From 6a6ddf1ad679d6f741eaeba31a8f6f9713f2bddd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Arthur Navi Date: Tue, 5 Nov 2024 23:58:21 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update README --- remount_checker/README.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/remount_checker/README.md b/remount_checker/README.md index e0f9e33..826d3d5 100644 --- a/remount_checker/README.md +++ b/remount_checker/README.md @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ This is a very simple program to check if a particular folder is a mounted folde You *need* a ``mount_points.py`` file. The ``example_mount_points.py`` provides an example format (it's a touple - first element is the folder to check, second element is the command to run). ## ``mount`` command -You'll need to make sure that the ``cron``user (can't think of the exact correct term - the user that cron _pretends_(?) to be when runnign the command??) is able to actually run the mount command. There are 2 simple options that I can see: +You'll need to make sure that the ``cron``user (can't think of the exact correct term - the user that cron _pretends_(?) to be when running the command is able to actually run the command in the seccond tuple member (the command being run). There are 2 simple options that I can see: 1. Use ``sudo crontab -e`` and make ``root`` use run the command, or 2. Make your user able to run the mount command. I'm sorry I don't know 100%, but I think that means adding ``user`` to the mount options in ``fstab``.