On Thursday 01 July 2004 06:32 pm, Doug McGarrett wrote:
Hello, list--
Somebody must have the same problem and has solved it. I CANNOT WRITE TO MY FLOPPY DISK AND I NEED TO.
I have already added "users" in fstab. It made no difference whatever. This is SuSE 9.1 with this funny mounting scheme.
Could some kind soul tell me how to make the floppy write-accessible for user, for root, for anybody in the whole wide world, I don't care, so I can copy information to a machine that i don't know how to make the network work for. (It's Win 98, se) [...] Thanx. I know I ask a lot more than I contribute, but by and large this is a pretty darned good bunch of people here.
PS: Does anyone on eastern Long Island, NY, USA, know of Linux classes anywhere not too far away? I'm in Rocky Point.
--doug =====================
Doug, I found that putting the floppy entry in /etc/fstab back to how it was setup in 9.0 to be the best. Here is the entry you need in your fstab to change it back and away from the automatic stuff. This also allows you to add an icon to your desktop and mount it normally. Don't forget also that you have to unmount it before removing the disk. /dev/fd0 /media/floppy auto noauto,user,sync 0 0 Should you add the icon to your desktop and it appears to be mounted already, you will have to unmount it as root in your shell first before using it as user. That happened to me on a customer's machine. Just open a shell, su to root, umount /dev/fd0 and you should be good to go! Lee -- --- KMail v1.6.2 --- SuSE Linux Pro v9.1 --- Registered Linux User #225206 On any other day, that might seem strange...