Difference between revisions of "Davfs2"
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chmod 0600 ~/.davfs2/secrets | chmod 0600 ~/.davfs2/secrets | ||
− | Mount or unmount your '''ownCloud | + | Mount or unmount your '''ownCloud''' home |
mount ~/webdav | mount ~/webdav | ||
fusermount -u ~/webdav | fusermount -u ~/webdav |
Latest revision as of 13:41, 28 October 2014
About
Mount a WebDAV resource as a regular file system.
davfs2 provides the ability to access webdav resources like a typical filesystem, allowing for use by standard applications with no built-in support for WebDAV. davfs2 is designed to fully integrate into the filesystem semantics of Unix-like systems (mount, umount, etc.). davfs2 makes mounting by unprivileged users as easy and secure as possible. davfs2 will work with most WebDAV servers needing little or no configuration.
Installation
The epel repository has to be enabled to install davfs2 and some dependencies. See here how to enable the epel repository.
Once the epel repository has been enabled, issue the following command:
yum install davfs2 --enablerepo=epel
No further configuration is required.
Usage
Mounting a webdav resource examples:
mount.davfs http://localhost:8080/ /mnt/dav
or
mount -t davfs http://localhost:8080/ /mnt/dav
Mounting your ownCloud home
Adding a webdav resource at boot to your linux station (replace username and URL with your real values): Add the following entry to your /etc/fstab:
https://webdav.example.com /home/username/webdav davfs user,noauto,uid=username,file_mode=600,dir_mode=700 0 1
Create secrets file in your ownCloud home (replace username with your real values):
mkdir ~/.davfs2/ echo "https://webdav.example.com/remote.php/webdav webdavuser webdavpassword" >> ~/.davfs2/secrets chmod 0600 ~/.davfs2/secrets
Mount or unmount your ownCloud home
mount ~/webdav fusermount -u ~/webdav