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userformat [ device ] [ options ]
Also, if the user has the appropriate permissions for the device, the Format button will be active. This allows the user to format disks using fdformat and create a new filesystem of the type listed (using mkfs with the appropriate option). Naturally, the user will be prompted for confirmation before actually destroying data on the device.
Note that if a device is already mounted, the format button is inactive for all entries that share the same device.
When run as root, usermount displays all of the entries in /etc/fstab rather than just the ones with the user option.
| Tag | Description |
|---|---|
| /etc/fstab | The system file describing the mountable filesystems. |
Mount entries for swap files or partitions are also ignored. A nice feature might be to allow root to turn swap on and off for swap partitions.
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