Some file systems, such as ext2/ext3 that were created a few years ago, do not support ACLs. As long as we do not have /media on a tmpfs, ignore failures to set the ACL on /media/<user> and fall back to chowning the directory to the target user.
Mount drives in /media, not /run/media/, to stay FHS compatible. As on Debian and Ubuntu /media is not currently a tmpfs, we need to put the "mounted-fs" file to a persistent path as well.
Some file systems, such as ext2/ext3 that were created a few years ago, do not support ACLs. As long as we do not have /media on a tmpfs, ignore failures to set the ACL on /media/<user> and fall back to chowning the directory to the target user.
Mount drives in /media, not /run/media/, to stay FHS compatible. As on Debian and Ubuntu /media is not currently a tmpfs, we need to put the "mounted-fs" file to a persistent path as well.