Harddrive mounting
I just installed Red Hat 9. However, it doesn't recognize any of my other harddrives. Is Red Hat even able to read Fat 32?
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You should be more specific:
- are you those drives ATA (IDE) or SCSI ? - are they listed in /etc/fstab - if in /etc/fstab, are they mounted automatically, or do you have to do it manually Ty the following for extra help (on command line) man mount man fstab |
Hi Manarius
Yes Red Hat can read FAT32 Red Hat can also read NTFS if you get the RPM Red Hat can't write to NTFS thougn. Susbstitute your partition and mount point in here in place of /dev/hda1 and /mnt/windows - this will temporarily mount a FAT32 partition mount /dev/hda1 /mnt/windows -t vfat -r To create a permenant mount on boot up do /dev/hda1 /mnt/windows vfat rw |
Okay...I got them mounted...they are ATA. I had to do the mounting manually. But now...(I got the swtich to KDE ok) it won't read my MP3 files or my CD's. I think that my kernel doesn't have support for my sound card. But I pdated to the latest one...and I hope it auto configs ok. In the old kernel, it finds that card, but when I play the sound, it doesn't play.
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Harddrives do not read CD's. Trying to replace the disk inside will also invalidate your warrenty :p .
To read files from a data-CD (as opposed to an audio CD), mount it manually using the mount command. The entry in /etc/fstab should specify the filesystem as isso9660. Do NOT mount the CD automatically, thats not appropriate for removable media. To support ATAPI CD players (those with a IDE/ATA connector), the kernel needs the following modules: ide-cd isofs They can be built in to the kernel, or compiled as a sperate module. In the latter case, you can have these modules on autoloading or not. This determines wheter you have to run insmod/modprobe by hand. I never play audio CD's directly. I just rip them using CDparanoia and turn them into mp3's or oggs. Alternatively, use workman or something like that. |
Hi...I had a hardware conflict (graphics card and memory i think) and windows went self destruct and linux survived fine! I'm not too bothered about losing windows but I'd like to get some of the files that were in my shared files for kazaa. So I've been trying to mount my NTFS partition (I wasn't a linux user when I chose ntfs) without luck, I used a more detailed tutorial than this to try to mount and eventually it worked up until the point of adapting my fstab so that I could get easy access...I'm not sure about my hdd configuration but I'm pretty sure hda1 is my main windows partition and hda2 a 40GB file dump which is very important to me! anyway with the multiple methods i've tried I haven't been able to mount the partition. The one time I did as forementioned I didn't have "kernel-ntfs-2.4.18-3.athlon.rpm" but I installed it after reading the above post which still gave me the same old error!
"[root@localhost alistair]# mount /dev/hda2 /mnt/windows -t vfat -r mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/hda2, or too many mounted file systems (aren't you trying to mount an extended partition, instead of some logical partition inside?)" PS - I'm aware that mounting the drive will not solve my problems but it could help! I've heard of people running an NTFS drive through wine though and esentially emulating the whole system! |
I figured it all out....i needed "kernel-ntfs-2.4.18-14.i686.rpm" just gotta figure out how to access it as a normal user! But there's another thread for that.
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This is how the .bash_profile looks like: Code:
... Code:
$ more fstab |
I figure out a way for other users besides root to mount other files systems in Redhat 8.0. I have also Mandrake 9.1 which automatically mounts the other file systems (FAT32 and NTFS) without logging in as root. Redhat 8.0, root can only mount other file systems.
First, research about 'sudo' and 'sudoers' using the man command. Once you know how 'sudo / sudoers' work, look for the file sudoers in the 'etc' directory. /etc/sudoers only root can modify this file. You can log in as root or use the 'su' command to modify it. Look for the following line: # User privilege specification root ALL=(ALL) ALL testUser ALL=ALL Add another user, similair to root. Save and exit. Next, we need to modify the .bash_profile or .cshrc file in the home directory to include the following lines. Include these lines in the files mentioned above: sudo mount /dev/hd??? /mnt/??? The ??? are where you put the device name and the mount name. This will prompt you for a password. The password should be the same login password as the user logging in. |
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