On Wed, 6 Sep 2006, Michael Ham wrote:

Anyway, I am wondering if there is some roundabout way that an NTFS
partition, mounted in Linux, could be used with full write capabilities
if it were made a network drive in Windows.

Let's see if I understand your question...

You have a filesystem on a windows machine and you want to mount it on your linux box so that it appears as a regular rw disk on your linux box (eg as if it were nfs mounted from another machine).

If so, yes. You need your linux box to run samba and you then smb mount the filesystem on the windows box. (You have to setup sharing on the windows box).

According to a posting I got here a few weeks ago, samba has three components, samba-client, samba-core and samba-server (when I look at samba I just see one application - samba) and it would appear that you only need samba-client and samba-core.

I did a windows project this way using vi on the files on the windows box from my linux box, with its multiple screens and normal development tools. When I needed to test the program, I would just reach over to the windows box and click on the program. At first I tried the cygwin tools on the windows box, and they helped a lot, but still having only one screen on the windows box and having to use the mouse all the time to get anywhere on the windows box drove me nuts. The windows box didn't seem to mind having all the files with unix carriage control.

Joe

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