So, is JFS not supported by the kernel by default? I do recall on the original install using 'Linux JFS' when booting the installation.
Can I install JFS after the fact or do I need to rebuild the kernel?
Thanks,
On 8/28/05, Neale Swinnerton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Also the device names for
FYI.
I just did another re-install using''Linux JFS' at boot time and still have the same results. Disk druid recognized the LVM but it did not get mounted upon rebooting the system and has the sameerror as previously posted.
AJM,
On 8/28/05, A JM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So, is JFS not
thats heavily dependent on what kernel you have. i don't know if the
kernel has jfs support by default. perhaps you need to pass it a boot
time argument to enable jfs support. also did you try just fsck on the
volume using the fsck.jfs? perhaps there is some corruption that needs
to be corrected
I need some help mounting this logical volume. The LVM existed prior to recent re-install of the OS, now I can't mount it? When doing the reinstall I left the LVM partition alone and am guessing that's where the problem lays. Does something need to be running in FC3 in order to recognize the the
At 06:31 PM 8/27/2005, A JM wrote:
I need some help mounting this logical volume. The LVM existed prior
to recent re-install of the OS, now I can't mount it? When doing the
reinstall I left the LVM partition alone and am guessing that's
where the problem lays. Does something need to be running
afaik, you need to have device mapper support compiled into the kernel
and have device mapper userland utils available. i may be off the mark
since i use evms which allows LVM2 format for evms volumes.
--
ali
On 8/27/05, A JM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I need some help mounting this logical
Also the device names for the device mapper devices changed recently
e.g. my devices look this this now...
/dev/mapper/media-movies
used to be something like
/dev/media/movies
where media is the volume group name.
There's some way to enable a translation layer to support the old names,