from 'man mount': [...] -t vfstype The argument following the -t is used to indicate the file system type. The file system types which are currently supported are listed in linux/fs/filesystems.c: minix, xiafs, ext, ext2, msdos, umsdos, vfat, proc, autofs, devpts, nfs, iso9660, smbfs, ncpfs, adfs, affs, coda, hfs, hpfs, ntfs, qnx4, romfs, ufs, sysv, xenix, coherent. Note that the last three are equivalent and that xenix and coherent will be removed at some point in the future -- use sysv instead. Since kernel [...] You can try 'auto' as vfstype also... Health, Yatsen Ng wrote:
Hi there,
I' trying to mount my boot disk but I don't know exactly which filesystem I need to use as an option. By the way, is there a listing of every available filesystem somewhere in the documentation?
Thanks -- Yatsen Ng Den Haag, The netherlands yatsenng@casema.net
It said "Needs Windows 95 or better". So I installed Linux...
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