wnpp Severity: normal The current maintainer of kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng, Mika Fischer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, has orphaned this package. If you want to be the new maintainer, please take it -- see http://www.debian.org/devel/wnpp/index.html#howto-o for detailed instructions how to adopt a package properly.
Maximiliano Curia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> has showed interest in this package, if you want to adopt this, please contact him whether he's still interested. Some information about this package: Package: kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng Binary: kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng Version: 1.2.11-1 Priority: extra Section: devel Maintainer: Mika Fischer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Build-Depends-Indep: debhelper (>> 4.0.0), dh-kpatches Architecture: all Standards-Version: 3.6.1.0 Format: 1.0 Directory: pool/main/k/kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng Files: 266cbace967065beb62c2feb18023ef5 590 kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng_1.2.11-1.dsc f532cc47264ace5dd89a43ab7e220f31 164175 kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng_1.2.11-1.tar.gz Package: kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng Priority: extra Section: devel Installed-Size: 248 Maintainer: Mika Fischer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Architecture: all Version: 1.2.11-1 Depends: bash (>= 2.0), patch, grep-dctrl Suggests: kernel-package, kernel-source-2.4 Filename: pool/main/k/kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng/kernel-patch-2.4-supermount-ng_1.2.11-1_all.deb Size: 173138 MD5sum: 8bc71f5c95a9a93076ae88da8930d141 Description: Automatically mount and unmount removable media With supermount, you can change the disk in the drive whenever you want (with the obvious exception that you shouldn't do it when the filesystem is actively in use). You don't need to "cd" out of the directory first, and you don't need to tell the kernel what you're doing --- supermount will detect the media change automatically. . Supermount will automatically detect whether the media you are mounting is read-write or readonly, and if you mount a write-protected disk, then the subfs will be mounted as a readonly filesystem. . Supermount detects when you have finished activity on the subfs, and will flush all buffers to the disk before completing the operation. So, if you copy a file onto a supermounted floppy disk, the data will all be written to disk before the "cp" command finishes. When the command does complete, it will be safe to remove the disk. . It can be applied to the following Linux kernel sources: 2.4.20, 2.4.21, 2.4.22, 2.4.23, 2.4.24 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]