I’ve 2 network drives on one subnet (nfs and samba). I would like to access them only if computer is connected to particular ssid (subnet).
I’m using gnome primarily. And files stops responding if mount points can’t be accessed. There is no real way to recover from this apart from connecting to network, unmount and then change network.
I would like those drives to be accessed by system only if they are reachable.
Maybe look into autofs which will mount only when you choose to access the drives and then unmount on idle. Could be simpler then trying to react to network status.
I second this. autofs is was I’d recommend.
Thanks will have a look at autofs
When using gnome you’re supposed to not have specific filesystems mounted if they’re not gonna be available.
The proscribed solution is to use systemd to figure out if those mount points are available and mount them, but that would have to be coming off networkd instead of fstab which it sounds like is what you’re using.
A script to figure out if the server you want is available before mounting the filesystem would be easy, but a bad idea because that should be handled by your init system (probably systemd as above).
You could also just abandon gnome and use something else.
Not really tied to gnome, it’s just something I’m using. Would KDE work better ?
You’re asking the wrong person, I use lxqt.
Tonight I can see if konqueror (the kde file browser still think…) does the same thing.
How are your network filesystems mounted, fstab?
It was through fstab until recently. About 2 weeks back I moved to mount them on demand (systemd, will confirm exact method when I’m in front of computer) however this still doesn’t address unmount part when I switch network.
Systemd will do this. Iirc you just need to put the mount info in fstab.
Let’s avoid systemd solutions. They’ll just lock you deeper into lennart’s cancer.
Imagine using a well designed set of tools instead of parts stuck in the 90s
If you have systemd installed then using it is fine.
Genuine question: what init do you use & how would you do this? Of course it doesn’t need to involve init.They just reach into their computer case and tickle the pins on the CPU when they want to initialize PID 1.
I know autofs will work with nfs. Never used it with SMB. I’ve used it on a share of /home to specifically mount /home/user as needed (e.g., at login).
Thanks will have a look at autofs
I’ve used smb with autofs. Works a treat.
Be sure you have nothing running from or accessing the mount constantly, of course – I forgot with a homedir – or it’ll never I mount.
This should sidestep that and timeout pretty quickly: https://jshtab.github.io/guide/gvfs-autmount/





