

I’ll definetly look deeper into this, thank you very much.


I’ll definetly look deeper into this, thank you very much.


I know the image you mean, but I can’t find it.


Best practice


That sounds useful, thank you very much.


I described what I did here.


Meanwhile I found a solution using fstab.
What’s the advantage of using a systemd script?
I’ll probably switch to simple script, since I don’t like the idea of my laptop shouting my NAS access credentials into any available random network on startup.


You’re right, I’ve been mixing up nfs and smb.
Meanwhile, I’ve found a solution: I’ve added the following line to my /etc/fstab:
//nas/sharedFolder /mnt/entrypoint cifs credentials=/home/yourUserNameHere/.nascreds,uid=yourUserID,gid=yourGroupID,defaults,auto 0 0
then run sudo systemctl daemon-reload
followed by sudo mount -av.
make sure your credentials file can only read by users and groups you trust, in my case it’s 750.
However, this is still a workaround. The thing is, GTK-based apps don’t show network resources. That irks me.


Using gvfs-nfs returns unknown file system type.
I’ve run mount -v yadda yadda and got portmap query failed: RPC: Unable to receive - Connection refused
Vielen Dank für das Teilen dieses Artikels, als indirekt betroffener liefert mir dieser eine Basis, mit der ich agieren kann.