![]() X-KDE-Solid-Predicate=[ IS StorageVolume AND StorageVolume.ignored = false I had to modify this a little bit to make it work with the latest edition of plasma:Įxec=udisksctl unmount -b %d udisksctl power-off -b %d > external HDD stays off and doesn't restart again." - by a user who's now > unmounts the drive and then powers it off. > notifier in the control panel to power off the device. The file creates a new entry for the device > Exec=solid-hardware unmount %i & udisksctl power-off -b %d > sktop at ~/.local/share/solid/actions/ with the following content: > "I think I've found a workaround (at least for me). > thread, but I did with this other one found on Reddit so I'm copy pasting it: In fact, some drives monitor how often this happens with S.M.A.R.T. Emergency retracts aren’t going to brick your drive immediately, but if they occur regularly they’re putting a lot of unnecessary wear and tear on the drive. If you think that sounds bad, you’re right. Instead, the power switch simply cuts power to the drive, which forces the drive to do an emergency head retract. Turns out that most cheap external USB/SATA/firewire enclosures don’t properly issue a stop command to the drive when you flick the power switch. rantģ Press HDD enclosure power button/Remove USB cable to external HDD > Those workarounds should be satisfactory enough for everybody. > 2) Kill X server, udiskctl spin down, start X server > 1) Turn off your computer, remove disk, turn on your computer. > `udisksctl power-off -block-device /dev/sdb` spins down the disk for about > There is currently no way to remove external disks safely in KDE. (In reply to David Polák from comment #37)
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