(Please respond to debian-laptop@lists.debian.org, not privately :)

On Wed, 20 Nov 2002 09:59:16 -0800
Jay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for replying.
> 
> It's a Sharp Mebius laptop with a 2.1Gb HD, FAT Windows 98 partition.
> And Debian Potato Linux on the other.
> 
> The thing is that the floppy and CD drives are out, and all I have is a
> USB CDRW which I want to use to fix the windows partition (system files
> are messed up, can't load windows), so I can backup what I have there.
> 
> Is this possible? Or will I have to move the HD to a better suited
> laptop?

Okay, you don't want to use Samba for this. Unless you've compiled the
kernel yourself and specifically omitted support for it, you can access
the FAT filesystem natively in Linux:

[ [EMAIL PROTECTED]: ~/ ]# modprobe vfat
[ [EMAIL PROTECTED]: ~/ ]# mount /dev/hda1 /mnt

Where /dev/hda1 is your FAT partition. It'll be mounted, unsurprisingly,
under /mnt; just use it like you'd use a regular Linux filesystem (though
some things like ownership, file modes, etc., won't work).

Attachment: pgpz24lq80vKB.pgp
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to