Rhythmbox breaks auto mounting.

For a few days I have struggeled with making gnome-volume-manager automount removable storage devices. Some times it woked and sometimes it did not. I had enabled hal and dbus I was sure gnome-volume-manager was running. Eventualy I even loggeg into Gnome as root and everything workes perfectly, so my system is configured correctly. So maybe it was a permission issue, was what first come to my mind, but eventualy it turned out to be Rhythmbox(Rb) who was the trubblemaker. Rb does not autostart as root, as it does on my regular user account, thats way it worked as root.
Now, after some more testing, the situation is this: Automounting works perfektly until i start rhythmbox, then it just stop woking. Even if i stops Rhythmbox, automounting still is broken, even a "pkill gnome-volume-manager && gnome-volume-manager" does not fix it, but logging out and inn again does fix it! No other programs breaks auto mounting!!
I have tried to recompile Rb without both the --with-ipod and --with-dbus flags, but it did not help? Otherwise I have a standard Arch-install.

This is my rc.conf, so if you don't see anything wrong with it I can file a bug!
# /etc/rc.conf - Main Configuration for Arch Linux
# Localization
# HARDWARECLOCK: set to "UTC" or "localtime"
# TIMEZONE: timezones are found in /usr/share/zoneinfo
# KEYMAP: keymaps are found in /usr/share/kbd/keymaps
# CONSOLEFONT: found in /usr/share/kbd/consolefonts (only needed for non-US)
# CONSOLEMAP: found in /usr/share/kbd/unimaps
# USECOLOR: use ANSI color sequences in startup messages
HARDWARECLOCK="UTC"
TIMEZONE=Europe/Oslo
KEYMAP=no-latin1
CONSOLEFONT=
CONSOLEMAP=
USECOLOR="yes"
# Scan for LVM volume groups at startup, required if you use LVM
USELVM="no"
# Networking
HOSTNAME="arch"
# Module to load at boot-up (in this order)
#   (prefix a module with a ! to disable it)
MODULES=(usblp fuse snd-bt-sco)
# Interfaces to start at boot-up (in this order)
# Declare each interface then list in INTERFACES
#   - prefix an entry in INTERFACES with a ! to disable it
# Note: to use DHCP, set your interface to be "dhcp" (eth0="dhcp")
lo="lo 127.0.0.1"
eth0="dhcp"
ra0="dhcp"
INTERFACES=(lo ra0)
# Routes to start at boot-up (in this order)
# Declare each route then list in ROUTES
#   - prefix an entry in ROUTES with a ! to disable it
gateway="default gw 192.168.0.1"
ROUTES=(!gateway)
# Enable these network profiles at boot-up.  These are only useful
# if you happen to need multiple network configurations (ie, laptop users)
#   - set to 'menu' to present a menu during boot-up
#   - prefix an entry with a ! to disable it
# Network profiles are found in /etc/network-profiles
#NET_PROFILES=(main)
# Daemons to start at boot-up (in this order)
#   - prefix a daemon with a ! to disable it
#   - prefix a daemon with a @ to start it up in the background
DAEMONS=(syslog-ng hotplug sshd network netfs crond dbus portmap fam hal alsa cups uptimed sensors hcid)
# End of file

Similar Messages

  • Disable Auto-Mounting

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    Last edited by Timn (2009-11-17 01:18:33)

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    -Then add "Mount Disk Image".
    -Then test workflow by clicking on "Run" button on top right of window. If your
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    -To have your Mac auto-mount your disk image automatically when you login:
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    Too many steps. Do this:
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    It's important that the image is a journaled one because if it isn't, being disconnected from it while writing would be potentially disastrous.
    It's important that the image is a sparsebundle for two reasons: sparsebundles only take up as much space as they need (e.g., a 1Tb sparsebundle with 100M of data takes up about 100M of space), and they also break the disk down into smaller files. If the underlying filesystem on your network share is FAT32, then no file can go over 4Gb. If you use a sparsebundle, of course, there's no practical limit to how large the disk image can get. Also, it can speed up certain types of backup procedures.
    I suggest using partition type "Hard Disk" instead of "1 partition GUID" because, as a disk image, there's no sense in having a partition table or making it bootable (because you can't boot from the image).

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    Repair Disk.
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    Hello.
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    UUID=3f87634f-7dbf-46ba-a84c-e8606b40acfe /some/7 ocfs2 _netdev,defaults 0 0
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    UUID=0e682b5a-8d75-40d1-8983-fa39dd5a0e54 /some/2 ocfs2 _netdev,defaults 0 0

    What is the output of:
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  • External Hard Drive connected to AEBS does not auto mount

    Just upgraded from Tiger 10.4.11 to Leopard 10.5.5. I have a AEBS running 5.3.2 airport utility with a LaCie HD connected to it.
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  • How do I stop a CCC partition auto mounting in Lion

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  • [solved] USB drives won't auto mount

    When I plug in a drive, I get this error message:
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    Last edited by Meskarune (2010-04-15 04:21:08)

    HAL:
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  • Disable Gnome auto mount for one specific UUID

    I am using Gnome 3 (gnome disk utility,udisks,udev stack i think).
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  • Working auto-mount?

    Hi all,
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    ## Backup -fstype=ext4,user,rw,async,umask=000,gid=users,noatime,nodiratime :/dev/disk/by-uuid/f569bba5-8007-40f5-8b3c-36960c5796d5
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    ReaderCard -fstype=vfat,flush,user,rw,async,umask=000,gid=users,noatime,nodirat
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    As an alternative I have tried xfce volume manager, but that doesn't work with ANY external device.
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    That would be a solution - if it worked. I tried that too. The Arch wiki just glances on the setup, solving the whole question with a one liner "Thunar-volman's automount doesn't work currently because of the hal to udev switch, Sept 2010"
    The section on udev is obscure, mentioning to check policykit to "properly start your session".
    However the policykit page is also obscure, containing no mention about starting X session properly or even improperly for what matters.
    The default setting produces no result at all.
    Nowhere I was able to find a five-lines working example of set up. I have used Linux daily since 2000 (and I know it should not take more than 5 line explanation to setup an auto-mount).
    I am really embittered by this interpretation of "the arch way". The documentation on certain core tools such as policykit is completely insufficient and the defaults do not solve basic problems (hours to set up a basic auto-mount? incomplete wiki pages referring each other?).
    Arch could be a perfect desktop distribution with just a pinch of attention to put the obvious features, when correctly disabled by default, at easy reach through complete examples. (Shutdown buttons? Same story: one line reference to policykit, dbus and other 10 tools with not the barest explanation about how to use them in synergy for the purpose. Result? Manual shutdown for the moment).
    If you could provide a working setup for thunar volume manager I'll be happy to use and add it to the wiki.
    Thank you.

  • USB Auto-mounting Woes [SOLVED]

    Hi,
    I've been trying to get my USB sticks to auto-mount and grant all users permission to mount/unmount them.
    To achieve that I initially added the following to my sudoers using visudo:
    %wheel ALL=NOPASSWD: /bin/mount
    %wheel ALL=NOPASSWD: /bin/umount
    That however didn't solve my inability to (un)mount drives in PCMan FM.. so I headed towards the wiki. The wiki stated the following:
    You can easily automount and eject removable devices with the combination of pmount, udisks2 and spacefm. Note you have to run spacefm in daemon mode with spacefm -d & in your startup scripts, ~/.xinitrc or ~/.xsession, to get automounting.
    I wasn't too fussed about having to use spacefm and everything seemed to work just fine.. until I tried format a USB stick using gparted. Gparted fails because because seemingly half way through the formatting procedure the drive is mounted (my suspicion is that it's spacefm).
    mkdosfs: /dev/sdb1 contains a mounted file system.
    If i unmount and format manually using the CLI it works just fine.. but I quite like gparted
    I tried removing
    spacefm -d
    from my .xinitrc and that actually stops openbox from starting up. Uninstalling (and later re-installing when it didn't help) pmount didn't help either, spacefm just auto-mounts in a strange 'run' way..
    So now I'm stuck, anyone experienced similar issues with gparted and spacefm?
    Last edited by omgitsaheadcrab (2012-06-22 13:27:07)

    ck-list-sessions shows an active consokekit session, so that should be fine?
    Session1:
    unix-user = '1000'
    seat = 'Seat1'
    session-type = 'x11'
    active = TRUE
    x11-display = ':0.0'
    x11-display-device = '/dev/tty7'
    display-device = ''
    remote-host-name = ''
    is-local = TRUE
    on-since = '2012-06-22T12:24:47.734505Z'
    login-session-id = '3'
    The gparted error log is as follows:
    GParted 0.12.1
    Libparted 3.1
    Delete /dev/sdb1 (fat32, 7.37 GiB) from /dev/sdb 00:00:01 ( SUCCESS )
    calibrate /dev/sdb1 00:00:00 ( SUCCESS )
    path: /dev/sdb1
    start: 2048
    end: 15466495
    size: 15464448 (7.37 GiB)
    delete partition 00:00:01 ( SUCCESS )
    ========================================
    Create Primary Partition #1 (fat32, 7.37 GiB) on /dev/sdb 00:00:01 ( ERROR )
    create empty partition 00:00:00 ( SUCCESS )
    path: /dev/sdb1
    start: 2048
    end: 15466495
    size: 15464448 (7.37 GiB)
    set partition type on /dev/sdb1 00:00:01 ( SUCCESS )
    new partition type: fat32
    create new fat32 file system 00:00:00 ( ERROR )
    mkdosfs -F32 -v -n "PATRIOT" /dev/sdb1
    mkdosfs 3.0.12 (29 Oct 2011)
    mkdosfs: /dev/sdb1 contains a mounted file system.
    ========================================
    I still can't help but feel it's spacefm doing something funny (automounting when it shouldn't)
    Last edited by omgitsaheadcrab (2012-06-22 12:31:36)

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