-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday 22 Apr 2003 21:04, Michael Peddemors <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tuesday 22 April 2003 12:17, you wrote: > > Le 22/04/03 à 15:14 Michael Peddemors ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) écrivait : > > > Same here, but I thought we could do some debian specific stuff, > > > like adding a cron entry to cleanup orphaned mounts etc.., ensure > > > that mounts are unmounted on logout/disconnect etc.. > > > > How could you be sure a mount is orphaned ? > > If the user who mounted the share is not logged on anymore. > > > Why should mount be unmouted on disconnect ? > > Because the user is no longer logged in. The mounts mounted under > their home directories are of no use to the system or any other user, > until they log back in.
What if they are still running processes which might be using those mounts? > > That is clearly not the purpuse of komba, sorry ! > > Uh, but it seems the exact use of Komba, to mount shares under their > home directories when they need them, and to unmount them when they > disconnect. There is an option to remount shares on logon. > > When you mount via Komba, with 50 users mounting 60 shares, we have a > lot of unused mounts. In windows, when you disconnect, the smb > connections are dropped when you disconnect. So when a user > disconects, it should close the mount, when they login again, the > shares will get remounted. In Microsoft Windows, AFAIK, when one logs off, all of their user processes are terminated. This is not necessarily the case on non-Microsoft systems. Assuming that it is the case is wrong. Paul Cupis - -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE+pb6RIzuKV+SHX/kRAtAjAJ4z8UcRIbm2lv9MOACBmdusFuvsZQCeNr7Y E0ea2kejbH2sTgATm8HjjCQ= =T/Jq -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----