On 05/27/2010 06:19 AM, roberto wrote:
hello, i am trying to mount an external USB hard disk whose partitions
i have previously deleted entirely;
i am trying to repartition it with only one large ext3 partition but
when i plug the disk in i receive the following:
# dmesg | tail -24
[119345.37625
I haven't tried to install Knoppix, but Knoppix
runs great from the
CD on my machine.
I haven't tried creating more but smaller
partitions, but I'll
give it a shot.
Thanks.
Doug
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsu
>All the above said, I'm not entirely clear on
what your actual problem
>is. Why do you need to mount an extra filesystem
by hand from the
>installer?
Thanks to all for the advice so far. I'm not
trying to mount any "extra" filesystem. I'm trying
to mount the root, and the
> 'mount -t ext2 /dev/hda3
/wherever/you/want/to/put/it', if it's a
> standard Linux filesystem.
Thanks to all for the advice so far. Let me
explain exactly what I have been trying. The
Debian installation program can't mount the root
partition because it contains an invalid a
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 11:45:49 +0900, Douglas Dreistadt wrote:
> The system always comes back with: "Mount failed:
> invalid argument"
>
> The installer doesn't display the command line, so
> I have no idea what argument is invalid. At that
> point, I can't continue until I mount the root,
> and th
>All the above said, I'm not entirely clear on
what your actual problem
>is. Why do you need to mount an extra filesystem
by hand from the
>installer?
I'm not trying to mount any "extra" filesystem.
I'm trying to mount the root, and the Debian
installer won't let me. After
On Fri, Jan 09, 2004 at 09:34:33AM +0900, Douglas Dreistadt imagined:
> As for my level of expertise... well, zero experience with
> Linux. I have been using DOS/WIN since DOS 3.2, so I do feel
> comfortable at the command line, but I am not familiar with
> Linux commands. I was really impressed wi
On Fri, Jan 09, 2004 at 09:34:33AM +0900, Douglas Dreistadt wrote:
> I tried Alt-F2, and guessed that the command for mounting a disk was
> "mount". I tried "mount hda3" and "mount /dev/hda3" and several other
> combinations of these, but I keep getting the error "Can't find hda3
> in /etc/fstab" I
The installer I'm using is the one which starts up
when you boot the official Debian CD. I just
bought a 7 CD set which is labeled:
debian GNU/Linux 3.0r2[woody] i386 binary
As for my level of expertise... well, zero
experience with Linux. I have been using DOS/WIN
since D
On Thu, 2004-01-08 at 12:31, Douglas Dreistadt wrote:
> to be a Catch 22. I can't do anything else until I
> mount the root filesystem. It won't let me mount
> hda3 as the root because of an invalid argument.
I don't know what installer you're using, and I don't know the amount of
expertise on yo
I re-created my partitions. Now hda1 is 30mb and
set as bootable, hda2 is 1gb and is activated as
the swap drive, and hda3 is about 78gb. I
initialized hda1 and hda3 as "Linux native". After
initializing hda1, the installation program said I
must mount the root filesystem before con
* Douglas Dreistadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004-01-06 09:16]:
> Lou,
>
> Thanks for the reply. I was feeling pretty lost.
>
> * Douglas Dreistadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> [2004-01-05 20:34]:
> > I'm trying to install Debian from CD on a
> > 700mhz AMD system with 500mb RAM.
> > Right now I am stuck
* Douglas Dreistadt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004-01-05 20:34]:
> I'm trying to install Debian from CD on a
> 700mhz AMD system with 500mb RAM.
> Right now I am stuck in the middle of
> installation. I have made it as far as disk
> formatting, but cannot "mount"(?) the root
> partition.
> When I try to
13 matches
Mail list logo