From c48c7a64c7a401c8f11ceb140309d62296ae7c6b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas Willingham Date: Wed, 29 Jan 2014 21:42:12 +0000 Subject: Doco - add KDE/Gnome/Davfs2 instructions --- doc/dav_davfs2.md | 58 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 58 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/dav_davfs2.md (limited to 'doc/dav_davfs2.md') diff --git a/doc/dav_davfs2.md b/doc/dav_davfs2.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..546638810 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/dav_davfs2.md @@ -0,0 +1,58 @@ +**Installing The Cloud as a Filesystem on Linux** + +To install your cloud directory as a filesystem, you first need davfs2 installed. 99% of the time, this will be included in your distributions repositories. In Debian + +`apt-get install davfs2` + +If you want to let normal users mount the filesystem + +`dpkg-reconfigure davfs2` + +and select "yes" at the prompt. + +Now you need to add any user you want to be able to mount dav to the davfs2 group + +`usermod -aG davfs2 ` + +Edit /etc/fstab + +`nano /etc/fstab` + +to include your cloud directory by adding + +`example.com/cloud/ /mount/point davfs user,noauto,uid=,file_mode=600,dir_mode=700 0 1` + +Where example.com is the URL of your hub, /mount/point is the location you want to mount the cloud, and is the user you log in to one your computer. Note that if you are mounting as a normal user (not root) the mount point must be in your home directory. + +For example, if I wanted to mount my cloud to a directory called 'cloud' in my home directory, and my username was bob, my fstab would be + +`example.com/cloud/ /home/bob/cloud davfs user,noauto,uid=bob,file_mode=600,dir_mode=700 0 1` + +Now, create the mount point. + +`mkdir /home/bob/cloud` + +and also create a directory file to store your credentials + +`mkdir /home/bob/.davfs2` + +Create a file called 'secrets' + +`nano /home/bob/.davfs2/secrets` + +and add your cloud login credentials + +`example.com/cloud ` + + +Where and are the username and password for your hub. + +Don't let this file be writeable by anyone who doesn't need it with + +`chmod 600 /home/bob/.davfs2/secrets` + +Finally, mount the drive. + +`mount example.com/cloud` + +You can now find your cloud at /home/bob/cloud and use it as though it were part of your local filesystem - even if the applications you are using have no dav support themselves. -- cgit v1.2.3