Rogério Brito a écrit :
Hi, Samson.

On May 01 2006, Samson PIERRE wrote:
I have a USB device.
When the files system is ext3 or ext2(Formated "vfat" with mkfs.ext2 or mkfs.ext3 under Debian), there is no problem for the automount.

What exactly do you mean by "formatting 'vfat' with mkfs.ext{2,3}"? They
will only create ext2/3 fs, AFAIK.

But when the files system is vfat(Formated "FAT" under Windows XP, or Formated "vfat" with mkfs.vfat under Debian), there is a lot of errors:

attempt to access beyond end of device
sda: rw=0, want=1985044, limit=503808
FAT: Directory bread(block 1985043) failed

This is an error in the kernel. I guess that the kernel you were using
had/has a bug. Can you reproduce the problem with a newer kernel and a
recent usbmount?

BTW, it would help if you posted the output from "fdisk -l" on the
device that contains such partitions, to see exactly the limits of the
partition.

Thanks for using usbmount.


Regards, Rogério Brito.

Sorry but I posted this bug 2 years ago.
I don't remember.
I am on Slackware Operating System now.
I think you can close this bug because I have no problem anymore with my USB device.
Bye ;-)



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