Quote:
Originally Posted by ershiba
btw, is there any specific concerns when mounting those file partitions?
in linux, windows or must use OpenBSD only to mount it to prevent possible issues arise?
@shep,
thanks for the tips, =)
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With LInux I find that I can read the OpenBSD partitions.
The Linux 3.7.1 'dmesg' reveals all:
sdb1: <openbsd: sdb10 sdb11 sdb12bad subpartition - ignored
Here I have the "/" partition on sdb10, swap on sdb11 and another data partition on sdb12.
(the bad "subpartition message" is for partition sdb11, the OpenBSD swap partition)
So I can mount sdb10 and sdb12 using the following /etc/fstab entries:
/dev/sdb10 /b10 ufs ufstype=44bsd,noauto,ro 0 0
/dev/sdb12 /b12 ufs ufstype=44bsd,noauto,ro 0 0
and then
mount /b10
mount /b12