On Tuesday 05 November 2002 04:53 am, Matthew Seaman wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 05, 2002 at 12:29:45PM +0000, Tiago Andre wrote:
> > I like to know how do i mount my floopy disk i try:
> > mount /dev/fd0 /mnt
> > and
> > mount /dev/fd0c /mnt
> > but the anwser is incorrect super block
>
> These are DOS format floppies?  The best advice is "don't bother
> mounting the disks".  Just install the emulators/mtools port, which
> lets you use DOS-like commands to access the floppy:
>
>     mdir a:
>     mcopy filename.txt a:
>
> etc.  This has a number of advantages over actually mounting the
> floppy:
>
>     - you don't need root privilege to use mtools
>
>     - you can eject and swap floppy disks at will, without
>       getting grief from the OS
>
>     - similarly you won't run into problems trying to write data
>       to a write protected floppy disk.
>
> Note that those last two effects are not just annoying but can in some
> circumstances lead to system crashes or having to reboot the machine
> to clear the errors.
>
> Now, if I haven't scared you off enough, the literal answer to your
> question is:
>
>     # mount -t msdos /dev/fd0 /mnt
>
> That has to be done as root: you'll need to install sudo or similar to
> make it possible for ordinary users to do that securely.  Always
> remember to unmount the disk before ejecting it.
>
>       Cheers,
>
>       Matthew

What are the consequences if I eject the floppy or reboot the system without 
unmounting the floppy?  and does it also apply to the CD-ROM too?
Thanks.


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