Also, linux doesn't have fsck_ffs and debian had support for ufs in ufsutils a long time ago.
I highly recommend that for such cases you have a small standalone source which can be built for correcting such errors which can perhaps have disklabel, fsck_ffs, etc. A user can use it locally! Thanking you Sagar Acharya https://humaaraartha.in 21 Jun 2023, 17:47 by sagaracha...@tutanota.com: > I have no clue on the wedges thing. > > dmesg shows these errors while mounting. > > ufs: ufs_fill_super(): fragment size 0 is not a power of 2 > ufs: ufs_fill_super(): fragment size 8192 is too large > > Thanking you > Sagar Acharya > https://humaaraartha.in > > > > 21 Jun 2023, 16:58 by m...@petermann-it.de: > >> Hi, >> >> On 21.06.23 12:16, Martin Husemann wrote: >> >>> On Wed, Jun 21, 2023 at 12:12:35PM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote: >>> >>>> My NetBSD system has gotten corrupted. How do I mount my NetBSD partition >>>> on voidlinux? >>>> >>> >>> The typical recovery doesn't involve any other OS. If your kernel >>> works and finds the / partition you can "boot -sa" and select >>> /rescue/init as init replacement, then fix things from there. >>> >>> If that doesn't work, just boot a USB installer and escape to shell, >>> then fix whatever needs fixing. >>> >> >> I fully agree to what Martin said. Just for the case you still want to >> access to FFSv2 from Linux, this is from my notes as I once had a similiar >> case*): >> >> ``` >> $ sudo mount -t ufs -o ro,ufstype=ufs2 /dev/sdf1 /mnt >> ``` >> >> >> Kind regards >> Matthias >> >> >> *) try to find a low-barrier, sustainable emergency access method to my >> FFSv2-formatted external USB backups for my family. Found out that giving >> them a live Linux System to boot from USB media was the easiest way. Another >> option I considered was ufs2tools for Windows >> (https://ufs2tools.sourceforge.net/) but this seems unmaintained. >> > >