On Saturday 18 April 2015 08:37:48 Jack wrote:
> On 2015.04.18 02:10, Thomas Baumgart wrote: > > On Thursday 16 April 2015 11:52:10 Jack wrote: > >> I just tried to backup my file and got an error about failure to > >> mount the directory. (Of course I didn't copy the exact > >> wording....) The only problem is that the directory is just a > >> folder two levels below my home directory, and doesn't need > >> mounting, and I did not check the box about needing mounting, and > >> backup has worked fine for years. This is the second time this has > >> happened, and simply restarting KMM fixed the problem both times. I > >> have not otherwise noticed anything strange about files or > >> partitions or mounts. If it happens again, are there any specific > >> things I can check to try and figure out the cause? > > > > That is strange. In case the mount option is unchecked, a simple > > 'echo' replaces the mount command. This is just so that the next step > > in the process can be triggered by the successful finish of a command > > (mount or echo in this case). The scenario you describe would happen, > > when the 'echo' command returns an exit code other than 0 (why should > > it) or the KProcess exitStatus differs from QProcess::NormalExit. I > > can't image why either of the two should happen. > > I think that gave me the answer, but I won't have time to test until > this evening. For years, I only ran KMM started from the start menu or > an icon. Recently, however, I've left those methods to start the > distro installed version, and have a git version installed in a > different location which I have to start with a script, from command > line. I suspect if I close that console, then the echo will fail > because KMMs stdout has gone away. > > I'll confirm this after I test later. That would be fine. In that case, we need to use a different command or mechanism to solve the problem. -- Regards Thomas Baumgart GPG-FP: E55E D592 F45F 116B 8429 4F99 9C59 DB40 B75D D3BA ------------------------------------------------------------- What is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind. (Punch, 1855) -------------------------------------------------------------
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