Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-16 Thread Alex Schuster
Colleen Beamer writes: I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In fstab it is /dev/sdc1 and /dev/sdc2 because I've configured it to have two ext3 partitions. If the drive is not powered on when I boot and then, I turn it on, I have

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-16 Thread Stroller
On 16 Aug 2007, at 03:49, Colleen Beamer wrote: ... In fstab it is /dev/sdc1 and /dev/sdc2 because I've configured it to have two ext3 partitions. If the drive is not powered on when I boot and then, I turn it on, I have to reboot to get fstab to recognize it. No, you don't have to. `sudo

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Rumen Yotov
On (15/08/07 22:49) Colleen Beamer wrote: Hi, I have a situation that, before, kind of bugged me but I was able to deal with it. However, now I've added another wrinkle to the situation. I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Tim
Colleen Beamer wrote: Hi, I have a situation that, before, kind of bugged me but I was able to deal with it. However, now I've added another wrinkle to the situation. I have a usb external hard drive attached to my computer. It's an Iomega and has a power switch. In fstab it is /dev/sdc1

Re: [gentoo-user] fstab question

2007-08-15 Thread Ow Mun Heng
Colleen Beamer wrote: The wrinkle is that my son bought me a usbstick. I can mount it just fine. However, if my usb external hard drive is not powered on on boot, the stick is recognized at sdc1. If the usb drive is powered on then, the stick is recognized as sdd1. So, this means that