> Why would it try for and NTFS file system on a Linux machine? The way I understand it is that without a filesystem type, mount will try all (disk-based) filesystem drivers that you have currently loaded. And the ntfs driver generates some debug output when it fails. So nothing to worry about.
It does make sense - sensibly enough the kernel has no other[1] facility to work out what filesystem is really on a given partition - it has to invoke the filesystem driver to find out. regards marc [1] partition ids, etc may provide a clue but consider the case of your magic new filesystem that you have just written a kernel driver for... _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list [email protected] https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng
