Somehow I love the name Sea-Rex
- 0 Posts
- 7 Comments
Dumb question here, but you did remember to point at a directory to mount the share to, right?
Part from that, I’ve encountered needing to provide the domain as well (typically WORKGROUP) as the credentials for a user with access to the given share. Furthermore providing username and password on the command-line is known to have some issues, thus I encourage you to provide them in a credential file, which would look something like this:
username=value password=value domain=WORKGROUPMy typical command, changed for your case, would be:
mkdir -p ~/mounted_music sudo mount -t cifs -o credentials=~/creds //DESKTOP-N840KKP/My\ Music ~/mounted_musicNot sure I’ve encountered it myself, but some shares doesn’t support Unix Extensions which can be disabled with “nounix”, you might want to define access rights then either “rw” or “dir_mode=0777,file_mode=0777”. (0777 is not a good practice, but it’ll do for testing) thus something like the following options argument.
-o credentials=~/creds,rw,dir_mode=0777,file_mode=0777,nounix
Desyn0xox@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.world•[USA] Which "send money to friends" service is the least bad, privacy-wise?English
4·4 months agoDon’t know how banking works in the US, but is a normal bank transfer not an option?
Thanks for sharing, looks really cool! Especially with how prevalent markdown is.
Hopefully this isn’t too off topic/thread derailing:
As a longtime LaTeX enjoyer, lately I’ve become increasingly infatuated by Typst. With Excalidraw quickly winning my favour as well …
However I find myself daydreaming of some of Obsidian’s powerfull features for knowledge graphing/“second brain”-ing, but given various reasons, never successfully convinced myself to use it. (Primarily: markdown seemingly a bit too simplistic for my preference, and Obsidian, to my knowledge, not being open source(?))
Instead I’ve tried some alternatives, each with excellent ideas, unfortunately none really hitting home with my wierd brain.e.g. Zim, LogSeq, SiYuan, ...As such I’m curious to hear about others’ setup, and thoughts. - Is Some(Quarkdown + Obsidian) perhaps what I’ve truly been longing for for?



Exciting you’re interested in the terminal. Personally I find it an invaluable tool, it’s powerful and versatile, suitable for almost any task. So as you learn, I’d encourage you to be concious about what you find interesting or fun, whether it is the coding-, problem solving-, automation-part, or an entiely different aspect.
There are several gamified introductions to programming, scripting and using the shell, which may be a good start. Some of my favourites (off the top of my head) are: