You must first install the source of the Rpmforge Software Library
1, download the rpmforge RPM packages
32-bit system
wget http://pkgs.repoforge.org/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.2-1.el6.rf.i686.rpm
64-bit system
wget http://pkgs.repoforge.org/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.2-2.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm
2, install the Rpmforge rpm file package
RPM-IVH rpmforge-release-0.5.2-1.el6.rf.i686.rpm
3. Installation ntfs-3g
Yum Install fuse-ntfs-3g
4. Mount Catalogue
Mount-t Ntfs-3g/dev/sdb1/windows_dir
mount the NTFS file system
If your NTFS file system is/DEV/SDA1 and you will mount it in/mnt/windows/system, follow these steps.
1. Create mount points. (generally recommended for hanging in the MNT directory)
Mkdir/mnt/windows/system
2. Mount NTFS partitions:
Mount-t Ntfs-3g/dev/sda1/mnt/windows/system
Note: The sda1 here refers to the first partition of the SATA or SCSI hard drive, if it is an old-fashioned IDE hard drive, it will be hda1, please use Fdisk-l view. Like my lab machine:
[Root@centos ~]# Fdisk-l
disk/dev/sda:160.0 GB, 160041885696 bytes
255 heads, Sectors/track, 19457 cylinders
Units = Cylinders of 16065 * 8225280 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): bytes/512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): bytes/512 bytes
Disk identifier:0xf0b1ebb0
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/DEV/SDA1 * 1 2550 20482843+ 7 hpfs/ntfs
/dev/sda2 2551 19457 135805447 f W95 Ext ' d (LBA)
3. If you want to automatically mount the NTFS partition when the boot system starts up, edit the Vim/etc/fstab file and add something similar to the following:
Read-only mount:/dev/sda1/mnt/windows/system ntfs-3g ro,umask=0222,defaults 0 0
Read-write Mount:/dev/sda1/mnt/windows/system ntfs-3g rw,umask=0000,defaults 0 0
Or:/dev/sda1/mnt/windows/system ntfs-3g defaults 0 0
Add:
Another is the installation of ntfs-3g, the use of ntfs-3g mounted partitions are readable and writable. Yum Install ntfs-3g installation can be used under the terminal. If you cannot find the package, you may need to modify the next update source, edit/etc/yum.repos.d/centos-base.repo, and change the content to:
[Base]
Name=centos-5–base
#mirrorlist =http://mirrorlist.centos.org/?release= $releasever 5&arch= $basearch &repo=os
#baseurl =http://mirror.centos.org/centos/$releasever/os/$basearch/
baseurl=http://ftp.sjtu.edu.cn/centos/5.3/os/$basearch/
Gpgcheck=1
Gpgkey=http://mirror.centos.org/centos/rpm-gpg-key-centos6
#released Updates
[UPDATE]
Name=centos-5–updates
#mirrorlist =http://mirrorlist.centos.org/?release=4&arch= $basearch &repo=updates
baseurl=http://ftp.sjtu.edu.cn/centos/5.3/updates/$basearch/
Gpgcheck=1
Gpgkey=http://mirror.centos.org/centos/rpm-gpg-key-centos5
#packages used/produced in the builds but not released
[Addons]
Name=centos-5–addons
#mirrorlist =http://mirrorlist.centos.org/?release=4&arch= $basearch &repo=addons
baseurl=http://ftp.sjtu.edu.cn/centos/5.3/addons/$basearch/
All right, here we go. The NTFS partition tutorial is closed and hopefully this Linux tutorial will help you guys.