On 11/12/12 05:58, Tom H wrote:
On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 6:01 AM, Fredrik Jonson<fred...@jonson.org> wrote:
William A. Mahaffey III wrote:
.... I am brand new to Debian [...] [I have a box that] has 2 other drives
on it, 1 IDE 500 GB Seagate, 1 SATA 500 GB WD. Those are both use ext3
filesystem, left over from the CentOS 5.7 that I was running on that box
before the root drive died. I tried to mount those drives as ext3 drives& I
get the following:
# mount -t ext3 /dev/ad0s1 /mnt
mount: /dev/ad0s1: No such device
Are you sure that /dev/ad0s1 is your file system? I'd expect a PATA drive to
show up named /dev/hda or /dev/hdb and partitions named /dev/hda1 etc. Likewise
SATA drives are normally named /dev/sda with partitions named /dev/sda1 etc.
Are you running debian-kfreebsd?
What does dmesg say about the disks? What about 'cfdisk -P s /dev/ad0'?
With a Linux kernel, BSD slices are sd partitions.
I am indeed running debian-kfreeBSD, I guess that is why the devices are
called /dev/ad<n> ....
--
William A. Mahaffey III
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"The M1 Garand is without doubt the finest implement of war
ever devised by man."
-- Gen. George S. Patton Jr.
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