My stupid floppy isn't letting me write to it. I use kernel 2.6.7. When mounted as subfs, it says it is a 'read-only filesystem'. When I mount it as vfat I get : Fuzzy:/home/steven # mount -t vfat /dev/fd0 /media/floppy mount: block device /dev/fd0 is write-protected, mounting read-only Fuzzy:/home/steven # and the same with msdos and ext2. I can't format it either. What is wrong?
On Thu, 2004-12-02 at 20:40, Steven Pasternak wrote:
My stupid floppy isn't letting me write to it <snip> I can't format it either. What is wrong?
Hi Steven, I know these are pretty obvious, but I've been tripped on them in the past myself when harried... 1 Verify the mechanical write-protect tab on the floppy is in the correct position -- open hole = write protected 2. Verify the write-protect sensor on the floppy drive, itself, is still working. 3. Make sure you're using a "fresh" floppy -- not one that has been pre-formatted or been left sitting in your desk drawer for two years. HTH & regards, - Carl
On Thursday 02 December 2004 08:40 pm, Steven Pasternak wrote:
My stupid floppy isn't letting me write to it. I use kernel 2.6.7. When mounted as subfs, it says it is a 'read-only filesystem'. When I mount it as vfat I get :
Fuzzy:/home/steven # mount -t vfat /dev/fd0 /media/floppy mount: block device /dev/fd0 is write-protected, mounting read-only Fuzzy:/home/steven #
and the same with msdos and ext2. I can't format it either. What is wrong? ===========
Steven, Are you using SuSE 9.1 or 9.2? I have only seen this behavior in 9.1, not 9.2, but I think all the 9.2 machines I've updated/installed were altered already by me. I never got the floppy to behave well with the subfs thing running on it under 9.1, so I removed that and put it back to manual, pre 9.x days. Here is how it should appear in your /etc/fstab: /dev/fd0 /media/floppy auto noauto,user,sync 0 0 (all one line, of course) After doing that, you can add an icon to your desktop for the floppy and mount & unmount as you have in the past. One oddity I noticed after doing this, the first time you try to unmount a mounted disk, it might tell you only root can unmount it. If it does, then open a shell, login as root and "umount /dev/fd0"! That will take care of it and you should not have any further difficulties. regards, Lee -- --- KMail v1.7.1 --- SuSE Linux Pro v9.2 --- Registered Linux User #225206 "Don't let the fear of striking out keep you from playing the game!"
participants (3)
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BandiPat
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Carl Hartung
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Steven Pasternak