I believe this has something to do with Microsoft having effectively copyrighted / patented NTFS after their "failure" to do so with FAT.
We can read it, but not write it. Longhorn will close this remaining loophole. Curt- On Tuesday 27 July 2004 14:16, [EMAIL PROTECTED] was heard to say: > Am 27.07.04 17:25:25, schrieb Ivan Glushkov > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > >Hi all, > >I have a problem with my NTFS partition. Currently I have in my > >/etc/fstab the following: > > > ># <file system> <mount point> <type> > ><options> > > <dump> <pass> > >/dev/hda1 /ntfs ntfs > >rw,exec,nodev,nosuid,users,gid=glushkov,umask=002 0 0 > >/dev/hda7 /data ntfs > >rw,exec,nodev,nosuid,users,gid=glushkov,umask=002 0 0 > > > >Looking at my kernel configuration one finds: > > > >cat .config | grep -i ntfs > >CONFIG_NTFS_FS=y > ># CONFIG_NTFS_DEBUG is not set > >CONFIG_NTFS_RW=y > > > >This way I can happily read my NTFS partition. But there is no > >way to write on them. Any ideas? > > > > Thanks in advance, > > Ivan > > Hi Ivan, > > go "goggle.de" for "captive". Or > http://www.jankratochvil.net/project/captive/ > > Captive is the only linux-project that propperly support writing > on NTFS. > > > greetings > CB -- September 11th, 2001 The proudest day for gun control and central planning advocates in American history