Quote:
Originally Posted by Broodjegehaktmetmayo
Thank you very much for your helpfull response
I decided your reasoning about the dangers of having anything else than Windows write on ntfs makes sense, so I decided to go with your recommendation.
That didn't exactly work out
I created /mnt/xp1, xp2, xp3 and xp4, and added this to /etc/fstab:
Code:
/dev/ad6s5 /mnt/xp1 ntfs ro 0 0
/dev/ad6s6 /mnt/xp2 ntfs ro 0 0
/dev/ad6s7 /mnt/xp3 ntfs ro 0 0
/dev/ad6s8 /mnt/xp4 ntfs ro 0 0
And rebooted.
Which gave me during the intial startup:
Code:
Mounting /etc/fstab filesystems failed, startup aborted.
ERROR: ABORTING BOOT (sending SIGTERM to parent)!
/bin/sh on /etc/rc terminated abnormally, going to single user mode
This is where I completely reinstalled FreeBSD in order to try again ( ).
(No, seriously, if I hadn't learned about mount -u / and mount -a before I would have done that since in single user mode there is no way you can edit /etc/fstab if you don't first do that - at least I learned something ).
So I am wondering if there is something else I need to customize somewhere else in order to make the boot go right, or
I will start investigating this, but thanks again for your help; I really do appreciate it (!)
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So I have all these settings in fstab I made earlier commented out (#), now I am downloading a pdf, it asks me where to save, I browse around and to my surprise all my ntfs-drives have been mounted already (
), and come to think of it, they have been mounted even before I tried the entries in fstab (I just didn't realize it as for example, in my /home/ I have a folder 'Downloads' and under XP I also have a
partition 'Downloads'. So I saw 'Downloads' but didn't realize this wasn't the one in my /home/ but instead an XP-partition.
FreeBSD 8.0 automatically mounts ntfs-partitions