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Full Discussion: Cannot mount file system
Operating Systems AIX Cannot mount file system Post 302793083 by MichaelFelt on Thursday 11th of April 2013 04:15:48 PM
Old 04-11-2013
DONT logform on /dev/fslvXX - that is your data, not your jfs(2)log device.

Code:
grep -p /testdir /etc/filesystems

and/or

Code:
grep -p /dev/fslv11 /etc/filesystems

is the AIX way to get the stanza related information.

Often that error message just means the mount directory no longer exists, or you have a hidden character in the "typed" command, so the directory does not exist.

If this is an alternate mount point, you need to be root, (or maybe only in the system group) to mount to a "random", i.e. undefined mount point.
 

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halmount(1)							   User Commands						       halmount(1)

NAME
halmount - mount and umount filesystems via hal SYNOPSIS
halmount [OPTIONS]... <device|label> [mountpoint] halmount -u [OPTIONS]... <device|label|mountpoint> halmount -e [OPTIONS]... <device|label|mountpoint> DESCRIPTION
halmount can mount and umount filesystems via hal. Hotpluggable devices and media such as USB sticks and CD-ROMs are typically not entered into /etc/fstab and are therefore not mountable by normal users via the mount(8) command. Instead hal provides methods to mount and umount such devices. Additionally it's also possible to eject devices. For devices like USB sticks eject means the device cannot be mounted again until the stick is re-plugged, ie a "save remove" feature. OPTIONS
-t TYPE specify the file system type to use -o OPTIONS specify mount options -v verbose listing of devices -u umount specified device -e umount and eject specified device -a perform requested mount/umount/eject operation all available devices --listudi list UDIs of devices, useful for debugging EXAMPLES
halmount list all mountable devices known to hal halmount /dev/hdc mount device hdc on default mount point (/media/volumelabel) halmount /dev/hdc cdrom mount device hdc on /media/cdrom halmount -u "Holiday Pictures" umount device that has the label "Holiday Pictures" SEE ALSO
mount(8), umount(8), eject(1), fstab(5) SUSE Linux November 2006 halmount(1)
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