pmount (0.9.99-alpha-1) experimental; urgency=low pmount now features a /etc/pmount.conf configuration file giving the possibility to allow potentially insecure operations to given users or globally. See pmount.conf (5) for more information. Default is no for every item in the configuration file, which is the safest (as safe as the earlier versions). pmount now by default forbids users not physically logged in the machine (ie not opwning a TTY) to use pmount/pumount, unless not_physically_logged_allow is set to yes in /etc/pmount.conf. -- Vincent Fourmond Fri, 25 Mar 2011 19:52:06 +0100 pmount (0.9.23-2) unstable; urgency=low pmount-hal has now been dropped, as support for HAL is fading away. There are no replacement planned for now. More information there: - http://wiki.debian.org/HALRemoval - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/hal/2008-May/011560.html -- Vincent Fourmond Fri, 11 Feb 2011 00:46:04 +0100 pmount (0.9.16-4) unstable; urgency=low The symlink lookup for /etc/fstab is enabled again - my mistake !! -- Vincent Fourmond Thu, 16 Aug 2007 15:29:54 +0200 pmount (0.9.16-2) unstable; urgency=low The symlink lookup for /etc/fstab has been disabled. If you were relying on the presence of a /etc/fstab entry to prevent your users from mounting a device, please make sure that the entry in /etc/fstab does not reference a symlink (see pmount (1) for more details). -- Vincent Fourmond Fri, 06 Jul 2007 19:53:34 +0200 pmount (0.9.16-1) unstable; urgency=low Starting from release 0.9.16-1, pmount supports globs in the /etc/pmount.allow configuration file. This means in particular that you should check if there wasn't any devices with *, [] or ? inside that shouldn't be interpreted as globs. It is however quite unlikely. -- Vincent Fourmond Wed, 04 Jul 2007 00:27:39 +0200