Anne Wilson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> gpg: CRC error; 68356b - dc3683
> gpg: quoted printable character in armor - probably a buggy MTA has been used
> On Sunday 23 Jan 2005 17:55, RickSisler wrote:
> > Hi All,
> > Somehow I borked my fstab settings with supermount, could someone
> > take a look
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Hash: SHA1
On Sunday 23 Jan 2005 17:55, RickSisler wrote:
> Hi All,
> Somehow I borked my fstab settings with supermount, could someone
> take a look at this for me ?
>
> /dev/hdb1 / ext3 defaults 1 1
> /dev/hda5 /home ext3 defaults 1 2
> none /mnt/cdrom supermou
Thank you very much for the explanation...
Cheers, Elwyn
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Join the Club : http://www.mandrakeclub.com
well lets see,
On Monday 18 Oct 2004 4:04 pm, SME Server Admin wrote:
> Can someone tell me of the following entries which are not needed.
>
you definitely need this:
> /dev/hda1 / ext3 defaults 1 1
i strongly suspect you need the following, its for pseudo terminals,
> none /dev/pts devpts mode=0
On Monday 18 Oct 2004 16:04, SME Server Admin wrote:
> //sentinel/Primary /mnt/Primary smbfs
> user,credentials=/etc/samba/auth.sentinel.admin 0 0
I've removed that and it's taken that icon off the desktop... But not sure
about the others so have left them...
Elwyn
_
On Saturday 12 June 2004 11:15 am, OOzy wrote:
->If I make changes to fstab. How can I reload it or there is no need for
->this?
Fast answer, as root do a "mount -a". That should do the trick.
--
/\
On Friday 26 March 2004 14:58, Miark wrote:
> I used the k3b setup twice, and it'll _never_ happen again. It
> made an awful mess both times.
>
> I don't mess with fstab regularly, but I'd change the "hd"s back
> to cdrom and cdrom2, and then do a "supermount -i enable" to turn
> on supermount and
On Sun, 11 Jan 2004 09:56:45 +
John Richard Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lee Wiggers wrote:
>
> >I have my fstab and lilo pretty much fouled up. Would someone
> >who has a working cdrw and dvd please post theirs so I can figure
> >out where I overused my delete key?
> >
> >Lee
> >
>
Lee Wiggers wrote:
I have my fstab and lilo pretty much fouled up. Would someone who
has a working cdrw and dvd please post theirs so I can figure out
where I overused my delete key?
Lee
This is mine, where,
DVD = IDEmaster= /dev/scd0 = /mnt/cdrom
Writer= IDEslave = /dev/scd1 = /mnt/cdrom2
und
On Sunday 11 January 2004 08:14, Lee Wiggers wrote:
> I have my fstab and lilo pretty much fouled up. Would someone who
> has a working cdrw and dvd please post theirs so I can figure out
> where I overused my delete key?
>
> Lee
*
Hi Lee,
Depending what editor you where using ther
On Sun, 11 Jan 2004 01:14:48 -0500
Lee Wiggers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I have my fstab and lilo pretty much fouled up. Would someone who
>has a working cdrw and dvd please post theirs so I can figure out
>where I overused my delete key?
>
>Lee
>
for your burner you should have
none /mnt/cd
On Sun, 14 Dec 2003 21:48:46 +0200
Johan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> Please inform me what the last two digits mean in an fstab entry.
> I have read it somewhere through the years and don't seem to be able
> to find it again.
> Thanks
from tuxfiles.org:
"The 5th column in /etc/fstab is
On Sunday 14 Dec 2003 7:48 pm, Johan wrote:
> Hi,
> Please inform me what the last two digits mean in an fstab entry.
> I have read it somewhere through the years and don't seem to be able to
> find it again.
> Thanks
man fstab
look for the fifth and sixth fields.
In short, the fifth field indic
- Original Message -
From: "L.V.Gandhi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2003 10:11
Subject: Re: [newbie] fstab, windows folders and permissions
> On Friday 01 Aug 2003 7:23 am, Sharrea wrote:
> > On Thu, 31 J
are they really spaces in the umask? and have you tried without?
bascule
On Monday 04 Aug 2003 1:59 pm, The Other wrote:
> 08/04/03
>
> I have uid=501 and umask=0 2 2 for windows folders in fstab. though I
> get owner as 501 user, permissions are there as 777 instead of 755 as
> dicta
On Monday 04 Aug 2003 6:29 pm, The Other wrote:
> 08/04/03
>
> I have uid=501 and umask=0 2 2 for windows folders in fstab. though I
> get owner as 501 user, permissions are there as 777 instead of 755 as
> dictated by umask. How to go about getting permissions as 755 for
> windows
08/04/03
I have uid=501 and umask=0 2 2 for windows folders in fstab. though I
get owner as 501 user, permissions are there as 777 instead of 755 as
dictated by umask. How to go about getting permissions as 755 for
windows folders.
Try ..,user,umask=0,auto,...
with umask=0 I think permissions
On Sat, 02 Aug 2003 14:11, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
> On Friday 01 Aug 2003 7:23 am, Sharrea wrote:
> > On Thu, 31 Jul 2003 02:02, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
> > > I have uid=501 and umask=0 2 2 for windows folders in fstab. though I
> > > get owner as 501 user, permissions are there as 777 instead of 755 as
> > >
Thanks to all who replied on and off the list.
Unfortunately, I encountered additional problems and decided to reinstall LM
8.0 as that appeared to work better with my hardware
Frank McKenna
True strength lies in gentleness
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://
Frank McKenna wrote:
>Hi All,
>
>In two previous posts I submitted the following. I only saw the
first
>appear so I am resending both messages as one. Sorry for the
long post
>
>I decided to put an old Creative DVD 2 X in a Mandrake 8.1 box
along with a
>32 X CD-ROM. Unfortunately, o
> I have successfully configured the fstab file to mount the
> vfat partitions that are elswhere on the hard drive, but I
> can't get the ntfs partition to mount at boot.
I think my one mounts at boot. All I need to do is type in the
file name with the (long ) path and i am there.
Below is m
AFAIK:
NTFS support is not turned on in the default configuration. It's still
buggy, and dangerous. If you really want it, you'll have to build a
kernel with it enabled.
Best advice: Don't go there.
JMHO-YMMV
Ric
On Tue, 2002-02-05 at 18:51, Greg Smith wrote:
> I have successfully configured t
My best suggestion is to 'man fstab', and see what it tells you. I'm not
sure if there is anything special about mounting ntfs partitions, but I
suspect there might be, because of the permissions used in ntfs which are
similar to ext2 in linux.
Good luck,
Dave
On Saturday 19 May 2001 01:37, t
I got it mounted using fstab which is what I wanted. However using the
following:
/dev/hde1 /mnt/windows ntfs user,exec,umask=0 0 0
it is browsable but read only...
Am I missing something to make it writeable??
Ed
~~
At 09:26 PM Friday, 5/18/2001, Dave Sherman wrote -=>
>Yep.
>
>Dave
>
>O
If it's an ntfs formatted partition do I use "ntfs" in place of "vfat"?
Ed
At 01:20 PM Friday, 5/18/2001, Dave Sherman wrote -=>
>Try this:
>
>/dev/hde1/mnt/windows vfatuser,exec,umask=0 0 0
>
>It should give you full read/write access.
>
>Dave
>
>On Friday 18 May 2001 10:33, thus s
On Fri, 18 May 2001, you wrote:
> What would be the proper entry in /etc/fstab to automatically mount my
> windoze partition from hde? I would like to at least have read access to
> be able to access files.
>
> Is this correct?
>
> /dev/hde1/mnt/windows ext2defaults 1 2
>
I thi
Try this:
/dev/hde1/mnt/windows vfatuser,exec,umask=0 0 0
It should give you full read/write access.
Dave
On Friday 18 May 2001 10:33, thus spake Ed Kasky:
> What would be the proper entry in /etc/fstab to automatically mount my
> windoze partition from hde? I would like to at l
Wow! Am very overwhelmed by the replies! Thanks guys! :))
On Thursday 10 May 2001 11:38, David E. Fox wrote:
> /etc/fstab is a boot time file that the system uses to mount your
> partitions and /etc/mtab is a run-time file showing what's currently
> mounted. Thus, if you unmount some partition, /
hi. i know the answer to this one=)
fstab is the file which tells linux which partitions to mount, where to mount them,
and how to mount them during boot. this is where you make changes to the mounting
procedure.
mtab is what actually is mounted, how & where it is mounted. *DO NOT* edit
Sam wrote:
>
> Hi,
> I was looking through the files in /etc and realised that /etc/fstab and
> /etc/mtab have very similar contents. Could anybody enlighten me on what're
> the differences between these files, e.g. in terms of function? Thanks.
fstab lists predefined filesystems which can be mo
On Sun, 19 Nov 2000, skidley wrote:
>Ok my fstab ended up majorly screwed somehow and i don't know why. I had
>to enable supermount again, but the options for the cdrom drive and
>burner are screwed up, i have like nosuid, noexec, noauto, etc. It worked
>excellent before on the standard way it wa
Adrian Smith wrote:
>
> okie, here is what i did.
> in /mnt i had the usual
> win_c
> win_d
> type things.
> i went into fstab & changed things about (did this using KDE & graphical interface)
>so that the drives would mount as
> windoze (win_c)
> games (win_d)
> so, that worked.
> if i go into
> Here's 'fstab' line for my Windoze drive. I moved it out of
> '/mnt/', to a dir named '/c'. I can read/write/exe anything on that
Not a bad idea Tom. I just did:
ln -s /mnt/windows win
with the link in my home directory. Seems to work. Any reason not to do it
that way? One of
>the odd thing is, the
>win_c
>win_d
>are still in /mnt also. if i go into them, they are empty.
>what up with this?? can i simply delete these as root? or is there some other
>solution?
Yes, and this demonstrates a problem with configuration via GUI tools; you are
one st
I use ReiserFS for data storage. Some directories have over 100,000 files
in them. ext2 worked but a directory listing took about a month to
generate. Also on my new server everything but /boot is ReiserFS and the
stability due to crashes, power loss, etc is great and everything runs
very quickly.
On Wed, 04 Oct 2000, you wrote:
> okie, here is what i did.> in /mnt i had the usual> win_c
> win_d> type things.
> i went into fstab & changed things about (did this using KDE &
> graphical interface) so that the drives would mount as windoze
> (win_c)> games (win_d)> so, that worked.
> if i go i
you did what?
- Original Message -
From:
Adrian Smith
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 04, 2000 3:44
PM
Subject: [newbie] fstab & mtab &
left overs...
okie, here is what i did.in /mnt i had the usual
win_cwin_dtype things.i went into fstab & c
Bert Bullough wrote:
>
> Can someone give me an example of their fstab entry ( preferably one
> with an entry for mounting a windows partition) so that i can see what i
> am doing wrong. Thanks.
Bert,
These work for me:
/dev/hda2 /mnt/dosc vfat rw,gid=100,umask=2 0 0
/d
On Fri, 06 Aug 1999, you wrote:
> Can someone give me an example of their fstab entry ( preferably one
> with an entry for mounting a windows partition) so that i can see what i
> am doing wrong. Thanks.
/dev/hda8 /mnt/data vfat exec,dev,suid,rw 1 1
The line ab
Sorry! That last reply was only about the two numbers after "defaults". I'm not sure
exactly what the defaults are but I know that you can specify how you want the device
to be mounted. For example the line for my floppy drive is this:
/dev/fd0/mnt/floppy auto sync,user,noauto,nosuid,node
This is a snippet taken from the fstab man page. I believe it should answer your
question:
"The sixth field, (fs_passno), is used by the fsck(8) pro-
gram to determine the order in which filesystem checks are
done at reboot time. The root filesystem should be speci-
On Fri, 06 Aug 1999, Bert Bullough wrote:
> Can someone give me an example of their fstab entry ( preferably one
> with an entry for mounting a windows partition) so that i can see what i
> am doing wrong. Thanks.
>
Here you go.
/dev/hda5 / ext2defaults
- Original Message -
From: Ian W Douglas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 06, 1999 1:26 PM
Subject: Re: [newbie] fstab
> fstab:
>
> (assuming your Windows 95 partition is /dev/hda2:)
>
> /dev/hda2 /mnt/win95 vfat defaults 0 0
Mine looks likes this. Win95 was installed on the first partition of hda and linux on
the second partion (hda5) Hope it helps:
/dev/hda5 /ext2defaults1 1
/dev/hda6 /homeext2defaults1 2
/dev/hda7 /usr ext2defaults1 2
/dev/hda8
1st, create a directory to mount to - I use /mnt/dos1. Then create and entry like :
/dev/hda1 /mnt/dos1 default msdos default 0 0
Then when rebooting the partition at hda1 will be mounted and available at /mnt/dos1.
You could also test it by entering "mount
fstab:
(assuming your Windows 95 partition is /dev/hda2:)
/dev/hda2 /mnt/win95 vfatdefaults0 0
I'm pretty sure that's what I have set up on my Linux box. I'm booted into
Windows right now or I'd double check.
Essentially, all you need to do is replace 'vfat' with the fi
- Original Message -
From: Bert Bullough <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 06, 1999 12:17 PM
Subject: [newbie] fstab
> Can someone give me an example of their fstab entry ( preferably one
> with an entry for mounting a windows partiti
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