On Thu, Aug 20, 2020 at 11:33:34AM +1200, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
On 20/08/2020 10:08, David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-08-13 01:31, David Christensen wrote:
Without knowing anything about your resources, needs,
expectations, "consistent backup plan", etc., and given the
choices ext2, ext3,
On 20/08/2020 10:08, David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-08-13 01:31, David Christensen wrote:
Without knowing anything about your resources, needs, expectations,
"consistent backup plan", etc., and given the choices ext2, ext3, or
ext4 for an external USB drive presumably to store backup
reposit
On 2020-08-13 01:31, David Christensen wrote:
On 8/12/20 5:14 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up
to an
external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to
use, I
think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm
On Vi, 14 aug 20, 10:31:51, David Wright wrote:
>
> I'm dubious whether I shall ever start using these filesystems.
> I create multiple backups on ext4 filesystems on LUKS, and keep
> MD5 digests of their contents. Would that qualify as your
> "additional tools"?
Assuming you are also periodicall
On Fri 14 Aug 2020 at 08:25:20 (+0300), Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Mi, 12 aug 20, 20:14:03, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
> > external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
> > think I want to
On Fri, Aug 14, 2020 at 10:31:08AM +0100, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 13, 2020 at 09:32:13PM +, ghe2001 wrote:
> >Two for sure and put them in a RAID1 -- formatted ext4. And watch that
> >mdstat.
> >
> >And a third or fourth to see if you can get ZFS going.
>
> For playing around wit
On Thu, Aug 13, 2020 at 09:32:13PM +, ghe2001 wrote:
Two for sure and put them in a RAID1 -- formatted ext4. And watch that
mdstat.
And a third or fourth to see if you can get ZFS going.
For playing around with tech, sure: for part of a mundane, reliable
backup strategy for the OP, and as
On Mi, 12 aug 20, 20:14:03, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
> external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
> think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is
> any
> g
On 2020-08-13 01:31, David Christensen wrote:
> Migrating to ZFS was non-trivial, and I am still wresting with
> disaster preparedness.
I should have qualified that -- when I used ZFS only as a volume manager
and file system, it was not much harder than md and ext4. You could put
a GPT partiti
On 8/13/20 13:52, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Thursday, August 13, 2020 01:45:59 PM Tom Dial wrote:
>> Debian ZFS root (and boot) is not *that* hard; see the instructions at
>>
>> https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/Debian/Debian%20B
>> uster%20Root%20on%20ZFS.html
>>
>>
On Thursday, August 13, 2020 04:09:46 PM David Christensen wrote:
> On 2020-08-13 12:52, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Thursday, August 13, 2020 01:45:59 PM Tom Dial wrote:
> >> I would recommend installing from buster-backports to get the current
> >> openzfs release which includes improvements
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, August 13, 2020 2:50 PM, Dan Ritter wrote:
> D. R. Evans wrote:
>
> > Greg Wooledge wrote on 8/13/20 2:29 PM:
> >
> > > The simplest answer would be to use ext4.
> >
> > I concur, given the OP's use c
D. R. Evans wrote:
> Greg Wooledge wrote on 8/13/20 2:29 PM:
>
> >
> > The simplest answer would be to use ext4.
> >
>
> I concur, given the OP's use case. And I speak as someone who raves about ZFS
> at every reasonable opportunity :-)
Also concur. But by all means buy a spare drive and expe
Greg Wooledge wrote on 8/13/20 2:29 PM:
>
> The simplest answer would be to use ext4.
>
I concur, given the OP's use case. And I speak as someone who raves about ZFS
at every reasonable opportunity :-)
Doc
--
Web: http://enginehousebooks.com/drevans
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On Thu, Aug 13, 2020 at 01:09:46PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> On 2020-08-13 12:52, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > * Most of my backup will be done from a Wheezy system -- can I install
> > ZFS
> > on Wheezy?
>
> I do not see any ZFS packages for Wheezy:
>
> The simplest answer would be
On 2020-08-13 12:52, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thursday, August 13, 2020 01:45:59 PM Tom Dial wrote:
Debian ZFS root (and boot) is not *that* hard; see the instructions at
https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/Debian/Debian%20B
uster%20Root%20on%20ZFS.html
They certainl
On Thursday, August 13, 2020 01:45:59 PM Tom Dial wrote:
> Debian ZFS root (and boot) is not *that* hard; see the instructions at
>
> https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/Debian/Debian%20B
> uster%20Root%20on%20ZFS.html
>
> They certainly are not harder than installing early
Aug 13, 2020, 00:14 by rhkra...@gmail.com:
> I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
> external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
> think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is
> any
> good reas
On 8/13/20 02:31, David Christensen wrote:
> On 8/12/20 5:14 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>> I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up
>> to an
>> external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to
>> use, I
>> think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 fa
On Wed, Aug 12, 2020 at 09:15:21PM -0600, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Wed, 12 Aug 2020 20:14:03 -0400
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> > I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up
> > to an external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable
> > filesystem to use, I thin
On Thu, Aug 13, 2020 at 12:55:35PM +1200, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
> On 13/08/2020 12:14, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> >I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
> >external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
> >think I want to stay i
On 8/12/20 5:14 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is any
good reason to use an
On Wed, 12 Aug 2020 20:14:03 -0400
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up
> to an external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable
> filesystem to use, I think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and
> I'm wondering if there is any
On 8/12/2020 7:14 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is any
good reason to use
On 13/08/2020 12:14, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is any
good reason to use a
On 13/8/20 10:14 am, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is any
good reason to use a
I'm getting closer to setting up a consistent backup plan, backing up to an
external USB drive. I'm wondering about a reasonable filesystem to use, I
think I want to stay in the ext2/3/4 family, and I'm wondering if there is any
good reason to use anything beyond ext2?
(Some day I'll try ZFS o
time there can only be one master on an USB tree.
And the hardware has to play along.
Why are you
wanting to employ USB Ethernet / TCPIP is the way to go. Make the
external drive a NAS, and you are good to go. Many NAS systems
support printer sharing, or you can roll your own.
USB is
t; wanting to employ USB Ethernet / TCPIP is the way to go. Make the
> external drive a NAS, and you are good to go. Many NAS systems
> support printer sharing, or you can roll your own.
USB is no replacement for networking, no.
Cheers
-- tomás
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
As already mentioned, this simply will not work. Why are you wanting
to employ USB Ethernet / TCPIP is the way to go. Make the external
drive a NAS, and you are good to go. Many NAS systems support printer
sharing, or you can roll your own.
On 6/4/2020 1:46 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote
Thanks to all who replied!
On Thursday, June 04, 2020 05:14:29 PM Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Thursday 04 June 2020 14:46:50 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3
> > computers, 1 printer, 1 external drive (for backup for
On Thursday 04 June 2020 14:46:50 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3
> computers, 1 printer, 1 external drive (for backup for any of the
> three PCs)".
>
> I don't know much about USB hubs, I guess all of t
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3 computers,
> 1
> printer, 1 external drive (for backup for any of the three PCs)".
>
> I don't know much about USB hubs, I guess all of the ports are two way.
>
>
On Thu, Jun 04, 2020 at 08:53:26PM +0200, Sven Hartge wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> > In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3
> > computers, 1
> > printer, 1 external drive (for backup for any of the three PCs)".
>
&g
On Thu, 4 Jun 2020 14:46:50 -0400
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3
> computers, 1 printer, 1 external drive (for backup for any of the
> three PCs)".
>
> I don't know much about USB hubs, I guess all of th
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3 computers,
> 1
> printer, 1 external drive (for backup for any of the three PCs)".
> I don't know much about USB hubs, I guess all of the ports are two way.
No. This is e
In a way, the subject covers most of it: " Using a USB hub with 3 computers, 1
printer, 1 external drive (for backup for any of the three PCs)".
I don't know much about USB hubs, I guess all of the ports are two way.
To clarify, if needed, I'd like to buy a 5 (or more) p
On Mon 02 Dec 2019 at 16:32:39 (+0300), Reco wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 02, 2019 at 07:28:41AM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> > On Mon 02 Dec 2019 at 05:50:29 (-0500), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > > On Monday, December 02, 2019 04:51:01 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > > I have since discovered that they are
Le 02/12/2019 à 22:28, Gene Heskett a écrit :
On Monday 02 December 2019 16:02:59 Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 02/12/2019 à 02:30, Gene Heskett a écrit :
What I did was plug the u-sd into a card reader/writer.
The card wasn't recognized and dd refused to write to it.
What do you mean *precisel
On Monday 02 December 2019 16:02:59 Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 02/12/2019 à 02:30, Gene Heskett a écrit :
> > What I did was plug the u-sd into a card reader/writer.
> >
> > The card wasn't recognized and dd refused to write to it.
>
> What do you mean *precisely* by "wasn't recognized" ?
>
Ack d
Le 02/12/2019 à 02:30, Gene Heskett a écrit :
What I did was plug the u-sd into a card reader/writer.
The card wasn't recognized and dd refused to write to it.
What do you mean *precisely* by "wasn't recognized" ?
Then someone said I need to install exfat,
Bullshit.
dd does not care about
On Monday 02 December 2019 10:43:49 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Lu, 02 dec 19, 05:35:33, Mark Allums wrote:
> > exfat support is not necessary in the card reader. All readers
> > support exfat if they support the size of sd/microsd card that comes
> > preformatted to exfat. You need filesystem su
On Lu, 02 dec 19, 05:35:33, Mark Allums wrote:
>
> exfat support is not necessary in the card reader. All readers support
> exfat if they support the size of sd/microsd card that comes preformatted to
> exfat. You need filesystem support in your OS of choice. That is all.
Just in case it's not
rhkramer writes:
> Well, plus some specialty electronic component houses -- I think James
> is gone...
Jameco is still going strong.
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy.com
Elmwood, WI USA
Linux-Fan wrote:
...
> Just as a side note (I saw that the mapages have been found later in the
> thread by going online): You can also search manpages by using the `apropos`
> command (part of the man-db package) like this:
>
> $ apropos exfat
> dumpexfat (8)- dump exFAT file s
On Monday 02 December 2019 08:28:41 David Wright wrote:
> On Mon 02 Dec 2019 at 05:50:29 (-0500), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Monday, December 02, 2019 04:51:01 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > I have since discovered that they are already installed on this
> > > stretch install, but man pages se
On Monday 02 December 2019 06:35:33 Mark Allums wrote:
> On 12/2/19 4:57 AM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Monday, December 02, 2019 05:11:41 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> >> On Monday 02 December 2019 04:40:28 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> >>> Try a different (known good) reader and/or system.
> >>
> >>
Gene Heskett writes:
On Monday 02 December 2019 03:09:57 Frank Weißer wrote:
> Hi Gene,Gene Heskett:
> > Just for S&G:
> > gene@coyote:~$ sudo apt install exfat
> > Reading package lists... Done
> > Building dependency tree
> > Reading state information... Done
> > E: Unable to locate package e
On Monday 02 December 2019 05:57:34 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, December 02, 2019 05:11:41 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Monday 02 December 2019 04:40:28 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > > Try a different (known good) reader and/or system.
> >
> > I'll look for one that claims exfat support. B
On Mon, Dec 02, 2019 at 09:01:36AM -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > I found:
> >
> > https://www.systutorials.com/docs/linux/man/8-mount.exfat-fuse/
>
> I did find this one, and it looks simple enough. Unprintable because of
> all the advertising screwing up the manpage formatting. Looks as if its
On Monday 02 December 2019 05:50:29 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, December 02, 2019 04:51:01 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> > I have since discovered that they are already installed on this
> > stretch install, but man pages seem to be on missing list. Example:
> > gene@coyote:~$ man exfat-fuse
Hi.
On Mon, Dec 02, 2019 at 07:28:41AM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Mon 02 Dec 2019 at 05:50:29 (-0500), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Monday, December 02, 2019 04:51:01 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > I have since discovered that they are already installed on this stretch
> > > install
On Mon 02 Dec 2019 at 05:50:29 (-0500), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, December 02, 2019 04:51:01 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> > I have since discovered that they are already installed on this stretch
> > install, but man pages seem to be on missing list. Example:
> > gene@coyote:~$ man exfat-f
On 12/2/19 4:57 AM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
On Monday, December 02, 2019 05:11:41 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
On Monday 02 December 2019 04:40:28 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
Try a different (known good) reader and/or system.
I'll look for one that claims exfat support. But I'm out in the
puckerbrush s
On Monday, December 02, 2019 05:11:41 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 02 December 2019 04:40:28 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > Try a different (known good) reader and/or system.
>
> I'll look for one that claims exfat support. But I'm out in the
> puckerbrush so if staples or wally's doesn't carry i
On Monday, December 02, 2019 04:51:01 AM Gene Heskett wrote:
> I have since discovered that they are already installed on this stretch
> install, but man pages seem to be on missing list. Example:
> gene@coyote:~$ man exfat-fuse
> No manual entry for exfat-fuse
> gene@coyote:~$ man exfat-utils
> No
On Monday 02 December 2019 04:40:28 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Du, 01 dec 19, 20:30:31, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > What I did was plug the u-sd into a card reader/writer.
> >
> > The card wasn't recognized and dd refused to write to it.
>
> Regardless of exFat, if the system (hardware + kernel) doesn
On Monday 02 December 2019 03:09:57 Frank Weißer wrote:
> Hi Gene,Gene Heskett:
> > Just for S&G:
> > gene@coyote:~$ sudo apt install exfat
> > Reading package lists... Done
> > Building dependency tree
> > Reading state information... Done
> > E: Unable to locate package exfat
>
> has to be
> ~$
On Du, 01 dec 19, 20:30:31, Gene Heskett wrote:
>
> What I did was plug the u-sd into a card reader/writer.
>
> The card wasn't recognized and dd refused to write to it.
Regardless of exFat, if the system (hardware + kernel) doesn't recognize
there is card in your system you won't be able to do
On Monday, December 02, 2019 03:09:57 AM Frank Weißer wrote:
> Hi Gene,Gene Heskett:
> > Just for S&G:
> > gene@coyote:~$ sudo apt install exfat
> > Reading package lists... Done
> > Building dependency tree
> > Reading state information... Done
> > E: Unable to locate package exfat
>
> has to be
Hi Gene,Gene Heskett:
Just for S&G:
gene@coyote:~$ sudo apt install exfat
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
E: Unable to locate package exfat
has to be
~$ sudo apt install exfat-fuse exfat-utils
readU
Frank
On Friday 29 November 2019 12:04:37 Charles Curley wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 13:25:38 +
>
> Łukasz Kruk wrote:
> > I have an external drive formatted to exFAT.
> >
> > I cannot access it?
>
> What do you mean when you say you can't access it? You can
On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 13:25:38 +
Łukasz Kruk wrote:
> I have an external drive formatted to exFAT.
>
> I cannot access it?
What do you mean when you say you can't access it? You cannot mount it?
You cannot fsck it? It doesn't show up in fdisk or sfdisk?
What exactly are
Install exfat support.
apt install exfat-fuse exfat-utils
Mark
On 11/29/2019 7:25 AM, Łukasz Kruk wrote:
Hi there,
I have an external drive formatted to exFAT.
I cannot access it?
Can you please assist?
Kind regards,
L. Kruk.
On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 13:25:38 +, Łukasz Kruk wrote:
>
> I have an external drive formatted to exFAT.
>
> I cannot access it?
>
virgo@dragon:~$ apt search exfat
Sorting... Done
Full Text Search... Done
exfat-fuse/stable 1.3.0-1 i386
read and write exFAT driver for FUSE
Hi there,
I have an external drive formatted to exFAT.
I cannot access it?
Can you please assist?
Kind regards,
L. Kruk.
On Sun 03 Dec 2017 at 20:10:31 (+0100), Bernard wrote:
> All of this raises a number of questions concerning safe storage of
> data. What is available is far from reliable. Another problem is
> that of usb ports : on two of my three computers, usb ports have
> become faulty after 2-3 years ; on my
Hi,
Bernard wrote:
> Surprise : this time, it did AUTOMOUNT the way it used to in the old days !
So there are probably unstable readbility problems with the partition table.
If you have the start address of partition 1 then you could try to
circumvent the partition table by using a loop device a
Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
arne wrote:
[stuff deleted]
This is probably the normal superblock in that partition.
But running e2fsck might cause the end of the remaining data in the
filesystem.
I'd try to mount the loop device and hope to recover some files.
When this is queezed out, then may
Hello,
the last bit made me laugh. If the situation is truly dire, you may consider
file carving with 'scalpel' or 'foremost', both of which are in the
repositories.
$ apt-cache show foremost scalpel
Package: foremost
Version: 1.5.7-6
Installed-Size: 123
Maintainer: Raúl Benencia
Depends: libc6
Hi,
arne wrote:
> and I doubt if I understand what is a 'sparse' superblock
It's not a bad sign, as it seems:
http://www.nongnu.org/ext2-doc/ext2.html#SUPERBLOCK
"The first version of ext2 (revision 0) stores a copy at the start of
every block group, along with backups of the group descri
Thanks to All for your advises. Indeed, I most likely have a hardware
problem with this WD external drive. It no longer boots, that is for
sure... But, at most starts it get registered as scsi drive, as reveals
$cat /proc/scsi/scsi
it does most times, not all times. When it does not, I have
On 26/11/17 22:37, bd wrote:
> This drive no longer mounts
FWIW, my WD external drive stopped mounting. I opened the case (with
difficulty, and possibly breakage, IIRC) removed the drive, and used it
as a normal SATA drive. Still working fine, all the data was there.
This may be complet
On 11/26/17 01:37, bd wrote:
WD P/N : WD1H 1Q
S/N : WCAU4D 164675
is about 4 or 5 years old. It is an external drive using external power
supply. At start, I had formatted it in ext3, so that I 'd be able to
storage videofiles larger than 2 Gb. Since then, I storaged a number of
On 26.11.2017 14:37, bd wrote:
>
> Hi to Everyone,
>
> My
>
> WD P/N : WD1H 1Q
>
> S/N : WCAU4D 164675
>
> is about 4 or 5 years old. It is an external drive using external
> power supply. At start, I had formatted it in ext3, so that I 'd be
> ab
at new device appears
> in the list whenever I plug my external drive. It shows 'sdb'. Not 'sdb1' as
> for other external drives, just 'sdb'.
So it looks like the partition table on the drive is unreadable or was
overwritten by data which the Linux kernel in
> How am I to get this drive back to operation, or, at least, to
> recuperate the datafiles that are stored in that WD external drive ?
>
> Thanks in advance to tell me what diagnosis and repair tools I could
> use
>
> Bernard
Hello,
TestDisk checks the partition and
Hi to Everyone,
My
WD P/N : WD1H 1Q
S/N : WCAU4D 164675
is about 4 or 5 years old. It is an external drive using external power
supply. At start, I had formatted it in ext3, so that I 'd be able to
storage videofiles larger than 2 Gb. Since then, I storaged a number of
files in se
[I used the wrong email address when I posted this message a few minutes
ago. I hope I will be forgiven for reposting using this correct address.]
Hello:
I have four partitions on a USB drive, including ntfs, fat32, and
ext4. None of them is accessible as automounted. Each of them is
accessible a
- Original Message -
From: Joao Luis Meloni Assirati
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: 3/13/2013 7:31:19 PM
Subject: Re: Itroductry info on permission issues and implications - where?
-was [Re: permissions on a Verbatim USB external drive]
> João Luis Meloni Assirati wr
> João Luis Meloni Assirati wrote:
>> [snip]
>>
>> Since vfat filesystems don't hold UNIX permissions, it has
>> to be mounted with the umask and/or uid, gid options. If it
>> is plugged through USB and you have a mount desktop service
>> communicating with dbus, all should be automatic. However,
>
João Luis Meloni Assirati wrote:
[snip]
Since vfat filesystems don't hold UNIX permissions, it has
to be mounted with the umask and/or uid, gid options. If it
is plugged through USB and you have a mount desktop service
communicating with dbus, all should be automatic. However,
if User mounts it
On Wednesday 13 March 2013 14:55:01 João Luis Meloni Assirati wrote:
> Em 13-03-2013 07:37, Lisi Reisz escreveu:
> > On Tuesday 12 March 2013 18:58:16 John L. Cunningham wrote:
> >> On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 05:31:57PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> >>> The Verbatim belongs to User, and needs to function
Em 13-03-2013 07:37, Lisi Reisz escreveu:
On Tuesday 12 March 2013 18:58:16 John L. Cunningham wrote:
On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 05:31:57PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
The Verbatim belongs to User, and needs to function on his box. But it
cannot be written to from his box, even as root, and returns
On Tuesday 12 March 2013 18:58:16 John L. Cunningham wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 05:31:57PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > The Verbatim belongs to User, and needs to function on his box. But it
> > cannot be written to from his box, even as root, and returns "access
> > denied" to most files an
On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 05:31:57PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
>
> The Verbatim belongs to User, and needs to function on his box. But it
> cannot be written to from his box, even as root, and returns "access denied"
> to most files and directories that I try to copy over.
What is the filesystem
I am having problems with a Verbatim USB external hard drive Model 47512 1TB
It belongs to someone else, let's say User. He is using Squeeze with TDE, I
think 3.5.12.
(tl;dr - read next paragraph, then skip to last paragraph!)
The Verbatim belongs to User, and needs to function on his box. B
Mitchell Laks writes:
> Rashi:/home/mlaks# fdisk /dev/sdd
Better use fdisk -luc as suggested in the warning.
> Rashi:/home/mlaks# mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdd1
mkfs -t ext3 ...
> Rashi:/home/mlaks# mount -t ext2 /dev/sdd1 /mnt
What do you expect when you explicitly mount the FS as ext2?
--
http://w
On Fri, 22 Jul 2011 08:18:41 -0400, Mitchell Laks wrote:
> Has anyone seen something like this?
> Here is the log of creating an ext3 partition on a device and lack of
> recognition as ext3 just ext2. very strange.
(...)
Safely remove the USB drive and connect it again.
Is the drive automounted
Has anyone seen something like this?
Here is the log of creating an ext3 partition on a device and lack of
recognition as ext3 just ext2. very strange.
Rashi:/home/mlaks# fdisk /dev/sdd
Device contains neither a valid DOS partition table, nor Sun, SGI or OSF
disklabel
Building a new DOS disklabe
Monte Milanuk:
>
> I'm somewhat inclined to go with option 'C': an HP Proliant
> Microserver N36L - comes without OS (certified for RHEL5), 1GB ECC
> memory + 160gb SATA drive. Move the OEM drive to the optical drive
> bay, stuff the four HDD bays with 2TB drives and call it a day. A
> little m
On Thu, 20 Jan 2011, Monte Milanuk wrote:
> On 1/19/11 10:23 AM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> I'm somewhat inclined to go with option 'C': an HP Proliant
> Microserver N36L - comes without OS (certified for RHEL5), 1GB ECC
> memory + 160gb SATA drive. Move the OEM drive to the optical dri
nal
port or two to connect to an external drive array, and doesn't cost more
than the bloody drive enclosure (or the enclosure and a drive) and that
works 'out of the box' that someone will recommend via first-hand
experience (judging by reviews and such, support for cards among any
On Tue, 18 Jan 2011, Monte Milanuk wrote:
> 4-bay enclosure w/ eSATA card + cable:$130
> Hitachi 2TB SATA HDD ($120x4):$480
>
> Grand total: $610
>
> vs...
> 4-bay enclosure: $279
> Areca 1300x4 card + cable:$197
>
Okay... since this is not something I can go to the local office supply
store (around here its either that or mail order) and pick up and look
at it and see that tab A goes in slot B (i.e. how things physically
fit/work together)... how exactly would I set this up, and what would I
need?
Lets
On Mon, 17 Jan 2011 15:32:51 -0800, Monte Milanuk wrote:
(...)
> My big question is... most of these external drive boxes seem to claim
> support for JBOD, RAID 0, 1, 10, 5, etc. - should I presume that is
> simply fake RAID like many commodity mobos have, and not really usable
>
On Tue, 18 Jan 2011, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> And "most expensive enterprise-grade equipment" doesn't describe a small
> SAS jbod enclosure and a SAS HBA. You can probably get both for well
> below US$ 1k, and you can populate it with SATA disks just fine.
It is really well bellow US$
On Tue, 18 Jan 2011, Monte Milanuk wrote:
> On 1/17/11 5:57 PM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> >On Mon, 17 Jan 2011, Monte Milanuk wrote:
> >>My big question is... most of these external drive boxes seem to
> >>claim support for JBOD, RAID 0, 1, 10, 5, etc. - s
On 1/17/11 5:57 PM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Mon, 17 Jan 2011, Monte Milanuk wrote:
My big question is... most of these external drive boxes seem to
claim support for JBOD, RAID 0, 1, 10, 5, etc. - should I presume
that is simply fake RAID like many commodity mobos have, and not
On Mon, 17 Jan 2011, Monte Milanuk wrote:
> My big question is... most of these external drive boxes seem to
> claim support for JBOD, RAID 0, 1, 10, 5, etc. - should I presume
> that is simply fake RAID like many commodity mobos have, and not
Either that, or worse: data-eating crap like
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