On Sun, 2006-12-10 at 19:13 -0500, Marvin Renich wrote: > If you are using a new enough kernel, I highly recommend sshfs, which is > a FUSE filesystem that uses ssh. You can mount a subtree of a remote > filesystem and then access it with the same permissions as if you were > using an ssh session (which you are). Also the mount can be done by a > regular user; root privileges (or predefined entries in fstab) are not > necessary.
Sure, I could use sshfs instead of cifs. But that still leaves the question of how to do the dynamic mounting. I do not want to type in some mount command before I can access the share. Rather, it should just be there, whenever I need it and can access it. So that leads me to autofs again, but then there's not a real difference between sshfs and cifs, right? Or is there some easier way to accomplish this with sshfs? Koen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]