NTFS filesystems
Arpotu
arpotu at apathynews.com
Wed Oct 31 17:56:14 UTC 2007
Are you sure your USB drive is NTFS? I thought those were USBFS...
Also, is it a U3 USB device? If so, look for other /dev/sd* devices
defined when the device is plugged in. I found that, for my U3 device,
two file systems were mounted, even when I'm not using encryption.
The 2nd mounted file system contained the data I was looking for.
Cheers,
Arpotu.
> Have a look at:
>
> http://sourceforge.net/projects/linux-ntfs/
> or
> http://www.ntfs-3g.org/
>
> The first one works very well for me, but just using RHEL5 with an
> external USB drive. And it's still read-only access...
>
> I didn't have much luck with ntfs-3g, but that was some months ago. I
> think that was supposed to allow write access too.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: redhat-list-bounces at redhat.com
> [mailto:redhat-list-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf Of Michael Scully
> Sent: 31 October 2007 17:21
> To: 'General Red Hat Linux discussion list'
> Subject: NTFS filesystems
>
> Greetings:
>
> Does anyone know the status of things regarding mounting NTFS
> filesystems? My RHEL4 installation squawks at this as an unsupported FS
> (plugging in an external USB drive). I have been able to whack the
> factory partition and create a new ext3 filesystem on it, but I was
> hoping for interoperability, so I could recover files from a Windows PC
> if necessary.
>
> My drive is a 750 GB model, and my kernel is 2.6.9. I thought
> NTFS had been supported for some time. Am I mistaken? If I am missing
> some other pieces for the kernel, how do I get them?
>
> Scully
>
>
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