Linux-Hardware Digest #381, Volume #14           Wed, 21 Feb 01 21:13:08 EST

Contents:
  Re: hard drive overheat (Stefaan A Eeckels)
  ATL tape library and RH 6.2 ("Andrew G. Bacchi")
  Re: scsi disk partition tables (Wilhelm Wienemann)
  Re: joystick driver on RH7 (2.2.16) (Philippe Massicotte)
  Re: redhat 7 scsi issues ("D. Stimits")
  Re: Iomega ZIP 100 USB drive: let's make it work. (Jim Chisholm)
  Re: Cheap PCI sound card supported by Linux and OS/2? (Ron Gibson)
  adaptec fibre channel controller (C White)
  Promise SuperTrak66 RAID 5 Controller (Tim Lider)
  Re: IDE CD-RW installation help needed ("japhilp")
  Re: IDE CD-RW installation help needed ("japhilp")
  Re: upgrading RPM!! (John Thompson)
  mounting udf cds as nonroot (Gregory Davis)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Stefaan A Eeckels)
Subject: Re: hard drive overheat
Crossposted-To: comp.unix.solaris
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 21:59:40 +0100

In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        John Hunter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> I have a Quantum external SCSI hard drive that has failed on a
> Sparc-Solaris 5.7 system.  I came in and the fan had burned out so I
> suspect the drive overheated.  It's been a couple of weeks since I
> last backed it up (I know, I know...) and there is some data I would
> like to recover.
> 
> The system that it was on booted from this drive, and I am hoping that
> there are some partitions that are still good which I can mount it
> from another system.  We have some linux boxes up and another
> Sparc-Solaris 5.7 up which I can use to try and recover some of the
> data.  I don't really know how to go about it, though.
> 
> Can anyone offer some advice?  Is there any hope?  If I mount it on a
> linux box, what fs type should I use in /etc/fstab?  Should I try and
> dump the data with dd, or fsck the drive?

I'd connect it to another Solaris box, just to maximize
your chances. Unfortunately, if a drive overheats, _all_
paritions are shot (they reside on the same platters, and
use the same heads...). 

Mount the disk in a ventilated enclosure, connect it up to
the external SCSI port of a Solaris/SPARC box, and boot -r
from OBP. The machine will -if the disk is still reacting -
recognize the disk and create the required /devices and /dev
entries. 
Then, try to dd the various partitions to a nice, huge area
on a reliable drive. If that works, mount them with lofi and
recover the files. 

Finally, get a backup routine going...

Take care, and good luck,

-- 
Stefaan
-- 
How's it supposed to get the respect of management if you've got just
one guy working on the project?  It's much more impressive to have a
battery of programmers slaving away. -- Jeffrey Hobbs (comp.lang.tcl)

------------------------------

From: "Andrew G. Bacchi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: ATL tape library and RH 6.2
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 16:20:59 -0500

I have installed an ATL L500 tape library with an DLT 7000 drive.  I can
use the DLT drive with no problem, but I can't seem to get the library
robot to work under RedHat 6.2.  I am not sure which device to use or
which driver to use for the loader/library.  The host detects the SCSI
tape at /dev/st0, but there is nothing for the loader.  Can anyone
suggest where to begin on this.  Below is the output from dmesg for the
SCSI adapter.  Thanks for any help.

scsi1 : Adaptec AHA274x/284x/294x (EISA/VLB/PCI-Fast SCSI) 5.1.28/3.2.4
       <Adaptec AIC-7896/7 Ultra2 SCSI host adapter>
scsi : 2 hosts.
(scsi0:0:0:0) Synchronous at 10.0 Mbyte/sec, offset 15.
  Vendor: ATL       Model: L500     6320000  Rev: 0021
  Type:   Medium Changer                     ANSI SCSI revision: 02
(scsi0:0:1:0) Synchronous at 20.0 Mbyte/sec, offset 15.
  Vendor: QUANTUM   Model: DLT7000           Rev: 2560
  Type:   Sequential-Access                  ANSI SCSI revision: 02
Detected scsi tape st0 at scsi0, channel 0, id 1, lun 0
scsi : detected 1 SCSI tape total.

-- 
When all else fails, read the documentation.

Andrew G. Bacchi
Sr. System Administrator
AIRS
Hanover, NH

------------------------------

From: Wilhelm Wienemann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: scsi disk partition tables
Date: 21 Feb 2001 20:54:00 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Wilhelm Wienemann)

Beard Family <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> informed
comp.os.linux.hardware with the following:
> Trying to set up disk partitions to load slakware onto a pair of
> SCSI disks.  Everytime I try to create new partitions and write
> the info to the partition tables, ...

Which command (keycode in fdisk) did you use to write the 
partition table? The keycodes for Linux fdisk are:

Command action
   a   toggle a bootable flag
   b   edit bsd disklabel
   c   toggle the dos compatibility flag
   d   delete a partition
   l   list known partition types
   m   print this menu
   n   add a new partition
   o   create a new empty DOS partition table
   p   print the partition table
   q   quit without saving changes
   s   create a new empty Sun disklabel
   t   change a partition's system id
   u   change display/entry units
   v   verify the partition table
   w   write table to disk and exit
   ^   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
   x   extra functionality (experts only)

To write your partition table to the disk you have to use
the keycode 'w'.

> ...nothing gets written to the disks.   

Usually you will get a message about the write-process either
if the partition-table is created/modified and/or if this process
was failed.

bye - Wilhelm

-- 
>>>>>>>>> Wilhelm Wienemann, Amselweg 10, D-47546 Kalkar/Germany <<<<<<<<<
==========>>>>>   E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  <<<<<===========
"And since you are the future keepers of everything, including music, we
 hope you will keep it well, with love, and in joy." (Frederick Fennell)   

------------------------------

From: Philippe Massicotte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: joystick driver on RH7 (2.2.16)
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 17:03:51 -0500


Dances With Crows wrote:

>
> >I use an SB Live! and I had to put in my /etc/modules.conf:
> >alias char-major-15 joy-analog
> >options joy-analog js_an=0xa800,0x0033
> >The 0xa800 is where the SBLive puts the joystick port, the 0x0033 is
> >the setting for the joystick, in my case a x-y with two buttons or a
> >Gravis Gamepad works.
>
> Try what Philippe said.  BTW, 0x0033 is most likely not the best setting
> to use.  /usr/src/linux/Documentation/joystick.txt has info on the
> standard settings for various analog joysticks, among them many
> Sidewinder models.
>
> --
> Matt G|There is no Darkness in Eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
> Brainbench MVP for Linux Admin /  Workin' in a code mine, hittin' Ctrl-Alt
> http://www.brainbench.com     /   Workin' in a code mine, whoops!
> -----------------------------/    I hit a seg fault....

Hummmm,
I've added the two lines in my /etc/modules.conf, but
if I try to insmod the module, I always get the following message.
I get the same error if I try to load joy-analog or joy-sidewinder.
In the case of joy-sidewinder, this module autodetect your device
and you don't have (and can't) specify any parameters.

[root@localhost /root]# insmod joy-sidewinder
Using /lib/modules/2.2.16-22smp/misc/joy-sidewinder.o
/lib/modules/2.2.16-22smp/misc/joy-sidewinder.o: init_module: Device or
resource busy
Hint: insmod errors can be caused by incorrect module parameters,including
invalid IO or IRQ parameters

Even if I add those 2 lines, I still have to insmod the modules, right?

I'll try with another joystick tomorrow  (analog this time and not digital like
my SideWinder Precision Pro).
Ahhh, this is frustrating !!



------------------------------

Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 15:48:23 -0700
From: "D. Stimits" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: redhat 7 scsi issues

SkuMM wrote:
> 
> Ok I can't seem to get the scsi adapter to take in a new redhat 7.1
> installation...
> 
> I get the following errors...
> 
> The card is an adaptec 29160
> the kernel has the aic7xxx built into it.
> 
> I have 1 VXA tape backup robot connected to it (properly terminated)
> 
> aborting command due to timeout: pid 0 scsi 0 channel 0 id 0 lun 0
> scsi bus is being reset for host 0 channel 0 trying harder
> Inquirt 00 00 00 ff 00 scsi host 0 abort (pid 0) timed out. resetting
> 
> I need help here. I neither need to replace the card or get this
> riunning. If i should replace the card, what should I replace it with?
> 
> Mike.

I have the integrated version of this, which works nicely. What chipset
does the motherboard use, and is this SMP?

------------------------------

From: Jim Chisholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Iomega ZIP 100 USB drive: let's make it work.
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 19:07:13 -0400

Massimo Pinto wrote:

> I have tried to compile the kernel version 2.4.1 with SCSI and USB support
> (as modules) to be able to use a Iomega ZIP 100MB USB drive which I have
> just bought a few days ago.
>
> The computer is a Toshiba Tecra 520CDT notebook, so I have also inluded
> the associated Toshiba Module. After having loaded usb-ohci and
> usb-storage, plus the scsi module I have not been able to mount my zip
> drive using /dev/sda4. My kernel would reply to me saying that /dev/sda4
> has got wrong minor-major number, these are:
>
> ls -l /dev/sda4*
>
> brw-rw----      1       root    disk    8, 4    ago 24 10:00 sda4
>
> I guess these numbers are 8 and 4, but what do these minor/major numbers
> mean?
>
> For completeness, I include the output of `dmesg', hopefully someone can
> spot the stain and give some hints!
>
> Thanks in advance
>
> Massimo
>
> Linux version 2.4.1 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (gcc version 2.96
> 20000731 (Red Hat Linux 7.0)) #2 mer feb 7 22:36:08 GMT 2001 BIOS-provided
> physical RAM map:
>  BIOS-e820: 000000000009fc00 @ 0000000000000000 (usable)
>  BIOS-e820: 0000000000000400 @ 000000000009fc00 (reserved)
>  BIOS-e820: 0000000000010000 @ 00000000000f0000 (reserved)
>  BIOS-e820: 0000000001f20000 @ 0000000000100000 (usable)
>  BIOS-e820: 0000000000010000 @ 00000000fffe0000 (reserved)
>  BIOS-e820: 0000000000010000 @ 00000000ffff0000 (reserved) On node 0
> totalpages: 8224 zone(0): 4096 pages. zone(1): 4128 pages. zone(2): 0
> pages. Kernel command line: auto BOOT_IMAGE=linux-2.4.1 ro root=301
> BOOT_FILE=/boot/vmlinuz-2.4.1 Initializing CPU#0 Detected 165.860 MHz
> processor. Console: colour VGA+ 80x25 Calibrating delay loop... 329.31
> BogoMIPS Memory: 29836k/32896k available (1218k kernel code, 2672k
> reserved, 479k data, 204k init, 0k highmem) Dentry-cache hash table
> entries: 8192 (order: 4, 65536 bytes) Buffer-cache hash table entries:
> 1024 (order: 0, 4096 bytes) Page-cache hash table entries: 16384 (order:
> 4, 65536 bytes) Inode-cache hash table entries: 4096 (order: 3, 32768
> bytes) CPU: Before vendor init, caps: 008001bf 00000000 00000000, vendor =
> 0 Intel Pentium with F0 0F bug - workaround enabled. CPU: After vendor
> init, caps: 008001bf 00000000 00000000 00000000 CPU: After generic, caps:
> 008001bf 00000000 00000000 00000000 CPU: Common caps: 008001bf 00000000
> 00000000 00000000 CPU: Intel Pentium MMX stepping 04 Checking 'hlt'
> instruction... OK. POSIX conformance testing by UNIFIX PCI: PCI BIOS
> revision 2.10 entry at 0xfdce3, last bus=21 PCI: Using configuration type
> 1 PCI: Probing PCI hardware isapnp: Scanning for Pnp cards... isapnp: No
> Plug & Play device found Linux NET4.0 for Linux 2.4 Based upon Swansea
> University Computer Society NET3.039 Starting kswapd v1.8 pty: 256 Unix98
> ptys configured Toshiba System Managment Mode driver v1.7 22/6/2000 block:
> queued sectors max/low 19696kB/6565kB, 64 slots per queue Uniform
> Multi-Platform E-IDE driver Revision: 6.31 ide: Assuming 33MHz system bus
> speed for PIO modes; override with idebus=xx hda: TOSHIBA MK2103MAV, ATA
> DISK drive hdc: TOSHIBA CD-ROM XM-1502BN, ATAPI CD/DVD-ROM drive ide0 at
> 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6 on irq 14 ide1 at 0x170-0x177,0x376 on irq 15 hda:
> 4233600 sectors (2168 MB) w/128KiB Cache, CHS=525/128/63 hdc: ATAPI 10X
> CD-ROM drive, 128kB Cache Uniform CD-ROM driver Revision: 3.12 Partition
> check:
>  hda: hda1 hda2 < hda5 hda6 hda7 > Floppy drive(s): fd0 is 1.44M FDC 0 is
> an 8272A Serial driver version 5.02 (2000-08-09) with MANY_PORTS SHARE_IRQ
> SERIAL_PCI ISAPNP enabled ttyS00 at 0x03f8 (irq = 4) is a 16550A ttyS01 at
> 0x02f8 (irq = 3) is a 16550A Linux agpgart interface v0.99 (c) Jeff
> Hartmann agpgart: Maximum main memory to use for agp memory: 4M agpgart:
> no supported devices found. [drm] Initialized tdfx 1.0.0 20000928 on minor
> 63 [drm:radeon_init] *ERROR* Cannot initialize agpgart module. SCSI
> subsystem driver Revision: 1.00 request_module[scsi_hostadapter]: Root fs
> not mounted es1371: version v0.27 time 21:40:32 Feb 7 2001 Linux PCMCIA
> Card Services 3.1.22
>   options:  [pci] [cardbus] [pm]
> usb.c: registered new driver usbdevfs
> usb.c: registered new driver hub
> NET4: Linux TCP/IP 1.0 for NET4.0
> IP Protocols: ICMP, UDP, TCP, IGMP
> IP: routing cache hash table of 512 buckets, 4Kbytes
> TCP: Hash tables configured (established 2048 bind 2048)
> NET4: Unix domain sockets 1.0/SMP for Linux NET4.0.
> ds: no socket drivers loaded!
> VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem) readonly.
> Freeing unused kernel memory: 204k freed
> Adding Swap: 52376k swap-space (priority -1)
> Soundblaster audio driver Copyright (C) by Hannu Savolainen 1993-1996
> sb: No ISAPnP cards found, trying standard ones...
> SB 3.01 detected OK (220)
> SB DSP version is just 3.01 which means that your card is
> several years old (8 bit only device) or alternatively the sound driver
> is incorrectly configured.
> VFS: Disk change detected on device fd(2,0)
>
> --
> Massimo Pinto
> Ph.D. student
> Gray Laboratory Cancer Research Trust
> http://www.graylab.ac.uk/usr/pinto

Make sure you've got uhci and usbcore compiled as a module, I just use

           modprobe uhci ; mount -t vfat /dev/sda4 /zip

Iomega also has IomegaWare for linux available, works fine as well.

Jim

--

=======================================================
Jim Chisholm
Dalhousie University, Dept. Physics Halifax N.S. Canada
Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Service
Captain/Training Officer  Bay Road Station 59
=======================================================





------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ron Gibson)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.os2.multimedia
Subject: Re: Cheap PCI sound card supported by Linux and OS/2?
Date: 21 Feb 2001 23:45:26 GMT

Klaus Staedtler-Przyborski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> stated:

> Other Cards than the SBLive are the Crystal 3.06 Driver based Cards:
> A-Open AW320 (very cheap and simple) and Terratec DMX X-Fire 1024
> (similar to SBLive)
 
> WinOS2 and FM-Midi supported, Flash is - at the moment - not working
> under OS/2 (but hopefully this will be solved by the Flash/2 Team real
> soon)
 
Will the AOPEN card work with Warp 3 (non-connect) at FP40?

I'm getting weary of fighting the lack of ISA slots problem with 
newer mobos.

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Home Page: http://home.netcom.com/~rgibson/index.htm



------------------------------

From: C White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: adaptec fibre channel controller
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 01:02:07 GMT


==============B040775028C95919458A5B17
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

has anyone had any luck/skill in getting adaptec fibre channel controllers to work in 
linux

specifically the aha 950b, i've got the parts to build a nice little jbod box, and i'm 
hoping i don't have to use M$ to get it done

any help would be greatly appreciated

--
24 hours in a day... 24 beers in a case... coincidence?
--
C White:



==============B040775028C95919458A5B17
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>

<pre>has anyone had any luck/skill in getting adaptec fibre channel controllers to 
work in linux</pre>

<pre>specifically the aha 950b, i've got the parts to build a nice little jbod box, 
and i'm hoping i don't have to use M$ to get it done</pre>

<pre>any help would be greatly appreciated</pre>

<pre>--&nbsp;
24 hours in a day... 24 beers in a case... coincidence?
--
C White:&nbsp;<[EMAIL PROTECTED]></pre>
&nbsp;</html>

==============B040775028C95919458A5B17==


------------------------------

From: Tim Lider <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Promise SuperTrak66 RAID 5 Controller
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 17:06:28 -0800

Hi all,

I'm looking for any information on Promises' SuperTrak66 Raid
Controller.
This controller does RAID-5, the FastTrak66 does RAID-0, 0-1.

Need to find any device drivers for linux or unix.

Thank you.
Tim Lider
Advanced Data Solutions, LLC
http://www.adv-data.com
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: "japhilp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: IDE CD-RW installation help needed
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 01:23:56 GMT

why would a command line tool like cdrecord need tcl?


<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> On Tue, 20 Feb 2001 17:25:59 -0800, Bernie Yoo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> >Hi,
> >
> >I've been having trouble getting an IDE CD-RW drive to work on my system.
> >I have a Philips CDRW800 on a Storm Linux (based on Debian) system.
> >
> >I added a /etc/modutils/cdrw file that looks like:
> >
> >options ide-cd ignore=hdc
> >alias scd0 sr_mod
> >pre-install sg modprode ide-scsi
> >pre-install sr_mod modprobe ide-scsi
> >pre-install ide-scsi modprobe ide-cd
> >bernie@storm:/etc/modutils$
> >
> >I ran update-modules and verified that these entries were added to
> >/etc/modules.conf.  I added the     ' append="hdc=ide-scsi" '
> >line to the appropriate section of /etc/lilo.conf.  The CDRW drive is
> >on the IDE secondary master (hard drive is primary master, CD-ROM is
> >secondary slave).  I ran /sbin/lilo.
> >
> >When I check /proc/ide/drivers, all I see is:
> >
> >ide-disk version 1.08
> >
> >When I run cdrecord -scanbus, I get:
> >
> >Cdrecord 1.8 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) Copyright (C) 1995-2000 J�rg Schilling
> >cdrecord: No such file or directory. Cannot open SCSI driver.
> >cdrecord: For possible targets try 'cdrecord -scanbus'. Make sure you are
root.
> >
> >Any help would be appreciated.
> >
> >TIA
> >
> >Bernie Yoo
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
>
> I've run into a similar problem. After poking around in the various
> archives, I discovered that I needed to install either Tcl or Tck (at
> least that's how I remember it thru the mists of time!) since cdrecord
> uses it. You may want to check out the cdrecord website to check if
> there are any other solutions.
>
> jfg



------------------------------

From: "japhilp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: IDE CD-RW installation help needed
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 01:25:03 GMT

Does your kernel ( the one that you are currently using) have scsi emulation
enabled ???




"Bernie Yoo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi,
>
> I've been having trouble getting an IDE CD-RW drive to work on my system.
> I have a Philips CDRW800 on a Storm Linux (based on Debian) system.
>
> I added a /etc/modutils/cdrw file that looks like:
>
> options ide-cd ignore=hdc
> alias scd0 sr_mod
> pre-install sg modprode ide-scsi
> pre-install sr_mod modprobe ide-scsi
> pre-install ide-scsi modprobe ide-cd
> bernie@storm:/etc/modutils$
>
> I ran update-modules and verified that these entries were added to
> /etc/modules.conf.  I added the     ' append="hdc=ide-scsi" '
> line to the appropriate section of /etc/lilo.conf.  The CDRW drive is
> on the IDE secondary master (hard drive is primary master, CD-ROM is
> secondary slave).  I ran /sbin/lilo.
>
> When I check /proc/ide/drivers, all I see is:
>
> ide-disk version 1.08
>
> When I run cdrecord -scanbus, I get:
>
> Cdrecord 1.8 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) Copyright (C) 1995-2000 J�rg Schilling
> cdrecord: No such file or directory. Cannot open SCSI driver.
> cdrecord: For possible targets try 'cdrecord -scanbus'. Make sure you are
root.
>
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
> TIA
>
> Bernie Yoo
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>



------------------------------

From: John Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: upgrading RPM!!
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 15:49:24 -0600

Hatem wrote:

> I have an old version of RPM version 3, and need to upgrade it to 4..!!
> the funny thing is that the new version(4) can not be extracted because it
> needs a newer version of RPM,
> it is like the chicken and the egg.!!

You have a couple options: you can use an intermediate version of
rpm (eg 3.05 or higher) which understands the new format, or you
can surf over to http://www.rpm.org and pick up a tarball (source
or binary) of v4 and use that.

-- 


-John ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

------------------------------

From: Gregory Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: mounting udf cds as nonroot
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 21:05:03 -0500

I made a post a few weeks ago (maybe) about not being able to mount a
udf disk as a user.  I thought the solution lay in upgrading my version
of utils-linux to the version required by kernel 2.4.1, i upgraded that
and still no dice.  This is the output directly from console (no kde gui
or anything):

greg@linux:~ > mount /dev/cdrom /cdrom -t udf
mount: only root can do that
greg@linux:~ >

If it helps, I will tack on my fstab and filesystems files, but I have
pored over them, and I am almost positive that they are correct.  I can
mount the a udf cd as root successfully.  What's up???

Greg







fstab:
/dev/hda1       /windows        vfat    noauto,users               0 0
/dev/hda3       /                   ext2
defaults                       1 1
/dev/hda4       /boot             ext2    defaults
1 2
/dev/hda6       swap            swap    defaults                      0
2
/dev/hda5       /home            ext2    defaults                      1
2
proc               /proc             proc
defaults                      0 0
/dev/cdrom      /cdrom          auto    ro,users,noauto,exec    0 0
/dev/cdrom1     /burner         auto    ro,users,noauto,exec    0 0
/dev/fd0           /floppy         auto    noauto,users                0
0

filesystems:
nodev   sockfs
nodev   shm
nodev   pipefs
nodev   proc
        ext2
        minix
        vfat
        iso9660
        udf
nodev   autofs
nodev   devpts





------------------------------


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