On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 04:23:11PM -0800, Rick Stevens wrote: > Dave Feustel wrote: >> On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 02:26:28PM -0800, Rick Stevens wrote: >>> FFS is the BSD "fast file system" (yes, the Amiga also had an FFS, but >>> since the OP said "BSD", I'm going to discount the Amiga). I think >>> Linux' UFS filesystem can mount it but I'm not sure. If it can, it >>> should automount, but UFS may not recognize FFS markers even if it can >>> mount it. You can try forcing UFS to see if it'll work. >>> >>> First, make a directory somewhere where you want to mount it. A good >>> place would be in either /media or /mnt. I'd do it in /mnt to leave >>> /media pristine for automounts: >>> >>> mkdir /mnt/test >>> >>> Do a "dmesg" just before you plug in the drive, plug it in, wait a few >>> seconds and do "dmesg" again. The additional lines from dmesg should >>> refer to the device you plugged in. You'll probably see something like >>> this: >>> >>> sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through >>> sdb: sdb1 >>> >>> (that's from plugging in a FLASH drive). In this case, the drive >>> itself is sdb (/dev/sdb) and it contains one partition, sdb1 (or >>> /dev/sdb1). Then: >>> >>> mount -t ufs /dev/sdXY /path/to/your/mount/point >>> >>> In this case, "mount -t ufs /dev/sdb1 /mnt/test >>> >>> If it mounts up, voila! If not, either you didn't specify the right >>> partition or UFS doesn't mount FFS stuff. I don't have any FFS drives >>> handy or I'd test it for you. >> >> Thanks for this. I recognise the stuff from dmesg. I was trying to >> mount the ffs disk because it is handy. I have another flash device >> that I would like to partition as a 2 or 3 partition drive, mkfs >> and then copy data to it from (hd0,0). Then I want to recreate >> hd0 as a multi-partition drive, install 64-bit f9, and then copy >> the data back from the flash drive. >> >> The stumbling block for me was that I didn't understand how the usb >> devices are named and accessed in Fedora before they are mounted. I >> think I understand naming now. > > Ah! Yes, virtually all disk-like devices are treated as if they were > SCSI. "/dev/sd" is the prefix for all such devices, "sd" meaning "SCSI > disk". Then there's a drive designator which will be the letter "a" > through "zz" (yes, I've seen such two-letter things...typically on big > FC disk farms), then a decimal number, 1 through 15 for the partition > number. So, the fifth partition on the third drive found would be > /dev/sdc5 (and that would actually be INSIDE /dev/sdc4, see below). > > Additional note: Partition numbers 1 through 4 are reserved for > "primary" partitions. One primary partition can also be an "extended" > partition and partition 4 is always used for such a beast. Partitions 5 > through 15 will always refer to partitions INSIDE that extended > partition (partition 4), so don't freak out when you see the sector list > for partition 4 overlap those for partitions 5 through 15 in the output > of "fdisk" or "sfdisk". > > Probably more data than you need, but I'm nothing if not thorough (some > would say "bombastic" or "long winded"). Thanks again for the info above. This is the kind of info that I understand but which seems to be missing from my f9 bible. Linux device names are quite different from device names in OpenBSD which I had been using for several years before I started using Linux (Fedora 9 and Suse 11). -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines