On Tue, Mar 30, 2004 at 10:47:12AM -0700, Paul E Condon wrote: > On Tue, Mar 30, 2004 at 12:31:51AM -0700, CW Harris wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 30, 2004 at 02:04:50AM -0500, Lorenzo Prince wrote: > > > I am trying to mount an MS-DOS floppy disk. I get the following error message: <SNIP> > > > > > > Anyway, I think what you want is to put "vfat" or "msdos" into > > /etc/filesystems, this will cause the mount to try these additional > > types on a mount of an "auto" type. (man mount, search for > > /etc/filesystems). Note vfat is the windows format with long filename > > support. > > [snip] > > I'm curious about this advice. I'm running Sarge. I don't find a file > /etc/filesystems > on my computer. Is there a package that I failed to install? Which one?
>From "man mount": -t vfstype <snip> The type iso9660 is the default. If no -t option is given, or if the auto type is specified, the superblock is probed for the filesystem type (adfs, bfs, cramfs, ext, ext2, ext3, hfs, hpfs, iso9660, jfs, minix, ntfs, qnx4, reiserfs, romfs, udf, ufs, vxfs, xfs, xiafs are supported). If this probe fails, mount will try to read the file /etc/filesystems, or, if that does not ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ exist, /proc/filesystems. All of the filesystem types listed there will be tried, except for those that are labeled "nodev" (e.g., devpts, proc and nfs). If /etc/filesystems ends in a line with a single * only, mount will read /proc/filesystems afterwards. You just create it if you want it. It will cause the mount of "auto" types to check these additional filesystem types for the mount command. E.g.: $cat /etc/filesystems vfat msdos > > -- > Paul E Condon > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- Chris Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ------------------------------------------- GNU/Linux --- The best things in life are free. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]