James McKenzie wrote: > I thought that FHS was addressing this 'descrepency' by adding /media > for media mount points, again leaving /mnt for those devices that > 'disconnect' such as tape drives Um. I read it that a "temporary" mount is something like a once-off NFS mount or loopback mount. And you'd mount it straight on /mnt. And, as I said, you *don't* want to mount a tape as such: it's not designed for filesystems. > (btw, who uses a tape drive on a small system these days?) Anyone who *needs* good back-ups and doesn't have a networked backup solution. Small businesses, in particular, should be backing up important servers every night. And if the data doesn't fit on a single DVD±RW, then tape is the best solution: it gets expensive having enough hot-swappable removable hard drives. > Anyway, adding this after years of /mnt can and does lead to confusion. Tell me about it... > Of course you can always move the associated devices back over to /mnt > from /media. Again, this can lead to other headaches. Like it not being FHS-compliant: if you have /mnt/floppy, and something expects to loopback mount on /mnt, then /mnt/floppy will be hidden. James. -- E-mail address: james | You can tell when you're working with "Enterprise @westexe.demon.co.uk | Software Solutions" because the vendor freebies are | red t-shirts. | -- Anthony de Boer