The kernel will recognize all drives at boot.

Do a:

dmesg | more

You can look thru it and see which drives and partitions it sees.

or redirect it into a file:

dmesg 2> test.txt

----- Original Message -----
From: "Eric Budinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2002 9:59 AM
Subject: RE: [newbie] lost drive?


> I tried the mount command listed at the bottom cause the other hard
> drive should be hdc but it didn't come up. It said "mnt/ohd does not
> exist"
>
> How do I see if linux even see's the other harddrive?
>
> Eric
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Dave Sherman
> Sent: Friday, January 04, 2002 10:02 AM
> To: Mandrake-newbie
> Subject: Re: [newbie] lost drive?
>
> On Fri, 2002-01-04 at 08:47, Eric Budinger wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> >  I just re-installed Linux on my 4 gig hard drive. I have a 4 gig, My
> > Cdrom and a 1.2 gig. On my 1.2gig is my OLD linux system with my old
> > HOME directory. Well I don't see my old drive. My 4 gig is my Pri
> > Master, My CDrom is my Pri Slave and my 1.2 gig is my Sec Master.
> Help?
> >
> > Eric
>
> Linux is not like DOS -- you can't just access a drive by its letter or
> anything like that. Instead, each drive must be mounted on your root
> filesystem.
>
> You can probably access the drive by mounting /dev/hdc (or maybe
> /dev/hdb, depending upon how the cdrom was detected). The hard drive
> devices are named 'hdx' (for hard drive x, where 'x' is a, b, c... in
> order of primacy on the IDE channel). cdrom's sometimes appear as a hard
> drive if they are ordinary ide drives, or will appear as scsi devices if
> they are cd burners.
>
> So, assuming your second hard drive is /dev/hdb, you can mount it on
> your root filesystem as a directory, maybe call it /ohd (for 'old hard
> drive'). Once it is mounted as a directory, you can access it and do
> whatever copying or transferring of data you need to do. Then, just
> unmount it and you are ready to go.
>
> The mount command might be something like this (must be done as root):
> mount -t ext2 /dev/hdc /ohd
>
> There are lots of other options to the mount command, 'man mount' for
> more info on it.
>
> Dave
> --
> Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy, and good
> with ketchup.
>
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________
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>
>
>


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