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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Have to log out of a virtual terminal twice in order to exit virtual terminals Post 302398149 by Narnie on Wednesday 24th of February 2010 01:48:17 AM
Old 02-24-2010
I have tracked this problem down to a ecrypts issue.

I have a the Private ecrypts directory set up as usual except that I don't like it's automounting behaviour.

The original listing of the dir looks like:

Code:
woodnt@toshiba-laptop ~ $ ls .ecryptfs/
auto-mount   Private.mnt  sig-cache.txt.bak
auto-umount  Private.sig  wrapped-passphrase

I have renamed auto-mount to this, which prevents the auto-mounting of the ecrypts folder, which I manually mount if needed.

Code:
woodnt@toshiba-laptop ~ $ ls .ecryptfs/
NO_auto-mount   Private.mnt  sig-cache.txt.bak
auto-umount  Private.sig  wrapped-passphrase

If have have auto-mount as the original name, then I don't have to log out twice from a vtty. When I have auto-mount renamed so that ecrypt doesn't see it, I have to log out of vtty twice. This is very highly reproducible in that it occurs EVERY time. Also of note, it doesn't really matter if the private dir is "mounted" or not, which caused me to miss this. It is just renaming that one file that breaks it like this.

Anyone have any idea as to a fix?

I'll be posting a bug report in view of this as well.

Thanks,
Narnie

---------- Post updated at 12:48 AM ---------- Previous update was at 12:31 AM ----------

Here is the bug report link:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+s...ls/+bug/526868
 

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MOUNT(2)							System Calls Manual							  MOUNT(2)

NAME
mount, umount - mount or umount a file system SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> #include <sys/mount.h> int mount(char *special, char *name, int flag) int umount(char *name) DESCRIPTION
Mount() tells the system that the file system special is to be mounted on the file name, effectively overlaying name with the file tree on special. Name may of any type, except that if the root of special is a directory, then name must also be a directory. Special must be a block special file, except for loopback mounts. For loopback mounts a normal file or directory is used for special, which must be seen as the root of a virtual device. Flag is 0 for a read-write mount, 1 for read-only. Umount() removes the connection between a device and a mount point, name may refer to either of them. If more than one device is mounted on the same mount point then unmounting at the mount point removes the last mounted device, unmounting a device removes precisely that device. The unmount will only succeed if none of the files on the device are in use. Both calls may only be executed by the super-user. SEE ALSO
mount(1), umount(1). AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) MOUNT(2)
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