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Hello, I have a trivial error. But I saw more forum with google, but that never finished.
Maybe you can easily.
So I have an external partition with ext3 I want mount for if I'm user, I can rw that. How can I do?
Do you?
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 19:59:34)
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How do you mount it - with 'mount' or with thunar or ...? The wiki should help.
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Maybe one
sudo mount -t ext3 -o rw,user,noauto /dev/sdb6 /media/linux
drwxrwxrwx 21 root root 4096 okt 25 19.43 /media/linux/
df -h
/dev/sdb6 131G 125G 0 100% /media/linux
mc
read only
sudo mc
rw mode
Why?
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 19:30:12)
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'drwxrwxrwx' mean full access. Have you tried writing to that location?
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Isnt more space on destination. I get this message. Why?
I had run:
fsck.ext3 -yfv /dev/sdb6
But I have same problem.
Thanks for you ask me.
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 19:31:20)
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What's the output of
df -hi /media/linux
?
Last edited by karol (2011-10-25 20:22:45)
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/dev/sdb6 17M 152K 17M 1% /media/linux
But you need to know I used before the Ext2Fsd-0.51.exe application. Maybe that did for me a problem?
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 19:31:54)
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I'm not sure, maybe it's some reserved space? IIRC the filesystem takes 5% for its accounting purposes by default.
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But If I use sudo mc, I have space. Maybe I need change back to ext2?
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dumpe2fs 1.41.14 (22-Dec-2010)
Filesystem volume name: Linux
Last mounted on: <not available>
Filesystem UUID: e1113981-dd8c-4f1b-9213-87483e3edb59
Filesystem magic number: 0xEF53
Filesystem revision #: 1 (dynamic)
Filesystem features: filetype sparse_super large_file
Filesystem flags: signed_directory_hash
Default mount options: (none)
Filesystem state: clean
Errors behavior: Continue
Filesystem OS type: Linux
Inode count: 17448960
Block count: 34871074
Reserved block count: 1743551
Free blocks: 1591461
Free inodes: 17293712
First block: 0
Block size: 4096
Fragment size: 4096
Blocks per group: 32768
Fragments per group: 32768
Inodes per group: 16384
Inode blocks per group: 512
Filesystem created: Thu Sep 16 22:19:13 2010
Last mount time: Tue Oct 25 22:24:26 2011
Last write time: Wed Oct 26 20:54:27 2011
Mount count: 7
Maximum mount count: 39
Last checked: Wed Oct 26 01:00:27 2011
Check interval: 15552000 (6 months)
Next check after: Mon Apr 23 01:00:27 2012
Reserved blocks uid: 0 (user root)
Reserved blocks gid: 0 (group root)
First inode: 11
Inode size: 128
Default directory hash: tea
Directory Hash Seed: 751dbdcd-947e-41bf-b133-31756205447b
Journal backup: inode blocks
Have somebody any idea. I can use for best answer with su -. But I read linux is not windows, but I need use full with root. Do you thing I have generated user with wrong method?
dumpe2fs 1.41.14 (22-Dec-2010)
Filesystem volume name: vmdisk
Last mounted on: <not available>
Filesystem UUID: cff692ae-b9fd-4ff2-a881-3e247301a93b
Filesystem magic number: 0xEF53
Filesystem revision #: 1 (dynamic)
Filesystem features: ext_attr resize_inode dir_index filetype sparse_super large_file
Filesystem flags: signed_directory_hash
Default mount options: (none)
Filesystem state: not clean
Errors behavior: Continue
Filesystem OS type: Linux
Inode count: 294912
Block count: 1178761
Reserved block count: 58938
Free blocks: 1157939
Free inodes: 294901
First block: 0
Block size: 4096
Fragment size: 4096
Reserved GDT blocks: 287
Blocks per group: 32768
Fragments per group: 32768
Inodes per group: 8192
Inode blocks per group: 512
Filesystem created: Wed Oct 26 20:49:31 2011
Last mount time: n/a
Last write time: Wed Oct 26 20:53:37 2011
Mount count: 1
Maximum mount count: 31
Last checked: Wed Oct 26 20:49:31 2011
Check interval: 15552000 (6 months)
Next check after: Mon Apr 23 20:49:31 2012
Reserved blocks uid: 0 (user root)
Reserved blocks gid: 0 (group root)
First inode: 11
Inode size: 256
Required extra isize: 28
Desired extra isize: 28
Default directory hash: half_md4
Directory Hash Seed: 35004f28-9daa-422b-83b4-0415a092c46f
This is from a VMDK. But this working. Why?
$ sudo tune2fs -O ext_attr /dev/sdb6
tune2fs 1.41.14 (22-Dec-2010)
Setting filesystem feature 'ext_attr' not supported.
Oh sit. Anybody know?
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 19:24:03)
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Have you read https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/US … ge_Devices ?
When pasting code, please use [ code ] tags https://bbs.archlinux.org/help.php#bbcode
like this
It makes the code more readable and more convenient to scroll through.
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Thank's karol
Maybe this help for me solve the problem.
Have you read https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/US … ge_Devices ?
Mine partition is in normal HDD, is after NTFS.
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 19:35:32)
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Check out the -m option to tune2fs, which sets the reserved-blocks-percentage for the FS - the percentage of blocks reserved to the super user, which is 5% by default.
Presumably, root has filled the partition completely, and 5G worth of deleted user data is not enough to get under the 5% limit to allow for new data to be written by users.
As this partition is used for /home you might as well turn the feature off, as root should not need to have space reserved in that area of the filesystem.
tune2fs -m 0 /dev/sda1
should give regular users access to the reserved blocks.
Thank's for Daniel K.
Last edited by gyurman (2011-10-26 20:00:18)
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Mine partition is in normal HDD, is after NTFS.
I don't understand what you mean.
#2 Daniel K. wrote:Check out the -m option to tune2fs, which sets the reserved-blocks-percentage for the FS - the percentage of blocks reserved to the super user, which is 5% by default.
Presumably, root has filled the partition completely, and 5G worth of deleted user data is not enough to get under the 5% limit to allow for new data to be written by users.
As this partition is used for /home you might as well turn the feature off, as root should not need to have space reserved in that area of the filesystem.
[b]tune2fs -m 0 /dev/sda1[/b]
should give regular users access to the reserved blocks.
Thank's for Daniel K.
Yup, that's what I meant about the reserved space.
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Thank's for Karol. Sorry I didn't understud than.
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