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/dropboxThe --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-reloadYou can now start/enable each remote by using rclone@<remote>
systemctl --user enable --now rclone@dropbox
Good point, thanks.
/etc/fuse.confgets 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-otherfromrclone mountoptions, which doesn't require settinguser_allow_other.