Hi,
If I take Prasenjit's point of view, then you can explore smbmount option.
of course you have to first install samba and read the man smbmount.
HTH
Regards,
Sanvir
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sanvir Singh Jham Tel: 694 1831/6619/6612/8617/ 5226/7/8
Velocient Technologies Limited Fax: 694 3732
New Delhi E-Mail:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Just Believe in the Best
On Wed, 12 Jul 2000, Prasenjit Das wrote:
>
> > Hi Glenn!!!
> > As far as I know making this file system accesible is possible by going
> > into
> > Control Panel of Linux (linuxconf) & in other partitions/ root
> information,
> > you can define the mount points to be recognized.
> > For the purpose first open a terminal, enter /mnt and create mount points
> > such as c, d, e
> > All this is done as root:
> > cd /
> > cd mnt
> > mkdir c
> > mkdir d
> > mkdir e
> >
> > After doing this open linuxconf & in partitions & root information folder,
> > you have the option to set new mount points. Select the file system(it
> will
> > appear as a dropdown list) & then select the mount point as /mnt/c
> > repeat it till you configure all your NT partitions...onto different mount
> > points...
>
> Hey wait a minute I think Glenn has the NT and Linux on two seperate
> machines. Your solution works only when the two fs are on the same machine.
> Besides even my state of the art 2.2.14 kernel ;-) supports ntfs. My idea is
> that a possible solution could be found using nfs. Ofcourse I am just
> brainstorming so don't ask me how to do it.
>
> prasenjit
>
>
> The mailing list archives are available at
> http://lists.linux-india.org/cgi-bin/wilma/linux-delhi/
>
The mailing list archives are available at
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