I have been trying to figure out the changes myself but this is about the only subject I cannot locate *any* info on. This computer only has a FAT16 partition, but I also have another one that has a FAT32 partition that I would like to access, I poresume the methods are the same....
Cheers in advance
Last edited by Yogesh Sawant; 10-21-2010 at 07:35 AM..
Reason: added code tags
Hello,
I have a problem on my sun station, that run solaris7.
To free temporarly a little space on /, I moved a few empty folders (mnt, net, awk, tftpboot) to the /home partition.
Unfortunately the system froze just after this...maybe I should not have move this files, I don't know, I am a... (3 Replies)
dear all,
that is my problem :
c0d0p1 is nt,
c0d0p2 is solaris
and other on extended partition is pcfs,
so how can i mount it somewhere?
because i dont know which one connect from raw to block dev.
/dev/rdsk/c0d0p?
any help would be great... :) (6 Replies)
Hello ,
I 've got a problem with the root partition on my SCO 5.0.5 .
When I check the disk with df or mount , I can 't see the root filesystem .
# mount
/stand on /dev/boot read only on Tue Sep 05 16:13:51 2006
/home on /dev/home read/write on Tue Sep 05 16:14:41 2006
But , if I try... (3 Replies)
I've created a partition with GNU Parted, how do I mount the partition?
The manual information at http://www.gnu.org/software/parted/manual/parted.html is good, but I am sure about how I mount the partition afterwards.
Thanks,
--Todd (1 Reply)
Dear Brothers
First i installed suse linux with the following partition. my hd0 size is 75gb
hdc1 swap 1 gb
hdc2 native linux 39gb
For the rest of the 35 gb i did not create any partition. so i planned to install solaris 10x86 on that free space.
When i installed the solaris i... (1 Reply)
I dualboot Ubuntu and Fedora in one hard drive. Below are the scenario.
First, installed Ubuntu 10.4 on the entire disk (40GiB of size).
Then, shrink the Ubuntu installation to equal size to free up space for fedora.
Second, installed Fedora 13 using the option "Use free space on selected... (2 Replies)
Hello,
Im new here, and may be my question is stupid, but...
Today I run PGP Desktop decript on my 2nd partition ( D:\ ) and when decript finish, I restart my PC.Now when I try to open D:\ its give me: D:\ is not accessable and I lose my files :(
So I load Linux live CD ( knoppix ) and try to... (1 Reply)
I want to gain read/write access to a Windows 8 partition from a linux live cd. Prior to Windows 8, I used ntfs-3g to mount the partition from the command line.
The "Fdisk -l" command does not seem to be able to read efi partitions. There must be some new strategy for linux users. This is... (6 Replies)
Hello, today i get some aix errors (can't lock files and strange things) then i umount FS to do a fsck but i get these errors
root@omega / > fsck -p /dev/fslv06
The current volume is: /dev/fslv06
Unable to read primary superblock.
Unable to read either superblock.
I readed on this page... (9 Replies)
Hi,
In Linux, I had modified fstab file which used to mount ~/Music, ~/Pictures, etc with disk partitions containing corresponding content or binding directory located at other partition. But I am wondering can I do same in El-Capitan as well? No linking!
/media/L-Store/Desktop/Documents ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ezee
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
updfstab
updfstab(8) Red Hat Linux updfstab(8)NAME
updfstab - update /etc/fstab to reflect removable devices
SYNOPSIS
updfstab [-nt] [--usage]
DESCRIPTION
updfstab is designed to keep /etc/fstab consistent with the devices plugged into your system. It looks for devices such as cdroms, zip and
jaz drives, ls120 drives, and digital cameras on the SCSI and IDE buses. USB devices look like SCSI devices to user space, so those are
supported as well, but are only added if they are currently attached to the system (having a scsi device assigned to them is not suffi-
cient).
Devices which updfstab adds to /etc/fstab are marked with the kudzu mount option to distinguish them from other devices. updfstab will not
remove devices from /etc/fstab unless they are marked with the kudzu mount option. It also ignores devices that are already listed in
/etc/fstab, or which have multiple partitions on the media currently inserted.
OPTIONS -c,--config=path
Use the configuration specified by path, rather then /etc/updfstab.conf.
-n,--normalize
Normally, updfstab tries to touch /etc/fstab as little as possible. When this option is given, it will instead move all of the
devices with the kudzu mount option to the end of the file, and will list the devices in the same order the internal probe returns.
-t,--test
When this option is specified, updstab does not update the /etc/fstab file. Instead, it displays the fstab entries it would use to
standard out. If no changes need to be made, it outputs the string (nothing to do) rather then a full filesystem table.
CONFIGURATION
The devices updfstab looks for are specified by its configuration file, /etc/updfstab.conf by default. It defines a number of devices which
updfstab looks for on the system, along with various attributes of that device. If a single device name is given multiple times, later val-
ues override those given earlier. However, match directives accumulate; all specified matches remain in effect for that device. The
default value of flags may be changed by specifying a new value for that flag outside of any device section, which changes the default for
all future devices.
A simple configuration file looks like this:
# sample updfstab configuration file
symlink false
device cdrom {
symlink true
match cdrom
}
device zip {
match hd zip
match floppy "zip"
}
Here two devices are specified, cdrom and zip. If a cdrom device is found on the system, a /dev/cdrom is created pointing to the /dev entry
for the device, and /mnt/cdrom is added to /etc/fstab. The next entry looks for hard drive devices with zip in their description as well as
floppy devices with zip in their description. If either is found /mnt/zip is added to /etc/fstab, but no symlink is created.
Here is the complete list of directives which may be used:
device name
Set attributes for device name name. The name is used in the /etc/fstab entry and for any symbolic links which are created.
include path
Parsing of the current configuration file is stopped, and the file specified by path is read for current configuration information.
Multiple include directives may be given, but they may not appear inside of device sections.
match class string
This directive adds a new rule for this device type; devices found on the system which match this rule are considered a device of
the type whose section the match directive appears in. The class must be cdrom, floppy, or hd. If string appears, it must be a sub-
string of the physical device's description for the rule to match.
nofstab val
If val is true, updfstab does not add a mount entry to /etc/fstab. This is mainly useful in conjunction with symlink.
partition num
Specifies a default partition number which should be mounted from this device. If 0 is used, no partition number appears. updfstab
always scans /proc/partitions for the proper partition number before relying on this value.
skip val
The device entry is skipped. This lets a configuration file undefine a device that was defined earlier (such as in an included
file). val should be true or false.
symlink val
If val is true, updfstab creates a symbolic link in the /dev directory pointing to the actual device. This symbolic link is then
used in /etc/fstab.
FILES
/etc/fstab
/etc/updfstab.conf
/proc/partitions
SEE ALSO kudzu(1)AUTHORS
Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>
Red Hat, Inc. 29 Jan 2003 updfstab(8)