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Full Discussion: Hard Disk Prep From Shell
Operating Systems Linux Fedora Hard Disk Prep From Shell Post 302611777 by Tenuous on Friday 23rd of March 2012 01:01:07 PM
Old 03-23-2012
Thank you for your prompt response.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
Probably best to explain how disks actually work in UNIX first.

You don't get drive letters in UNIX, drives become special files under /dev/. If you had a disk with three partitions in it, you would get something like

/dev/sda -- the raw disk itself, with the contents of all three partitions. This is the device you use when editing partitions.
/dev/sda1,2,3 -- The partitions inside /dev/sda. These are the things you format and mount.

*snip*
To make sure I am understanding this correctly, I won't have to configure it to recognize that the disk is plugged in, rather it's a plug and play proposition?
 

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mrd(1)							      General Commands Manual							    mrd(1)

NAME
mrd - mtools utility to remove a DOS directory SYNOPSIS
mrd msdosdirectory [msdosdirectories...] DESCRIPTION
The mrd command removes a directory from a DOS file system. If the directory is not empty, an error occurs. Unlike DOS conventions, this command allows multiple arguments. DOS subdirectory names that contain the '/' or '' separator are supported. If you use the '' separator or wildcards, you must enclose file names in quotes to protect them from the shell. The mcd command can be used to establish the device and the current working directory (relative to DOS), otherwise the default is A:. EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: Success. Failure. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables affect the execution of mrd: If set, this variable names the file that contains the name of the current mtools working directory as established by the mcd command. If this variable is not set, the file $HOME/.mcwd is used. FILES
Contains the name of the current mtools working directory as established by the mcd command. If this file does not exist, the default mtools working directory is A:. Executable file SEE ALSO
Commands: mcd(1), mmd(1), mtools(1) mrd(1)
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