This service will use the same remote name you specified when using rclone config create
. If you haven't done that yet, do so now.
Next, create the mountpoint for your remote. The service uses the location ~/mnt/<remote>
by default.
mkdir ~/mnt/dropbox
The --allow-other
option is required in order to work in many desktop environments. This flag must be enabled by adding user_allow_other
to /etc/fuse.conf
. If you aren't using a desktop environment, such as on a server, this option can be omitted.
Save the [email protected]
file in ~/.config/systemd/user/
Make sure you include the @
. This is required to work.
As your normal user, run:
systemctl --user daemon-reload
You can now start/enable each remote by using rclone@<remote>
systemctl --user enable --now rclone@dropbox
Good point, thanks.
/etc/fuse.conf
gets overwritten on upgrading whenever it's content in the package changes, and multiple config file loading like/etc/apt/sources.list.d/*
isn't yet supported AFAIK.If you don't need to access the mount with users other than your own, it's actually safer and easier to just remove
--allow-other
fromrclone mount
options, which doesn't require settinguser_allow_other
.