If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ. You will have to register
before you can post. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Please do not use the CODE tag when pasting content that contains formatting (colored, bold, underline, italic, etc).
The CODE tag displays all content as plain text, including the formatting tags, making it difficult to read.
Sorry guys... I guess there was a module that you could control mount points, disks and the like. I'm trying to dig up an old 8.04 CD to give you the exact name because it escapes me right at the moment.
Yep, I've got Disk & Filesystems in my 8,04.3 and it works great for me, always did.
Someone told me about mountmanager (?), I'm forgetting the details, tried it once, but it is no D&F.
An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
The basic functionalities of MountManager are:
- Mount and unmount partitions (ext3/2, ntfs, swap, fat, reiserfs, iso9660,
udf, ...)
- Show all logical and physical disks
- Change config file /etc/fstab
- Descriptions of options and other settings of mounting
- Restoration system
- Images mounting and unmounting (Nrg, Mdf , Ccd, Bin , etc)
- Udev rules creation
- Disk wizard
- Etc...
Plugins are supported and there is good English and Russian documentations to
help develop new plugins.
havent tryd it but thare it is.
VINNY
EDIT: ok hears a screeney.......looks dangerus if you dont know what your dowing....
OK, got my Kubuntu 8.04 live cd (Man, that takes a guy back)...
dibl was right. It's was under "System Settings>Advanced>Disk & Filesystems"
I guess what I'm looking for would be a mount manager in kde 4.2.x.
I am not sure that it is the same as you need, but I use partitionmanager package (which is a tool running as a standalone and as a systemsettings module). Looks enough to move/resize/mount/unmount.
Yeah, between GParted or KDE Partition Manager I can manage partitions. What I'm looking for is the functionality of setting up '/dev/sda2' as '/home' without manually editing /etc/fstab.
4. Highlight the UUID of your /dev/sda2, and "copy" it.
5. In kate, start a new line in /etc/fstab that begins "UUID=" and then paste in the UUID that you copied from Konsole. This will make a new line that looks like this:
UUID="21c86c34-f1b9-4404-851e-36ce8fce4f5c"
So you modify it to do these things:
(a) delete the quote marks
(b) add the mount point and filesystem type
(c) add the mount options
Yeah, I agree. Linux CLI is sometimes so much better than gui. Looking for something that is spelled out pretty plainly in the man pages for mount and /etc/fstab is a little much. I was just more curious at what happened to the utility I used to use in KDE 3.5, and if there was a replacement. But typically after the initial setup, you rarely would have to edit the fstab at all.
I was just more curious at what happened to the utility I used to use in KDE 3.5, and if there was a replacement.
The module was a part of the "guidance" modules, which included a few kcontrol add-ons: http://extragear.kde.org/apps/guidance/
And I don't think it has been ported to KDE4.
Comment