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I ran dysk and was a bit shocked that my mounted /boot filesystem was missing from the output. I first thought that something was wrong with my system until I ran mount and then found #94
I'd like to discuss, whether a mounted filesystem (that is present in /etc/fstab) should be omitted from the output.
It is of course possible to run dysk -a, which then shows my /boot filesystem. But then I have to parse through tmpfs and virtual filesystems until I find it.
I believe that all filesystems that are manually mounted (smb, nfs) and filesytems in /etc/fstab (which are mounted) should be shown by dysk.
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I ran
dyskand was a bit shocked that my mounted/bootfilesystem was missing from the output. I first thought that something was wrong with my system until I ranmountand then found #94I'd like to discuss, whether a mounted filesystem (that is present in
/etc/fstab) should be omitted from the output.It is of course possible to run
dysk -a, which then shows my/bootfilesystem. But then I have to parse through tmpfs and virtual filesystems until I find it.I believe that all filesystems that are manually mounted (smb, nfs) and filesytems in
/etc/fstab(which are mounted) should be shown by dysk.What your take on this?
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