On Fri, October 21, 2011 20:50, David wrote:
On 22 October 2011 02:24, James B. Byrne
byrn...@harte-lyne.ca wrote:
CentOS-5.7 using fuse-ntfs-3g
I have a HDD from a laptop that is being returned for
repair replacement. I wish to remove certain files
before sending the laptop back with the
Vreme: 10/23/2011 02:35 AM, Yves Bellefeuille piše:
I've seen your correction, but I still don't understand where
this .Trash-root directory comes from.
The user says that he's running CentOS 5.7 and Gnome, but under Gnome
the trash directory is simply named .Trash, not .Trash-root, and
On 10/23/11 2:24 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
My observation is that .Trash is for normal users and .Trash-root is
when you delete as Root. I sometimes use Krusader (under Gnome) in root
mode, and that could account for .Thrash-root in my case. Maybe he did
something similar.
whem I use
On Friday 21 October 2011 11:24, James B. Byrne wrote:
CentOS-5.7 using fuse-ntfs-3g
I have mouunted the HDD on my desktop as an ntfs
filesystem using an external SATA / USB adapter. As root
I then used the gnome desktop to move the desired files to
trash. Now I wish to delete the
On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 11:24 AM, James B. Byrne byrn...@harte-lyne.ca wrote:
[snip]
folder and the folder itself. This I cannot do. I have
tried deleting using rm -rf ./.Trash-root but the command
Try deleting with the -f option. I.e., rm -r .Trash-root. This will
at least tell you what the
On 10/21/11 8:24 AM, James B. Byrne wrote:
I have a HDD from a laptop that is being returned for
repair replacement. I wish to remove certain files before
sending the laptop back with the HDD.
boot a Linux rescue USB or CD to a shell prompt
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda bs=65536
this will
Vreme: 10/22/2011 11:59 PM, Yves Bellefeuille piše:
On Friday 21 October 2011 11:24, James B. Byrne wrote:
CentOS-5.7 using fuse-ntfs-3g
I have mouunted the HDD on my desktop as an ntfs
filesystem using an external SATA / USB adapter. As root
I then used the gnome desktop to move the
Vreme: 10/23/2011 01:53 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic piše:
He is saying, which I think i also have seen on my USB Flash drive,
system immediately re creates Trash folder. He would like to delete it
and unmount without recreating Trash folder.
I just re-read his original post. I made a wrong
On Saturday 22 October 2011 19:53, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
He is saying, which I think i also have seen on my USB Flash drive,
system immediately re creates Trash folder. He would like to delete
it and unmount without recreating Trash folder.
I've seen your correction, but I still don't
CentOS-5.7 using fuse-ntfs-3g
I have a HDD from a laptop that is being returned for
repair replacement. I wish to remove certain files before
sending the laptop back with the HDD.
I have mouunted the HDD on my desktop as an ntfs
filesystem using an external SATA / USB adapter. As root
I then
How about put the HDD back in the laptop, download and burn dban (
http://www.dban.org/download) to a CD and boot the laptop to the CD?
Regards,
Ron Young
919-621-9015
http://www.linkedin.com/in/ronhyoung
+++
Little tiny dreams require little tiny thoughts and little tiny
Vreme: 10/21/2011 06:40 PM, Ron Young piše:
How about put the HDD back in the laptop, download and burn dban (
http://www.dban.org/download) to a CD and boot the laptop to the CD?
There is also Hiren's Boot CD with ton of tools and even Mini Windows
booted from Hiren's Boot CD not touching
On 22 October 2011 02:24, James B. Byrne byrn...@harte-lyne.ca wrote:
CentOS-5.7 using fuse-ntfs-3g
I have a HDD from a laptop that is being returned for
repair replacement. I wish to remove certain files before
sending the laptop back with the HDD.
I have mouunted the HDD on my desktop as
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