Colleen Beamer writes:

> I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer.  It's an
> Iomega and has a power switch.  In fstab it is /dev/sdc1 and /dev/sdc2
> because I've configured it to have two ext3 partitions.  If the drive
> is not powered on when I boot and then, I turn it on, I have to reboot
> to get fstab to recognize it.  That has always sort of irked me, but I
> dealt with it because the drive holds only my music files.

What I do is to build SCSI as modules into the kernel. When I turn on a 
SCSI device, I remove the module and modprobe it again. For my adaptec 
controller:
        modprobe -r aic7xxx && modprobe aic7xxx

However, this works only if removing the module is possible. If you have a 
mounted file system on a SCSI drive, this will not work.

If there is an easier solution, I'd be interested to hear about it.

> The wrinkle is that my son bought me a usbstick.  I can mount it just
> fine.  However, if my usb external hard drive is not powered on on
> boot, the stick is recognized at sdc1.  If the usb drive is powered on
> then, the stick is recognized as sdd1.  So, this means that if I want
> to use one or the other or both, I keep having to change fstab.  Is
> there a way I can set the device to always be the same - i.e.  I always
> want the usb external drive to be sdc1 and sdc2 and the usb stick to be
> sdd1.

I let udev manage this, so I get a /dev/stick and /dev/externhd. Or I just 
use KDE which opens a window with the contens of the drive/stick. But 
others already wrote more about that in detail.

> I know!  I only want the world.  If there isn't a way that this can be
> done, then I'll live with the situation.  It's not earth shattering!

Oh yes it is!

        Wonko
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