On Nov 7, 2003, at 2:57 PM, Ken McLennan wrote:
G'day there Chad,
Good evening to you!
Well, since I normally am a FreeBSD person, I will point out that
fdisk
Aahhh... but what are you when you're abnormal? g
Well, normally I am an OS X person, and abnormally I watch tv. FreeBSD
is for my
On Nov 7, 2003, at 3:18 PM, Ken McLennan wrote:
Be that as it may, my current kernel allows me to use the mount
command to access my BSD fs, just not the contents.
lsmod shows:
Module Size Used byNot tainted
ufs51392 1 (autoclean)
nls_cp437
G'day there Chad,
Well, normally I am an OS X person, and abnormally I watch tv. FreeBSD
is for my servers and Linux for specialty servers needing Java or other
things that exist in better forms on Linux... But OS X is my desktop.
OK then. Makes sense. My work (Government) used to
G'day there One All,
To those who followed this thread and offered assistance, I now send my
thanks. I've finally got FreeBSD 4.8 up and running. I still don't know what I did
wrong, as I'm sure that lilo.conf is exactly the same as I had it yesterday and I
couldn't get it to work at
On Thursday 06 November 2003 07:46, you wrote:
Can anyone please give me some advice as to how to read FreeBSD partitions
under Linux?
I did this during the weekend so I have it in fresh memory :)
You have to add ufs filesystem support in the kernel. Under partition
types you have to add PC
What version of FreeBSD are you running?
I'm asking because starting with 5.0, UFS2 is included, and you will
need support for that in Linux if you used it.
The UFS(1) module will not mount UFS2 slices.
Maybe this link can help:
Just a thought, but if it is just booting, they you may be in trouble.
You should have set up the bootmanager in FreeBSD to that partition
where FreeBSD is installed.
Then you use LILO to point to
other = /dev/hdx#
label = FreeBSD
You do not need to be able to mount te partition to boot it.
G'day there Chad,
Well, since I normally am a FreeBSD person, I will point out that fdisk
Aahhh...but what are you when you're abnormal? g
on a gentoo system does know about FreeBSD types. However, the
filesystem on a FreeBSD system is generally ufs up to FreeBSD4 and
G'day there Anders,
I did this during the weekend so I have it in fresh memory :)
...then tell your memory 'thanks' from me, as it worked well =)
You have to add ufs filesystem support in the kernel. Under partition
types you have to add PC BIOS-BSD disklabel support.
Yep,
At 07:46 AM 11/6/2003, you wrote:
Can anyone please give me some advice as to how to read FreeBSD partitions
under Linux? I've tried various options for the ufstype as outlined in the
manpages for mount fstab, but without success. /dev/hdb3 is a 20gig
partition on which I've installed a
Did you check under the kernel build options. There are options for adding
file systems but I don't konw if FreeBSD is there.
On Thursday 06 November 2003 07:46, you wrote:
G'day there Gentoo List Members,
Can anyone please give me some advice as to how to read FreeBSD partitions
G'day there Hall,
I know NOTHING about FreeBSD filesystems or partition types, but it's
Well, that makes 2 of us =)
possible you have to compile support into your kernel for this. Maybe it's
Hmmm... hadn't thought of kernel support. It's an obvious one now that
G'day there Brett,
Did you check under the kernel build options. There are options for adding
Err... No, I didn't. Never even thought about kernel support. I think the
kernel should just intuitively know what I'm trying to do make adjustments to itself
accordingly =)
file
On Nov 6, 2003, at 3:11 PM, Ken McLennan wrote:
G'day there Hall,
I know NOTHING about FreeBSD filesystems or partition types, but it's
Well, that makes 2 of us =)
Well, since I normally am a FreeBSD person, I will point out that fdisk
on a gentoo system does know about FreeBSD types.
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