David G. Miller wrote:
WipeOut <wipe_out@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I have a number mounts I need for network shares on my samba server..
I would like the mount commands to run when I login..
Where is the best place for a "login script" type thing in a Linux
system?
I have read mention of using rc.local, .bashrc and .profile files but
haven't found anything conclusive as to what the "right" way to do it
is..
Any advice would be appreciated..
/etc/fstab for either things you want mounted automatically at boot (use
the "auto" option) or things you want to easily mount from the command
line (fully define the mount but use the "noauto" option). Also, this
is a system resource so every user sees the same definitions.
rc.local is a good place to put actual mount commands for things you
want mounted automatically at boot but don't want a problem with the
mount to hold up your boot process. My server uses RAID 1 for all mount
points critical for operation and these are automatically mounted
through fstab but I have a large non-RAID scratch area that I define
noauto in fstab and then mount with a mount command in rc.local. Like
/etc/fstab, this is a system resource so it acts the same for everybody.
.profile (or .login for csh folks) is the place for stuff that is user
mountable and you want to have mounted when the user logs in. .bashrc
is sourced for each new shell but .profile is only sourced at the
initial login and you probably don't want to mount these each time the
user opens a new command shell. .profile is specific to each user so
you can customize which share(s) get mounted for a particular user.
Cheers,
Dave
Thanks Dave.. I think what I am looking for then is probably .profile to
make it user specific but not run every time a shell is opened..