Eric, search for raspberry pie. There are a couple of interesting episodes on
it which may be helpful to you. Sorry I can't be of more help right now.
Rill -- Sent from my iPhone
On Jul 15, 2016, at 9:56 AM, erik burggraaf <erik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:===========================================================
HI Rill,
Thank you for the tip.
I'm doing the research now. I've learned about autofs. This is apparently a
special utility for mounting usb and network hard drives and it works on the
pi. I'd rather use what's already here, but if this will do the job then I'm
for it.
I've also Listened to Ken Falen on hacker radio.
http://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?idI don't think this is the podcast you
were referring to, but that seems to be all that came up on a search for
large hard drives through hacker public radio, but I don't trust either the
google search utility they used or my own knowledge of what to search for
here.
I'll start configuring autofs when I get back from my walk and see if that
does what I need.
Thanks,
Erik Burggraaf
Freelance jack of many trades! Visit my website:
http://www.theoutofworkbum.work
Also check out my website for inclusion to the android platform for persons
with sensery, physical or cognitive disabilities:
http://www.inclusiveandroid.com
On Jul 14, 2016, at 7:24 PM, Rill <starbasecafe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In my experience, Eric, the problem simply may be the size of the drives you
were trying to mount. I'm guessing they are large based on what you're using
them for. Essentially, the pie can't mount them fast enough and therefore
they don't get mounted at all. There is a workaround for it. There was a
hacker public radio podcast on this subject. You'd have to dig through the
archives to find it. If you can't turn it up, post here and I'll try to find
it for you.
Rill -- Sent from my iPhone
On Jul 14, 2016, at 8:47 PM, erik burggraaf <erik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:===========================================================
Hello all, I have had this raspberry pi for three years and always
intended to set it up as a nas/personal cloud. This week, I have finally
gotten around to it. I'm using raspbian via command line. This meets my
needs and in particular it potentially lets me remote administrate. I have
a good two pages of notes. Many appropriate packages are installed and
updates performed. My drives are all accessible, but I have run into an
issue. In order to make my drives mount automatically at startup, I need
to edit the fstab file. I have done this successfully, but my drives don't
mount automatically, even though all of the commands work if I run them
myself. I used the tutorial found here:
http://www.techjawab.com/2013/06/how-to-setup-mount-auto-mount-usb-hard.html
<http://www.techjawab.com/2013/06/how-to-setup-mount-auto-mount-usb-hard.html>
This I believe is intended for arch, but all of the commands work exactly
as advertised on raspbian. I am guessing there is a problem with the way
I wrote my fstab file, but this is my first time doing such and I don't
particularly know what to search for on google to get the answer I need.
Would some one be willing to look at the contents of my fstab and tell me
where I went wrong? I could paste it into an email message.
Thanks,
Erik Burggraaf
Freelance jack of many trades! Visit my website:
http://www.theoutofworkbum.work
Also check out my website for inclusion to the android platform for persons
with sensery, physical or cognitive disabilities:
http://www.inclusiveandroid.com
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Archives: //www.freelists.org/archives/raspberry-vi
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-----------------------------------------------------------
Raspberry Pi and the Raspberry Pi logo are trademarks of the Raspberry Pi
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This list is not affiliated to the Raspberry Pi Foundation and the views and
attitudes expressed by the subscribers to this list do not reflect those of
the Foundation.
Mike Ray, list creator, January 2013
===========================================================
The raspberry-vi mailing list
Archives: //www.freelists.org/archives/raspberry-vi
Administrative contact: <mike.ray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
-----------------------------------------------------------
Raspberry Pi and the Raspberry Pi logo are trademarks of the Raspberry Pi
Foundation.
This list is not affiliated to the Raspberry Pi Foundation and the views and
attitudes expressed by the subscribers to this list do not reflect those of
the Foundation.
Mike Ray, list creator, January 2013