diff -ur ivman-0.6.14.orig/ivman.8 ivman-0.6.14/ivman.8 --- ivman-0.6.14.orig/ivman.8 2005-12-08 23:27:45.000000000 -0200 +++ ivman-0.6.14/ivman.8 2008-01-21 15:58:09.000000000 -0200 @@ -69,13 +69,17 @@ Ivman is a flexible device manager, allowing users to run arbitrary commands when devices are added/removed, when device properties change, and when devices emit conditions. -For automount purposes, Ivman should be run once from a system-wide init script and once -per user session (e.g., create a link to /usr/bin/ivman in ~/.kde/Autostart or -put an entry for /usr/bin/ivman in gnome-session-manager). -When a device is attached, Ivman will call pmount or mount to mount the device. If pmount is used, it will mount -the device readable and writeable only for the current user; if no per-user instance of -Ivman is running, the device will be mounted read/write for everyone in the same group as -is required to use the pmount command, and read-only for everyone else. If regular mount is used, then an fstab entry must exist in /etc/fstab for the device to be mounted, and the settings given in that fstab entry will be used for the mount. +For automount purposes, just starting ivman on the user session should be +enough (e.g., create a link to /usr/bin/ivman in ~/.kde/Autostart or put an +entry for /usr/bin/ivman in gnome-session-manager), but a more flexible +option is to start the system daemon as well. When a device is attached, +Ivman will call pmount or mount to mount the device. If pmount is used, it +will mount the device readable and writeable only for the current user; if +no per-user instance of Ivman is running, the device will be mounted +read/write for everyone in the same group as is required to use the pmount +command, and read-only for everyone else. If regular mount is used, then an +fstab entry must exist in /etc/fstab for the device to be mounted, and the +settings given in that fstab entry will be used for the mount. Ivman is supplied with sensible default configuration files for volume management, but autoplay functionality has no default actions;