mount / umount
Dany
dany_list at natzo.com
Wed Jan 7 21:38:52 PST 2004
Kevin Oberman wrote:
>>From: Fabrizio Parrella <fabrizio at nldesign.com>
>>Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2004 09:55:42 -0500
>>Sender: owner-freebsd-current at freebsd.org
>>
>>tried that too:
>>
>>devfs ruleset 10
>>devfs rule add path "fd0*" group wheel mode 666
>>devfs rule add path "apm" group wheel mode 666 (I tried also without this
>>line)
>>devfs rule applyset
>>
>>and after the reboot.. nothing :-(
>>
>>fabry
>>
>>On Wednesday 07 January 2004 09:47 am, Ryan Sommers wrote:
>>
>>
>>>On Wed, 2004-01-07 at 08:38, Fabrizio Parrella wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>If I try to mount the floppy when I am root, everything works fine!!
>>>>
>>>>I tried to chmod 766 /dev/fd* , but as soon as I reboot I have the
>>>>problem again.
>>>>
>>>>I have notice now that I cannot use also the /dev/apm when I am not the
>>>>root, but I can use /dev/dsp.
>>>>
>>>>
>
>Fabrizio,
>
>I think you are working a bit too hard. I had similar problems and
>discovered that, for this sort of simple action with no jail involvement,
>the format should be much simpler.
>
>link cd0 cdrom
>link cd0 dvd
>link ttyd0 pilot
>perm cd0 0666
>perm acd0 0666
>perm pass0 0666
>perm ttyd0 0666
>
>This will create symlinks from /dev/dvd and /dev/cdrom to /dev/cd0 (use
>acd0 if you don't use atapicam) and a symlink for /dev/piolot to the
>COM0 port.
>
>It also changes the protections on the cd0, acd0, and pass0 devices to
>global read/write.
>
>I think you can see what you need for your floppy. Probably:
>perm fd0 0666
>perm apm 0666 (I'm not sure that you need this.)
>
>
using configuration similar to the above one worked for me with for my
CD drive but I had to add my user to the group "operator" . So you
should give it a try.
Dany
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