Jim Cornette <fc-cornette@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I installed a system with the FC4 CDs that I had. Later I upgraded the system > to FC5 via yum upgrade. I cannot mount data CDs as a regular user. The disc > will mount if mounted using mount /dev/hdc /media/cdrecorder I can then view > and deal with the content of the CD as a user. Is there a package that is new > and might not be pulled in if one upgrades the installation via yum? I > plan on releasing this computer into the hands of some regular desktop > capable users. With this problem though, the user would have to know > root password and how to work at the command line. Hopefully there is > some program that was not pulled in and it will mend all wounds. David G. Miller wrote: > Chances are the upgrade process just rewrote your /etc/fstab file. Add the > keyword "user" or "managed" to the mount options column for the cdrecorder in > fstab. It should look something like: > > /dev/hdb /media/cdrecorder auto > pamconsole,exec,noauto,user 0 0 > > or > > /dev/hdb /media/cdrecorder auto > pamconsole,exec,noauto,managed 0 0 > > I think managed relies on the automounter while "user" lets the user > mount and the same user unmount the drive. User the "users" mount > option if you want to allow any user to unmount the drive even if they > weren't the user who originally mounted it. Hopefully, someone else > will chime in with how "managed" really works. Well normally in FC5, it doesn't. "managed" used to mean that fstab-sync could add and remove stuff at will (for example, if the CD drive was removed from the machine). These days it should be a combination of HAL and gnome-mount that handles removable devices, and they won't use /etc/fstab at all. So on a new install (or on an upgrade using the DVD) there shouldn't be any /dev/hdb line in /etc/fstab. What does rpm -V udev hal hal-gnome gnome-mount return? James. -- New address: james | It's fair enough for a surgeon to refuse to operate on @aprilcottage.co.uk | someone who won't stop smoking: you've got to give the | anaesthetist a chance to get in there. | -- "Jeremy Hardy Speaks to the Nation", BBC Radio 4