On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 08:30:13AM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote: > I assume "fsck.dos" is a typo as > [https://dyn.manpages.debian.org/jump?suite=stretch&binarypkg=dosfstools§ion=8&language=en&q=fsck.dos] > yields > "Sorry, the manpage “fsck.dos” was not found!"
You have the manpages on your box, hopefully. Try "man -k fsck", and you'll get: tomas@trotzki:~$ man -k fsck dosfsck (8) - check and repair MS-DOS filesystems e2fsck (8) - check a Linux ext2/ext3/ext4 file system e2fsck.conf (5) - Configuration file for e2fsck exfatfsck (8) - check an exFAT file system fsck (8) - check and repair a Linux filesystem fsck.cramfs (8) - fsck compressed ROM file system fsck.exfat (8) - check an exFAT file system fsck.ext2 (8) - check a Linux ext2/ext3/ext4 file system fsck.ext3 (8) - check a Linux ext2/ext3/ext4 file system fsck.ext4 (8) - check a Linux ext2/ext3/ext4 file system fsck.fat (8) - check and repair MS-DOS filesystems fsck.hfs (8) - HFS file system consistency check fsck.hfsplus (8) - HFS file system consistency check fsck.minix (8) - check consistency of Minix filesystem fsck.msdos (8) - check and repair MS-DOS filesystems fsck.nfs (8) - Dummy fsck.nfs script that always returns success. fsck.vfat (8) - check and repair MS-DOS filesystems git-fsck (1) - Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the database git-fsck-objects (1) - Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the database hpfsck (1) - check integrity of an HFS+ volume So I'd try fsck.fat or similar (/if/ it has to be fat, that is) > Thanks for trying. That's how we advance, after all :) > What bugs me is Gparted [though it does not output text] reports > used/unused space on each partition/file system. I can't grok this one: shouldn't gparted report on it? Or you don't expect the free space to be there? Cheers -- t > > > > > > >
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