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This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "lolife.se" (Feb 23rd 2007, 3:21am)
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Would it be hard to do, say, a smb (or whatever) system deamon that puts whole networks/workgroups directly into the tree? It would make everything so much more system transparant, instead of all these peculiar workarounds, no?
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Originally posted by Rinse
Dunno, but if an application uses a whole virtual desktop or a whole virtual screen, what's the difference?
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Should be possible i guess, like a network daemon that checks for network shares and mounts them automaticly.
This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "lolife.se" (Feb 23rd 2007, 9:36pm)
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I dunno.. Less clutter, more space for the application, etc.
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Why have several desktops when you don't always have use for them.
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Well, that's not quite the elegant solution, is it. What I meant was simply something that "mounts" the whole network/workgroup, so that workgroups, computers, shares, etc, all are represented as a "directory" in the tree. Ie. they're mounted all the time, so to speak.
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Well, that's not quite the elegant solution, is it. What I meant was simply something that "mounts" the whole network/workgroup, so that workgroups, computers, shares, etc, all are represented as a "directory" in the tree. Ie. they're mounted all the time, so to speak.
That's the same thing
That's what the network daemon should do..
But if you are using a static network with the same network shares all the time, you can add them to /etc/fstab yourself and get the directory tree you want.
Checkout smbmount for wich syntax you should use..
This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "lolife.se" (Feb 23rd 2007, 11:37pm)
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