Summary: | mount /dev/hda1 /mnt/windows fails | ||
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Product: | Gentoo Linux | Reporter: | baso <andreabaso> |
Component: | [OLD] Unspecified | Assignee: | Gentoo Linux bug wranglers <bug-wranglers> |
Status: | RESOLVED TEST-REQUEST | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | andreabaso |
Priority: | High | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | x86 | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Package list: | Runtime testing required: | --- |
Description
baso
2005-06-10 06:24:46 UTC
Hmm, you should probably specify filesystem type when mounting b/c the respective entry in /etc/fstab is commented out. :-) did you try -t vfat in your mount line, andrea? see what jakub said above. reopen if still broken. (In reply to comment #2) > did you try -t vfat in your mount line, andrea? Actually, -t vfat won (In reply to comment #2) > did you try -t vfat in your mount line, andrea? Actually, -t vfat won´t help much with NTFS partitions but -t ntfs should. ;-) No, it doesn't work with all the things you suggested :( (In reply to comment #4) > No, it doesn't work with all the things you suggested :( Please, paste the output of 'cat /proc/filesystems' cat /proc/filesystems nodev sysfs nodev rootfs nodev bdev nodev proc nodev sockfs nodev binfmt_misc nodev usbfs nodev pipefs nodev futexfs nodev tmpfs nodev eventpollfs nodev devpts reiserfs ext3 ext2 nodev ramfs nodev hugetlbfs msdos vfat iso9660 nodev devfs ntfs nodev autofs xfs Hmm, you should check the filesystem integrity in Windows... Reopen if you have verified that the filesystem is OK and it still fails. |