Emitted when the mount has been changed.
This signal may be emitted when the #GMount is about to be unmounted.
This signal is emitted when the #GMount have been unmounted. If the recipient is holding references to the object they should release them so the object can be finalized.
Checks if @mount can be ejected.
Checks if @mount can be unmounted.
Ejects a mount. This is an asynchronous operation, and is finished by calling g_mount_eject_finish() with the @mount and #GAsyncResult data returned in the @callback.
Finishes ejecting a mount. If any errors occurred during the operation, @error will be set to contain the errors and %FALSE will be returned.
Ejects a mount. This is an asynchronous operation, and is finished by calling g_mount_eject_with_operation_finish() with the @mount and #GAsyncResult data returned in the @callback.
Finishes ejecting a mount. If any errors occurred during the operation, @error will be set to contain the errors and %FALSE will be returned.
Gets the default location of @mount. The default location of the given @mount is a path that reflects the main entry point for the user (e.g. the home directory, or the root of the volume).
Gets the drive for the @mount.
Gets the icon for @mount.
Get the main Gtk struct
Gets the name of @mount.
Gets the root directory on @mount.
Gets the sort key for @mount, if any.
Gets the symbolic icon for @mount.
Gets the UUID for the @mount. The reference is typically based on the file system UUID for the mount in question and should be considered an opaque string. Returns %NULL if there is no UUID available.
Gets the volume for the @mount.
Tries to guess the type of content stored on @mount. Returns one or more textual identifiers of well-known content types (typically prefixed with "x-content/"), e.g. x-content/image-dcf for camera memory cards. See the shared-mime-info
specification for more on x-content types.
Finishes guessing content types of @mount. If any errors occurred during the operation, @error will be set to contain the errors and %FALSE will be returned. In particular, you may get an %G_IO_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the mount does not support content guessing.
Tries to guess the type of content stored on @mount. Returns one or more textual identifiers of well-known content types (typically prefixed with "x-content/"), e.g. x-content/image-dcf for camera memory cards. See the shared-mime-info
specification for more on x-content types.
Determines if @mount is shadowed. Applications or libraries should avoid displaying @mount in the user interface if it is shadowed.
Remounts a mount. This is an asynchronous operation, and is finished by calling g_mount_remount_finish() with the @mount and #GAsyncResults data returned in the @callback.
Finishes remounting a mount. If any errors occurred during the operation, @error will be set to contain the errors and %FALSE will be returned.
Increments the shadow count on @mount. Usually used by #GVolumeMonitor implementations when creating a shadow mount for @mount, see g_mount_is_shadowed() for more information. The caller will need to emit the #GMount::changed signal on @mount manually.
Unmounts a mount. This is an asynchronous operation, and is finished by calling g_mount_unmount_finish() with the @mount and #GAsyncResult data returned in the @callback.
Finishes unmounting a mount. If any errors occurred during the operation, @error will be set to contain the errors and %FALSE will be returned.
Unmounts a mount. This is an asynchronous operation, and is finished by calling g_mount_unmount_with_operation_finish() with the @mount and #GAsyncResult data returned in the @callback.
Finishes unmounting a mount. If any errors occurred during the operation, @error will be set to contain the errors and %FALSE will be returned.
Decrements the shadow count on @mount. Usually used by #GVolumeMonitor implementations when destroying a shadow mount for @mount, see g_mount_is_shadowed() for more information. The caller will need to emit the #GMount::changed signal on @mount manually.
The #GMount interface represents user-visible mounts. Note, when porting from GnomeVFS, #GMount is the moral equivalent of #GnomeVFSVolume.
#GMount is a "mounted" filesystem that you can access. Mounted is in quotes because it's not the same as a unix mount, it might be a gvfs mount, but you can still access the files on it if you use GIO. Might or might not be related to a volume object.
Unmounting a #GMount instance is an asynchronous operation. For more information about asynchronous operations, see #GAsyncResult and #GTask. To unmount a #GMount instance, first call g_mount_unmount_with_operation() with (at least) the #GMount instance and a #GAsyncReadyCallback. The callback will be fired when the operation has resolved (either with success or failure), and a #GAsyncResult structure will be passed to the callback. That callback should then call g_mount_unmount_with_operation_finish() with the #GMount and the #GAsyncResult data to see if the operation was completed successfully. If an @error is present when g_mount_unmount_with_operation_finish() is called, then it will be filled with any error information.