Question please: If you do ls -lR /dev/disk which symbolic links point to the disk in question when the disk is connected to your machine? If you found symbolic links in the /dev/disk/by-label or /dev/disk/by-uuid directory, such as /dev/disk/by-label/disklabel -or- /dev/disk/by-uuid/fe76a058 -then- in your fstab file, could you put /dev/disk/by-label/disklabel /media/disk ext2 user,noauto -or- /dev/disk/by-uuid/fe76a058 /media/disk ext2 user,noauto If you can do the above in your fstab file, would you be able to mount the disk as user and refer to its mount point as /media/disk? The symbolic link, you find, will be for your disk, and not "disklabel", and the uuid you find will not be fe76a058, but will be for your disk. Just a thought. On Thu, 2007-01-18 at 19:49 +0000, Anne Wilson wrote: > On Thursday 18 January 2007 19:29, Anne Wilson wrote: > > It's necessary to run 'udevtrigger' to activate them. > > > > Next question, then. Should I put that command into my .bash_profile? > > > Just realised, it will need to run as root, so that's no good. Where is it > best to put it, then? > > Anne > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list -- Rick Sewill tel:+1-218-287-1075 mailto:rsewill@xxxxxxxxxxxx 1028 7th St. N. mailto:rsewill@xxxxxxxxx Moorhead, MN 56560-1568 ymsgr:rsewill sip:628497@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx U. S. A. tel:+1-701-866-0266 xmpp:rsewill@xxxxxxxxxx