"Curlen Middleton" wrote: >Can anyone tell me how to mount my MSDOS and NTFS partitions...
Assume your DOS partition is your first primary partition; create a directory called /dosc (or /bill_gates_oses_suck/c if you prefer). Then, as root, type: mount -t msdos /dev/hda1 /dosc If you don't want anyone to write to the partition, add -r before `-t msdos'. For a Win95 partition, use vfat instead of msdos (but you may have to rebuild the kernel: I don't know if vfat support is built in to the default kernel). Use `umount /dosc' to unmount the partition. If you want the partition mounted all the time, add this line to /etc/fstab: /dev/hda1 /dosc msdos defaults 0 0 Look at the man page for mount to find the meaning of various options. The first IDE disk (master) is /dev/hda and its primary partitions are /dev/hda1 to /dev/hda4; the slave disk on the first controller is /dev/hdb and so on. > ... And >also, what's a good msdos like shell and how do i set it up? Something of an oxymoron, don't you think? If you mean a shell that emulates DOS, I don't think there is one; why would anyone create such a monster? Any Unix shell has greater capabilities. If you want to run DOS utilities on (unmounted) DOS disks, look at the package mtools, which contains programs such as mformat, mdir, mcopy and so on. To access a DOS disk which you have mounted, use normal Unix commands. -- Oliver Elphick [EMAIL PROTECTED] Isle of Wight http://lfix.co.uk/oliver PGP key from public servers; key ID 32B8FAA1 -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .