> Hi Glenn!!!
> As far as I know making this file system accesible is possible by going
> into
> Control Panel of Linux (linuxconf) & in other partitions/ root
information,
> you can define the mount points to be recognized.
> For the purpose first open a terminal, enter /mnt and create mount points
> such as c, d, e
> All this is done as root:
> cd /
> cd mnt
> mkdir c
> mkdir d
> mkdir e
>
> After doing this open linuxconf & in partitions & root information folder,
> you have the option to set new mount points. Select the file system(it
will
> appear as a dropdown list) & then select the mount point as /mnt/c
> repeat it till you configure all your NT partitions...onto different mount
> points...
Hey wait a minute I think Glenn has the NT and Linux on two seperate
machines. Your solution works only when the two fs are on the same machine.
Besides even my state of the art 2.2.14 kernel ;-) supports ntfs. My idea is
that a possible solution could be found using nfs. Ofcourse I am just
brainstorming so don't ask me how to do it.
prasenjit
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