You should also setuid mount.nfs4 because the mount command calls that if you are using NFSv4. On Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 2:47 PM Maxim Cournoyer wrote: > Hi! > > > Nathan Dehnel writes: > > > >> Right, but it's more inconvenient than just clicking the share in thunar > >> and it mounting. Actually, I can't mount it without doing "sudo" first, > >> despite having the "user" fstab flag set. This actually might be a > separate > >> issue, but I'm not sure. > > > > That's a good point. We should try to make this simpler. The mount.nfs > > binary needs to be setuid root to allow unprivileged users to mount NFS > > file systems. Unfortunately, the mount command (which we already define > > as setuid-root) only looked for helpers under /run/current/profile/sbin. > > This is now fixed in commit def6e2ae4619587114383b3f8fd9f3cf8310b4b9 > > (which had to be made on core-updates). > > > > [...] > > > I've sent a patch for review which proposes to add these setuid-root > binaries for > > desktop users out-of-the-box on Guix System, which only adds about 4 MiB > > to the almost 3 GiB closure of the lightweight-desktop.tmpl system [0]. > > > > As mentioned before, it depends on a change to util-linux that had to be > > made on the core-updates branch, so it won't be usable until the next > > core-updates merge. > > This patch has now been merged with commit d40c9f6c85. > > Closing! > > Thank you, > > Maxim >