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IVMAN(8)							      IVMAN(8)

NAME
       ivman - volume manager

SYNOPSIS
       ivman [ -sd ] [ --nofork ] [ -c <directory> ]

DESCRIPTION
       Ivman,  or Ikke's Volume Manager, is a daemon to handle the mounting of
       media as they are inserted/attached to the system.  It can also be used
       to  execute arbitrary commands when a device with certain properties is
       added to the system (Windows autoplay style functionality), and to exe‐
       cute  arbitrary commands when device properties change.	Ivman uses HAL
       to monitor the state of your system's hardware.

OPTIONS
       -s or --system
	      Start Ivman in system-wide mode.	This is the default if running
	      Ivman  as root.  When this option is specified, Ivman reads from
	      the system-wide configuration directory ( usually /etc/ivman/ );
	      if   this	  option   is	not   specified,   Ivman   reads  from
	      ${HOME}/.ivman/ instead.	Either of these locations may be over‐
	      ridden  with the -c option.  Other behaviour may differ slightly
	      when running in system-wide mode.	 Don't use this option	unless
	      you know you need it.

       --nofork
	      Force  Ivman not to daemonize, regardless of settings in IvmCon‐
	      figBase.xml.  Useful for capturing debugging output.

       -d or --debug
	      Force Ivman to give debugging output, regardless of settings  in
	      IvmConfigBase.xml.

       -c <directory> or --confdir <directory>
	      Force  Ivman  to	load  configuration  files  from the specified
	      directory.

DETAILS
       Ivman is a flexible device manager, allowing  users  to	run  arbitrary
       commands when devices are added/removed, when device properties change,
       and when devices emit conditions.

       For automount purposes, Ivman should be run  once  from	a  system-wide
       init  script  and  once	per  user  session  (e.g.,  create  a  link to
       /usr/bin/ivman in  ~/.kde/Autostart or put an entry for	/usr/bin/ivman
       in  gnome-session-manager).  When a device is attached, Ivman will call
       pmount or mount to mount the device.  If pmount is used, it will	 mount
       the device readable and writeable only for the current user; if no per-
       user  instance  of  Ivman  is  running,	the  device  will  be  mounted
       read/write  for	everyone  in  the same group as is required to use the
       pmount command, and read-only for everyone else.	 If regular  mount  is
       used, then an fstab entry must exist in /etc/fstab for the device to be
       mounted, and the settings given in that fstab entry will	 be  used  for
       the mount.

       Ivman  is supplied with sensible default configuration files for volume
       management, but autoplay functionality has no default actions; you will
       need  to edit ${HOME}/.ivman/IvmConfigActions.xml(5) or /etc/ivman/Ivm‐
       ConfigActions.xml(5) to specify some programs to execute.   The	syntax
       of  this	 file and the other Ivman configuration files are specified in
       their own manpages.

FILES
       /etc/ivman/IvmConfigActions.xml
	      actions to perform when media is inserted

       /etc/ivman/IvmConfigBase.xml
	      options affecting the running of Ivman

       /etc/ivman/IvmConfigConditions.xml
	      actions to perform when devices emit conditions

       /etc/ivman/IvmConfigProperties.xml
	      actions to perform when device properties change

SEE ALSO
       IvmConfigActions.xml(5),	    IvmConfigBase.xml(5),      IvmConfigCondi‐
       tions.xml(5), IvmConfigProperties.xml(5)

BUGS
       Hopefully,  none	 :-)   But  there could be some still lurking.	If you
       encounter a bug, please forward details to rohan.pm@gmail.com or add it
       to  the	bug  tracker at the project's Sourceforge page, http://source‐
       forge.net/projects/ivman

				9 December 2005			      IVMAN(8)
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