Sheedee wrote:
On Fri, 03 Jan 2003 17:15:06 +0100, Sheedee <sheedee@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Sat, 03 Jan 2004 16:56:01 +0100, Alexander Dalloz
<alexander.dalloz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Am Mi, den 28.01.2004 schrieb Sheedee um 16:10:
On Sat, 03 Jan 2004 14:23:49 +0100, Felipe Alfaro Solana
<felipe_alfaro@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 12:28, Sheedee wrote:
>> I've got a problem with /etc/fstab.
>> If I want to mount a vfat partition, only IS9660 encoding (that
for >> CD's) is available. Choosing any other ISO norm would result
in error >> message saying that the encoding is not supported in
kernel. (Which I've >> recompiled and made sure to add support for
these encodings...). Have I >> missed something? I know it's
propably just my /dev/hands ;), but still >> I have no idea where
the problem might be.
>
> ISO9660 is not an encoding, but the filesystem used on CD's, also
known
> as CDFS. UDF is also another filesystem usually found on DVD's
and CD-RW
> discs written using Incremental Packet Writing.
>
> On the other hand, ISO-8859-1 and ISO-8859-15, and UTF-8 are
encondings.
>
>
You know, that's good to know, but still I'd like to know, how to
fix it ;)
What do you exactly want to achieve? It is not clear to me.
But please first fix your system's date. Your mails arrive with date
28th January 2004.
Alexander
My FAT32 partition is encoded with ISO8859-2 charset, but Fedora
doesn't seem to accept that and reads it, as something different
(even though I specified the charset as ISO8859-2). As a result, I
can't read files, that have any special characters in their names.
I'd like to know, how to make Fedora accept central europian encoding
(ISO8859-2). This feature works just fine under Suse and Mandrake
linux. Thanx ;)
Well, nevermind, trying to recompile kernel (again) something went
wrong and now the network doesn't work anymore. I'm afraid, I'll have
to wait for next fedora, this one is just too buged.
Thanks anyway ;)
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Now it's even worse!!! Now they're time-stamped 2003!!!
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Proprietary software is like petrified wood. It used to be alive, but
then it was fixed in time and put in a box. GNU/Linux software, in
contrast, is alive, always changing and improving. I love that it's
more a process than a product. - Pamela Jones, Groklaw