That's exactly what I'd expect to happen. It's also not specific to RPiOS. Every Linux distribution, every Unix, and many other OS do this.* It's not specific to mounting network shares either. All mounts behave this way.
You can put your user's home directory on your NAS but doing so is not entirely trivial and won't work over SMB** or with a non-linux filesystem on the server.
*: For most values of "every"
**: That's not entirely correct. You could use SMB v1 with the unix extensions but that's disabled by default, old, and insecure. So don't.
You can put your user's home directory on your NAS but doing so is not entirely trivial and won't work over SMB** or with a non-linux filesystem on the server.
*: For most values of "every"
**: That's not entirely correct. You could use SMB v1 with the unix extensions but that's disabled by default, old, and insecure. So don't.
Statistics: Posted by thagrol — Mon Dec 23, 2024 6:32 pm