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Operating Systems Linux Debian Hardlink on wheezy by default for usb-stick? Post 302944212 by 1in10 on Sunday 17th of May 2015 11:33:56 AM
Old 05-17-2015
Final words on mounting points and fstab, I am quitting any update for wheezy 7.0.8 for the simple reason, that after the last update, four days ago, not even now a former pluggable usb-drive will only work or not due to the lack of a mounting point. I doubt that this is useful, to give each and every device around, a certain line in /etc/fstab. So I will probably move to external devices, that are recognized without editing every time the fstab as root.
Found this on stackexchange, well, probably shame on me, but it won't change my point of view.
Code:
 apt-get install usbmount

as root, su.
Thumbs up.

May for others this link can be useful who may still want to use their OS, whatever this may be (mint, buntu, debian based) and who cannot get acquainted to systemd and its tricky behavior. So here is something that can put the fun in your sys, but getting rid of systemd.
Have fun.

How to remove systemd from a Debian jessie/sid installation - Without Systemd

Last edited by 1in10; 08-31-2015 at 04:06 PM.. Reason: grammar final solution that worked, nontheless this does not change my opinion
 

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mkproto(8)						      System Manager's Manual							mkproto(8)

NAME
mkproto - Constructs a prototype file system SYNOPSIS
mkproto special proto DESCRIPTION
The mkproto command is used to bootstrap a new file system. First a new file system is created using newfs. mkproto is then used to copy files from the old file system into the new file system according to the directions found in the prototype file proto. The prototype file contains tokens separated by spaces or newlines. The first tokens comprise the specification for the root directory. File specifications consist of tokens, giving the mode, the user ID, the group ID, and the initial contents of the file. The syntax of the contents field depends on the mode. The mode token for a file is a 6-character string. The first character specifies the type of the file. (The characters -bcd specify regu- lar, block-special, character-special, and directory files, respectively.) The second character of the type is either a u or a - (dash) to specify setuid mode or not. The third character is either a g or a - (dash) for the setgid mode. The rest of the mode is a 3-digit octal number, giving the owner, group, and other read, write, execute permissions. (See the chmod(1) command for more information.) Two decimal number tokens come after the mode; they specify the user and group IDs of the owner of the file: If the file is a regular file, the next token is a pathname from which the contents and size are copied. If the file is a block-special or a character-special file, two decimal number tokens follow, giving the major and minor device numbers. If the file is a directory, mkproto makes the entries . (dot) and .. (dot dot) and then reads a list of names and (recursively) file specifications for the entries in the directory. The scan is terminated with the token $. The following listing shows a sample prototype specification. d--777 3 1 usr d--777 3 1 sh ---755 3 1 /bin/sh ken d--755 6 1 $ b0 b--644 3 1 0 0 c0 c--644 3 1 0 0 $ $ FILES
Specifies the command path RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: fsck(8), fsdb(8), newfs(8). delim off mkproto(8)
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