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Without knowledge of this, people trying out an Ubuntu- or Debian-based distribution will be frustrated when trying to use udisksctl(1). I ran into this situation myself, so discovering this was a relief.
35 lines
1.6 KiB
Plaintext
35 lines
1.6 KiB
Plaintext
# udisksctl
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# The udisks command line tool
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# Output low-level information for the provided block device and partition.
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udisksctl info -b /dev/sdd1
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# Mount partition on the given block device. This will by default use
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# '/media', and on typical systems won't even require root privileges.
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udisksctl mount -b /dev/sd??
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# Set up a loop device using 'imagefile'. This only sets it up, so you will
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# probably also want to mount it thereafter, using the device given to you
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# after executing this command. often, if not always, this is '/dev/loopX', -
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# where X is the loop device number.
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udisksctl loop-setup -f image file
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# Like the above, except this will delete the loop device (assuming 'loop0' was
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# previously created) but note that this will NOT delete the image file. Be
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# sure to unmount the filesystem(s) on the device first, before deleting it.
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udisksctl loop-delete -b /dev/loop0
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# Power off block device. May not work for all devices, and may vary in effect.
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udisksctl power-off -b /dev/sdb
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# Example of a suitable mount request for auto-mounting at startup. Useful if
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# fstab isn't playing nice. This also demonstrates using `mount`-style options.
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udisksctl mount --no-user-interaction --options noatime -b /dev/sde1
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# In some distributions of Linux, such as an Ubuntu 18.04 base install, will
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# not have its policies set to allow regular users to mount filesystems with
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# udisksctl(1) without root access, despite that being the point of this tool.
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# This can be resolved by updating the policies to this effect. In Ubuntu 18.04
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# it's as easy as a simple package installation procedure.
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sudo apt-get install policykit-desktop-privileges
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