Sorry for the late summary. The origional question was:
>We use in our workstation (running SunOS 4.1.3) the smount/unmount program,
>which allows normal users to mount/umount the CDROM-device.
>People often forget to unmount, therefore I am interested that the system
>will automatically unmount the device, if it has not been accessed within
>an appropriate time.
>I tried to check the last access time to the CDROM-device with:
>ls -ul
>But it returns me a time, which seems to be the creation date.
>Does anybody has a solution?
Most of the responses adviced to use /usr/etc/automount. But this
works only for NFS file systems, and not for devices, which are locally
connected.
Pete (shipley@merde.dis.org) recommended to use the amd-software.
This is an automounter daemon, which mounts/unmounts also ufs and hsfs
filesystems.
I installed the software, and it is works well for the cdrom-device,
which is directly connected to our workstation.
I got also a reply, that there is a vold-command in solaris 2.x, x>=2.
We are running SunOS 4.1.3, so I could'nt try it.
Thanks to all who replied:
miguel@dt.fee.unicamp.br
shipley@merde.dis.org
pluto!perryh@qiclab.scn.rain.com
sckhoo@emtds1.nsc.com
root@treveris.Uni-Trier.DE
anderson@neon.mitre.org
HMENSCH@us.oracle.com
strombrg@bingy.acs.uci.edu
jloh@futon.sfsu.edu
Friedel Loinger
Wise Observatory
Israel
------------------------------
e-mail: friedel@wise.tau.ac.il
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