问题
I know that Ubuntu (and Fedora) uses Upstart istead of the classical System V init daemon (SysVinit).
I would like to know how to detect when a USB-drive has been inserted, mount it and copy some files to it. I would like Upstart to call my own script for this.
If it is possible I would like Upstart to call the script for a specific USB-drive, so that I would get normal functionality for every USB-drive except my "instant backup" USB-drive.
If Upstart could send the USB-drive identification string as an argument to my script I guess that would be the ideal solution, as I would be able to have the id string in my script and possibly could make the script handle two USB-drives without much change.
And as a side-note, do you know any other system except Upstart which handles USB-drives, network mounted file systems and such in a nice way? (As SysVinit seems not to.)
回答1:
upstart
doesn't seem to come with "usb device plugged in" signals out of the box. The focus so far has been to do pretty much exactly the same thing as init, and the "cool advertised features" are in the future.
From the Fedora wiki: "...getting Upstart itself in place now, even though it will only be functioning as SysV does now, will allow us to begin a smooth transition toward this model."
Luckily, you can implement the future yourself by having udev run a script to send your custom upstart signal so upstart can call your backup script. You could also have udev call your backup script directly.
udev
already has a simple way to run scripts when devices are plugged and unplugged. See rename your usb hard drive's device name with udev rules. On my system, I would have to use udevadm monitor --env
instead of the tutorial's udevmonitor --env
. After following the tutorial, you would create another udev rule like this one:
echo 'SUBSYSTEM=="block", ID_SERIAL_SHORT=="101A9041C67D182E", \
NAME="myusbdrive", \
RUN+="/my/backup/script $env{NAME}"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/S96-mydrive.rules
Replacing ID_SERIAL_SHORT
with your device's actual id, and $env{NAME}
with whatever udev environment variable(s) your script needs to find the backup device. You might need to background the script to avoid blocking udev.
If you want to use upstart, you could have your udev rule run /sbin/initctl emit back-it-up VARIABLE=$env{VARIABLE} ...
and then write a script in /etc/event.d
beginning with the line start on back-it-up
.
See also How can I listen for 'usb device inserted' events in Linux, in Python? for hints on doing the same with DBus. DBus might be more convenient if you want to have the logged in user run a usermode "watch for backup drive" daemon.
回答2:
In Ubuntu 9.10 and newer Upstart has some udev capabilities through the upstart-udev-bridge
service.
#thumbdrive_special.conf
start on block-device-added
task
script
if [ `blkid $DEV` -eq "YOUR-THUMBDRIVES-UUID" ]; then
/home/you/bin/thumbdrive_special $DEV
fi
end script
I love how simple and elegant upstart can be. However, a DBus solution might be better if less elegant. With a DBus solution you could pop up notifications to the user and provide easy user control.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/589841/upstart-calling-script-for-inserted-usb-drive