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I know that there are many post and solutions regarding how to auto mount CIFS shares.... but for some reason I cannot get any of them to work.
Here is what I know.
1) I used to use fstab. But not fstab requires root access to mount CIFS Shares
2) I have tried smbnetfs as described here: [url= https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/sa … c_mounting ] Samba . This results in extremely slow browsing to the network share and my credentials being denied. It is possible that I have not set up the ~/.smb/smbnetfs.auth file correctly. I also get the message:
WARNING: Unkown libsmbclient version: 4.1.6
SMBNetFS may not work as expected.
3) I have tried autofs Autofs with no luck.
4) I would be willing to mount from the terminal or a script file. However, when I mount with
sudo mount -t cifs //networkstorage/01_media /home/user/Network/01_media -o username=xxxx,password=xxxxx
I do not get rear/write privileges.
5) I know the CIFS share is set up correctly. Because if I brows to the share using thunar I can mount the location (with password and username) and get full read write access.
Can anyone suggest what is the best method for mounting. So that I can begin trying to fiqure out how to make it work for my system. Or if I could get some advice on what I am doing wrong in the terminal so that I could get R/W privileges.
Thanks!
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You tried the fstab, but you didn't specify what youactually put in the fstab. There is an option which should enable you to mount the cifs filesystem as a normal user... it is the same option as any other filesystem. Have a look at the mount man page, as it has the information you are looking for.
I don't know what smbnetfs is or how one would use that, but from a quick gander at the package info it appears to be a fuse filesystem. You also didn't give even a hint of what happened when you tried autofs, or in what way you failed.
I think what you might really be looking for is an automounting daemon though. I'm not sure how they work with network shares that require a password, but you might want to have a look. This would be how the DEs handle automounting. In particular, there is udev{,2} that seems to be the most common solution.
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Thanks for the fast reply WonderWoofy. It I could get fstab to work that would be my preferred scenario. I have googled and tried many fstab options. The most recent is as follows:
//networkstorage/00_Media /home/user/Network/00_Media cifs sec=ntlm,noauto,x-systemd.automount,users, username=xxxx, password=xxxx 0 0
everything that I have read made it sound like fstab no longer allows users to access cifs mounts, so I thought it was a lost cause.
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