I have a machine that boots from and IDE drive then finds an internal SCSI drive after any USB drives are found.

The SCSI disk gets fsck'd and mounted fine if there is no USB drive in the machine, but the mount -a process at start-up mounts the USB drive in place of one of the partitions of the SCSI disk when the USB drive is present.

I'd like to ensure that the SCSI drive always gets mounted properly at boot-up time, whether or not a USB drive is plugged in.

Any suggestions?

Running Debian unstable, and wanting this to work with a stock Debian kernel (ie I don't want to build the SCSI driver into the kernel).

Arthur.


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