2 things here -
This never occurs on the 1st. insertion of blank optical media in an internal cd/dvd drive but happens on all subsequent insertions in that session
This never occurs when automount is disabled (org.gnome.desktop.media-handling
There is likely no tie in to the above 2 but does beg the question of why does gnome/gvfs connect blank media to org.gnome.desktop.media-handling automount at all?? It should have nothing to do with it & as far as usability of inserted blank media, automount 'false' has no effect. (other than prevent spurious warning
The same could/should be said for audio cd's, org.gnome.desktop.media-handling automount should not be involved. In the case of audio cd's there is an effect of automount 'false' - auto run on audio cd insertion is not possible. Again this is wrong behavior, a prompt on audio cd's or a user set action on audio cd insertion should always occur independent of org.gnome.desktop.media-handling automount true/false
2 things here -
This never occurs on the 1st. insertion of blank optical media in an internal cd/dvd drive but happens on all subsequent insertions in that session
This never occurs when automount is disabled (org.gnome. desktop. media-handling
There is likely no tie in to the above 2 but does beg the question of why does gnome/gvfs connect blank media to org.gnome. desktop. media-handling automount at all?? It should have nothing to do with it & as far as usability of inserted blank media, automount 'false' has no effect. (other than prevent spurious warning
The same could/should be said for audio cd's, org.gnome. desktop. media-handling automount should not be involved. In the case of audio cd's there is an effect of automount 'false' - auto run on audio cd insertion is not possible. Again this is wrong behavior, a prompt on audio cd's or a user set action on audio cd insertion should always occur independent of org.gnome. desktop. media-handling automount true/false