mount

Erik Schmidt eschmidt90 at gmail.com
Fri Dec 7 16:58:15 UTC 2007


In my case, I've actually encountered the journaling problem before, so
I can be fairly certain that it's the problem.

Next time I run OS X I will disable journaling, and I'll see if it works

-Erik Schmidt

On Fri, 2007-12-07 at 10:30 -0400, Derek Broughton wrote:
> debian wrote:
> 
> > 
> > On Thu, 2007-12-06 at 21:35 -0500, Erik Schmidt wrote:
> >> Hi, I'm having an issue with mounting from the command line.
> >> 
> >> I'm running ubuntu 6.10 on my PPC iBook G4, and I have it loaded onto a
> >> partition on my built-in hard drive.  I'd like to mount my Mac OS X
> >> partition from ubuntu so that I can transfer data between them, so I go
> >> into command line, go to the mnt directory that I set up using mkdir,
> >> and execute sudo mount -t hfsplus /dev/hda3
> >> 
> >> voila, the partition shows up in mnt!  Unfortunately, though I can read,
> >> I cannot write, and this is a problem.  I tried using -o rw, but that
> >> doesn't work.
> > 
> > i know it is kinda strange...the same thing happens with my drives,
> 
> I doubt it.
> 
> > however my drives are all ext3, so what i do is i mount with sudo, then
> > open them using nautilus (in sudo). i can then read and write
> > 
> > i tried also changing the permissions with absolutely no prevail
> 
> Could you both just post the relevant /etc/fstab entries, please?  It's
> impossible to diagnose the problems if you don't tell us what you're
> actually doing.  In your case, I'm sure it's either the fstab entry or the
> mountpoint, but in Erik's I'm not at all sure the hfsplus filesystem is
> writable (never having tried it).
> -- 
> derek
> 
> 





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