I'd suggest looking into the config for automount.
On Fri, 2014-01-03 at 22:48 +0000, Ken Smith wrote:
Dennis Jacobfeuerborn wrote:
On 03.01.2014 15:37, Leon Fauster wrote:
Am 03.01.2014 um 15:04 schrieb Ken Smithkens@kensnet.org:
Leon Fauster wrote:
Am 03.01.2014 um 08:57 schrieb Mauricio Tavaresraubvogel@gmail.com:
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 10:19 PM, Leon Fauster leonfauster@googlemail.com wrote:
{snip}
thats why i suggest to try it in backup. Thats not a solution, it is more a heuristic way to get close to the problem (after evaluating the results).
I tried it in /media. Same result. Its as if umount is doing a rm -rf
please try /backup, /test or /random or something that is not /mnt or /media. The latter dirs are common to be under control by some "processes".
Also try to use /bin/umount instead of just umount. That way you prevent a potential alias for "umount" from running instead of the actual command.
Regards, Dennis
OK result. I created /TEST and mounted and umounted successfully with both /bin/umount and plain umount
Interesting, as suspected something is messing with things in /mnt and /media
Ken