High Sierra: won't mount external volume not mounted at start-up
When running High Sierra, can I manually mount an external drive volume that was explicitly prevented from mounting at start-up? (I can't do it with Disk Utility).
I've known for a long time how to configure etc/fstab to prevent MacOS from mounting external drive partitions. But in the past (until I upgraded to High Sierra ... yeah ... and belatedly learned about the switch from HFS+ to APFS) I was always able to use Disk Utility to mount partitions that had been explicitly prevented from mounting at star-up.
I had been using a single external (USB) drive containing 3 partitions when I first upgraded to 10.13.6, and I could see these "partition's" on the external drive when using Disk Utility, but only the partition I had been using for Time Machine backups was mounted. The other two were greyed out. Attempts to mount either of the other two partitions were ignored - no action and no feedback. (These partitions also had been set up for use by Time Machine).
Remembering that my etc/fstab was configured to prevent mounting these two volumes at start-up, I cleared etc/fstab and re-booted. Bingo! All three external volumes mount at startup and all 3 can be mounted/dismounted/remounted manually via Disk Utility.
So yeah, I can mount those volumes, but if I only want to use them under rare circumstances, it's kind of a hassle to have to muck with fstab.
I'm guessing this problem has something to do with telling the file system to use smb to access the rarely used volumes, but I cannot figure out how to do that.
Can someone help me out?