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Operating Systems Linux Debian Hardlink on wheezy by default for usb-stick? Post 302939932 by sea on Tuesday 31st of March 2015 04:10:06 AM
Old 03-31-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1in10
Code:
root@rechenknecht2:/media/usb0/save# mount -o loop -t iso9660 grub-efi-amd64_1.99-27+deb7u2_amd64.deb /media/usb0/save
mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/loop0,
       missing codepage or helper program, or other error
       In some cases useful info is found in syslog - try
       dmesg | tail  or so

You are trying to mount a debian package.
Its just like your attempt to unrar an iso file.

deb != iso != rar
Though, you might have better luck with un[rt]ar the deb package.
But those are ment to be installed on an system, not mounted.

Try: (either just this, or use tab to autocomplete to the full file name you want to install, which ALWAYS ends on deb)
Code:
su
apt-get install grub-efi-amd64

Hope this helps
 

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deb-old(5)							      Debian								deb-old(5)

NAME
deb-old - old style Debian binary package format SYNOPSIS
filename.deb DESCRIPTION
The .deb format is the Debian binary package file format. This manual page describes the old format, used before Debian 0.93. Please see deb(5) for details of the new format. FORMAT
The file is two lines of format information as ASCII text, followed by two concatenated gzipped ustar files. The first line is the format version number padded to 8 digits, and is 0.939000 for all old-format archives. The second line is a decimal string (without leading zeroes) giving the length of the first gzipped tarfile. Each of these lines is terminated with a single newline character. The first tarfile contains the control information, as a series of ordinary files. The file control must be present, as it contains the core control information. In some very old archives, the files in the control tarfile may optionally be in a DEBIAN subdirectory. In that case, the DEBIAN subdirec- tory will be in the control tarfile too, and the control tarfile will have only files in that directory. Optionally the control tarfile may contain an entry for `.', that is, the current directory. The second gzipped tarfile is the filesystem archive, containing pathnames relative to the root directory of the system to be installed on. The pathnames do not have leading slashes. SEE ALSO
deb(5), dpkg-deb(1), deb-control(5). Debian Project 2011-08-14 deb-old(5)
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