11-10-2002
If I remember correctly the reason they say to convert the ntfs to a fat32 is because Linux will pick up a fat32 filesystem. I'm pretty sure that's the reason there, I'd more or less put money on that to.
Secondly when you boot and it goes into Mandrake from there then you edit the lilo.conf file to put in Win2k and XP. Don't forget to run lilo before you reboot to make sure it has made the changes and they work.
That should the fix your problem.
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LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
ntfs.util
NTFS.UTIL(8) BSD System Manager's Manual NTFS.UTIL(8)
NAME
ntfs.util -- NTFS file system utility
SYNOPSIS
ntfs.util -k device
ntfs.util -m device mountpoint mountflag1 mountflag2 mountflag3 mountflag4
ntfs.util -p device mountflag1 mountflag2
ntfs.util -u device mountpoint
DESCRIPTION
The ntfs.util command supports the mounting, probing, and unmounting of NTFS file systems.
Options:
-k Get the UUID key for the NTFS file system at device.
-m Mount the NTFS file system located on device onto mountpoint with the flags mountflag1 mountflag2 mountflag3 mountflag4.
-p Probe the device for an NTFS file system using the flags mountflag1 mountflag2. If the probe is successful, i.e. the
device contains a valid NTFS file system, its label is printed to the standard output stream.
-u Unmount the NTFS file system located at device and mounted on mountpoint.
The mountflags referenced above are:
o mountflag1: removable or fixed
o mountflag2: readonly or writeable
o mountflag3: suid or nosuid
o mountflag4: dev or nodev
SEE ALSO
diskarbitrationd(8) mount_ntfs(8)
HISTORY
This NTFS implementation first appeared in Mac OS X 10.5.
AUTHORS
This NTFS implementation was written by Anton Altaparmakov <aia21@cantab.net>.
Mac OS X October 22, 2006 Mac OS X