For clarity, my goal is to create a bootable install usb using the instructions in the guide here but following this results in a non-bootable usb which will not even mount as a drive once the computer has booted up.
Furthermore every 12.x iso I have tried will not even mount using the OS X disk utility, instead showing an error message "Unable to mount the_iso_i_am_trying.iso (no mountabl
hi
I am a newbie trying to test and learn Linux especially Ubuntu
I have read some documentations but really cannot understand how
mount ...
I am trying to mount a second HDD, but it won't let me do it.
I'm not sure if it's trying to mount to the same place as the first HDD, or if it's just me being a ditz.
My first HDD mounted straight away, so I'm afraid that I only know the below ways to mount a volume.
This is the error message I got when I plugged it in, and when I tried right-click - Mount.
I connected a new internal HDD to my headless ubuntu server and would like to partition it so I can copy my existing system disk to it (the existing disk is way low on free space and the new disk is larger.)
The disk shows in /dev/sdd (there is not sdd1 or any partitions showing).
This simple and brief tutorial is going to show you how to automatically mount Windows 7 and other ntfs partitions in Ubuntu 12.10.
It’s easy to use NTFS Configuration tool to make Ubuntu auto-mount Windows 7 dual-boot partition.
First search for and install ntfs-config package in Ubuntu Software Center.
Then hit Ctrl+Alt+T, copy and paste this command into terminal and hit enter to run:
su
Greetings,
After trying everything that I can think of for hours, I've finally given up. I just can't seem to mount a dmg image under ubuntu 12.04. I've updated all packages, I have the latest kernel available through ubuntu's update system. This is an 64 bit installation.
I have a dmg image. I've converted it to img via dmg2img.
Ubuntu desktop edition by default auto-mount removable media connected via usb port. This tutorial shows how to disable usb auto-mount feature on Ubuntu 11.10, 12.04 and higher.
1. Install dconf-editor by searching dconf-tools in Software Center.
2. Launch dconf-editor and navigate to org -> gnome -> desktop -> media-handling
3. The automount key controls whether to automatically mount media.
Hello everybody,
I have a problem. I couldn't mount my ubuntu partition, my windows partition is working ok.
i receive the following error when i try to mount my raid 6 on Ubuntu Linux
mount /dev/md3 /mnt/md3
mount: File too large
i have another raid 1 existing (2TB only) and working fine .. any ideas?