What’s the easiest way to make external USB drives automount, without adding them to fstab? It should just work even if someone else hands me their flash drive.
I’m running sway on Arch if that matters.
What’s the easiest way to make external USB drives automount, without adding them to fstab? It should just work even if someone else hands me their flash drive.
I’m running sway on Arch if that matters.
DEs dont use
mount
and fstab, they useudisks2
which works with polkit, GUI prompts or rootless.Using
udisksctl
prevents a ton of breakages.I dont know about how autostart files work anymore, I always thought just place stuff in
~/.config/autostart
but now those dont work anymore on KDE, sometimes.I think you use your init system for that. If you go fully rootless, you can create a user systemd service that mounts the drive.
mkdir -p ~/flashdrive cat <<EOF > ~/.config/systemd/user/flashdrive-mount.service [Unit] Description=Mount flash drive on /dev/sda #After=multi-user.target [Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/usr/bin/udisksctl mount --block-device /dev/sda --mount-point /home/$USER/flashdrive RemainAfterExit=true [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target EOF systemctl --user enable --now flashdrive-mount.service
Not sure if
After=multi-user.target
andWantedBy=multi-user.target
twists the space time continuum or something.I am always kinda confused by those targets, as you must state one.