FreeBSD team,
I am having problems mounting my filesystem after moving the drive from slave to
master, the old location was, '/dev/ad1s1a', and the device is now called 'ad0'.
Please could you help,
Regards,
Elliot Reeves
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
FreeBSD team,
I am having problems mounting my filesystem after moving the
drive from slave to master, the old location was,
'/dev/ad1s1a', and the device is now called 'ad0'.
I can tell you what the problem is, I just don't know exactly how to fix
it. I believe it is your
I was installing an additional hard disk and I believe I commented out
the wrong line in fstab or typo'ed something. The /usr filesystem is
not mounted. The machine will not boot to a command prompt so I can
repair it. It complains bitterly at boot time about not finding things
in the
On Thu, 29 May 2003, Tom Parquette wrote:
I was installing an additional hard disk and I believe I commented out
the wrong line in fstab or typo'ed something. The /usr filesystem is
not mounted. The machine will not boot to a command prompt so I can
repair it. It complains bitterly at boot
On Thursday, 29 May 2003 at 21:30:37 -0400, Tom Parquette wrote:
I was installing an additional hard disk and I believe I commented out
the wrong line in fstab or typo'ed something. The /usr filesystem is
not mounted. The machine will not boot to a command prompt so I can
repair it. It
On Wed, Feb 19, 2003 at 05:41:46PM +0100, Henrik W Lund wrote:
I'm just wondering how one can make it possible for anyone to mount, say a
CD-ROM or floppy disk, locally? I've played around with permissions on the
devices, on /sbin/mount, placement in groups and whatnot, but when my
ordinary
Hello,
my question is about mounting filesystems over SLIP interface:
The situation:
I have an old notebook, running FreeBSD 4.4 on it. It only has a serial
interface to network with it. So I got a serial cable from scrap and modified
it for serial communication.
On my server