[ale] Problems with mount...

Benjie benjie.godfrey at gmail.com
Fri Jun 16 19:47:32 EDT 2006


Is the hard drive from a RedHat or a Fedora system?  If so, you will
have to reconfigure the lvm settings to access it on another system.
If it was setup with the default Fedora/RedHat settings, do not
attempt to add it to the lvm group on the system that it was added to,
or you run the risk of destroying the data on it.  If at all possible,
put it back in the system that it was removed from, and edit the lvm
settings for the drive there.  You can create a new lvm group for the
drive to belong to, and then add that setup to the new host machine.
I don't know of an easier method,  but if there is, I'm sure someone
on this list will tell us both. :-)

Benjie

On 6/16/06, Brian J. Dowd <bdowd at dentfirst.com> wrote:
> I have attached a laptop HD, using an adapter, as hdc on a desktop system
> (in an effort to pull off some of the laptop's data to the desktop)
> When I do a mount -t ext3 /dev/hdc1 ./mnt I can see the files from the
> laptop's boot sector
> Then I do an umount...
> When I do a mount -t ext3 /dev/hdc2 ./mnt I get
> mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/hdc2,
>        or too many mounted file systems
>        (aren't you trying to mount an extended partition,
>        instead of some logical partition inside?)
> Ok, I now know that I know nada about extended partitions or logical volumes
> or how to access them.
> Any ideas or helpful hints?
>
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