On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Frank J. Mattia writes: 
> 
> > check the man pages for mount and fstab...  id say that its a very easy 
> > thing to do...  that is, unless the windows partitions are on separate 
> > computers.
>       Oh yes. I've forgot to tell you. This is my fstab:
> /dev/hda4             /               reiser          rw                      0 0
> /dev/hda3             none            swap            sw                      0 0
> /dev/cdroms/cdrom1    /cdroms/ide     iso9660         noauto,ro,users         0 0
> /dev/cdroms/cdrom0    /writers/ide    iso9660         noauto,ro,users         0 0
> /dev/cdroms/cdrom2    /writers/scsi/1 iso9660         noauto,ro,users         0 0
> /dev/cdroms/cdrom3    /writers/scsi/2 iso9660         noauto,ro,users         0 0
> /dev/cdroms/cdrom4    /writers/scsi/3 iso9660         noauto,ro,users         0 0
> /dev/hda1             /mnt/win/c      vfat            rw                      0 0
> /dev/hda5             /mnt/win/d      vfat            rw                      0 0
> /dev/hda6             /mnt/win/e      vfat            rw                      0 0
> /dev/hda7             /mnt/win/f      vfat            rw                      0 0
> /dev/hda8             /mnt/win/g      vfat            rw                      0 0
> proc                  /proc           proc            defaults                0 0 
> 
> 
> I think that rw in the windows partitions should solve the think. Aperently, 
> I'm wrong. Is there anything else I can do? Thanx. :o

This works for me:

/dev/hda8               /mnt/win        vfat            rw,user,umask=000       0 0

Regards,
-- 
Jorge Almeida


--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list

Reply via email to