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&applet; Manual The &applet; applet enables you to quickly mount or unmount various types of drives and file systems from a panel. 2015 MATE Documentation Project 2005 Trent Lloyd 2004 Sun Microsystems 2002 John Fleck 2000 Dan Mueth MATE Documentation Project GNOME Documentation Project MATE Documentation Team MATE Desktop Trent Lloyd GNOME Documentation Project
lathiat@bur.st
Sun GNOME Documentation Team Sun Microsystems John Fleck GNOME Documentation Project
jfleck@inkstain.net
Dan Mueth GNOME Documentation Project
muet@alumni.uchicago.edu
&applet; Applet Manual V&manrevision; &date; MATE Documentation Team MATE Documentation Project &applet; Applet Manual V2.11 &date; Trent Lloyd GNOME Documentation Project &applet; Applet Manual V2.10 February 2004 Sun GNOME Documentation Team GNOME Documentation Project Disk Mounter Applet Manual V2.0 March 2002 John Fleck jfleck@inkstain.net GNOME Documentation Project Drive Mount Applet Manual April 2000 Dan Mueth muet@alumni.uchicago.edu GNOME Documentation Project This manual describes version &appversion; of &applet;. Feedback To report a bug or make a suggestion regarding the &app; or this manual, follow the directions in the MATE Feedback Page.
Disk Mounter Introduction
&applet; The &applet; applet.
The &app; enables you to quickly mount and unmount various types of drives and file systems. For the &app; to work properly, your system administrator must configure your system appropriately. Refer to the fstab5 for more information about the necessary system administration tasks. To Add &applet; to a Panel To add &applet; to a panel, perform the following steps: Right-click on the panel. Choose Add to Panel. Scroll down the list of items in the Add to Panel dialog, then select &applet;. Click Add. Manually Mounting and Unmounting File Systems Many file systems on Linux and other Unix-like systems must be manually mounted and unmounted. When a file system is mounted, you can read and write to the file system. When you finish working with a file system, you should unmount the file system. You must unmount removable drives, such as floppy disks and Zip disks, before you remove the media, because Linux and other Unix-like systems do not always write the changes immediately. Such systems typically buffer the changes to the disk, to improve the speed of the system. Partitions on fixed drives, such as your hard drive, are typically mounted automatically when your computer boots, and unmounted when your computer shuts down. Removable media must be mounted and unmounted manually, for example by using the &app;. Some systems may also automatically mount some removable media (such as USB and IEEE1394 disks), these devices may also come up in the &app; so that you can unmount them when you are finished, and provide a visual indication that they are present.
Usage To Display the Name and Mount Status of a Drive To display the name and mount status of a drive, move the mouse pointer to the drive icon in the panel. A tooltip displays the name and mount status of the drive. To Mount, Unmount or Eject a Drive To mount drive, click on the drive icon in the panel and then select the Mount Drive option. To unmount a drive, click on the drive icon in the panel and then select the Unmount Drive option, or if the device is a CD-ROM Drive, it may be labeled Eject Drive To Browse the Contents of a Drive To use a file manager to browse the contents of a drive, click on the drive icon in the panel, then choose Open Drive. You can only browse the contents of a mounted drive.