Dovrai creare manualmente un mountpoint e aggiungerlo al tuo fstab
file. Come passo per passo:
- Creare una directory che funga da punto di montaggio:
sudo mkdir /media/mymountpoint
- Ottieni le informazioni sul disco rigido (UUID è il migliore, poiché il nome dello sviluppatore può cambiare)
sudo blkid
(grazie @ernie, li ho confusi) [Trova il tuo disco e copia l'UUID]
- Smonta l'unità
sudo umount /dev/sdX#
- Modifica il tuo
fstab
filesudo vim /etc/fstab
- Devi usare il layout (su una sua riga)
UUID MountPoint FSType Options Dump Fsck
- Ad esempio, ecco il mio per il mio lato di Windows
UUID=MyUUID /media/windows ntfs-3g defaults 0 0
- Per evitare il riavvio, è possibile eseguire
sudo mount -a
(montare tutto).
Da man fstab
:
The first field (fs_spec).
This field describes the block special device or remote filesystem to be mounted.
The second field (fs_file).
This field describes the mount point for the filesystem. For swap partitions, this field should be
specified as `none'. If the name of the mount point contains spaces these can be escaped as `\040'.
The third field (fs_vfstype).
This field describes the type of the filesystem. Linux supports lots of filesystem types, such as adfs,
affs, autofs, coda, coherent, cramfs, devpts, efs, ext2, ext3, hfs, hpfs, iso9660, jfs, minix, msdos,
ncpfs, nfs, ntfs, proc, qnx4, reiserfs, romfs, smbfs, sysv, tmpfs, udf, ufs, umsdos, vfat, xenix, xfs,
and possibly others. For more details, see mount(8).
The fourth field (fs_mntops).
This field describes the mount options associated with the filesystem.
It is formatted as a comma separated list of options. It contains at least the type of mount plus any
additional options appropriate to the filesystem type. For documentation on the available mount options,
see mount(8). For documentation on the available swap options, see swapon(8).
The fifth field (fs_freq).
This field is used for these filesystems by the dump(8) command to determine which filesystems need to
be dumped. If the fifth field is not present, a value of zero is returned and dump will assume that the
filesystem does not need to be dumped.
The sixth field (fs_passno).
This field is used by the fsck(8) program to determine the order in which filesystem checks are done at
reboot time. The root filesystem should be specified with a fs_passno of 1, and other filesystems
should have a fs_passno of 2. Filesystems within a drive will be checked sequentially, but filesystems
on different drives will be checked at the same time to utilize parallelism available in the hardware.
If the sixth field is not present or zero, a value of zero is returned and fsck will assume that the
filesystem does not need to be checked.
sudo mount
mostrerà l'UUID a meno che non sia stato montato da UUID. Non sei sicuro di cosa usi Debian 7.1? Un modo più robusto è usareblkid