Mounting it in fstab is a bad idea... in home even worse.
Just make some desktop entries with the shares and that should be enough.
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Mounting it in fstab is a bad idea... in home even worse.
Just make some desktop entries with the shares and that should be enough.
What's so wrong with fstab?
Well, for one, it's network attached storage. If it's not present in the network for one reason or another, guess what, your OS doesn't boot... or it errors during boot, depending on how the kernel was compiled and what switches your bootloader sends to the kernel during boot. Second, this is an easy way for malware to spread, especially if it's set to run after user logon.
Well, for one, it's network attached storage. If it's not present in the network for one reason or another, guess what, your OS doesn't boot... or it errors during boot, depending on how the kernel was compiled and what switches your bootloader sends to the kernel during boot.
Just use nofail
in the fstab.
Second, this is an easy way for malware to spread, especially if it's set to run after user logon.
If your fileshare is accessible to you, it is also accessible to malware running as your user. Mounting the share via a filemanager doesn't change this.
I use systemd mount files instead of fstab, that way I can specify a network dependency in the off chance there's no network connection. Plus I can have other services like jellyfin depend on that mount file so it starts after the share is available.
in fstab, there's a nofail option that I started using when mounting NFS and other disks that may be missing and I don't want to kill my bootup