?? It is gratifying to try and successfully attach a 500G mobile hard drive to the RHEL5 system today. Thought that perhaps later oneself or other students will have similar experience, so as far as possible meticulous record in this.
Whether it is a hard disk with Windows/linux dual system installed, or a removable hard drive/u disk connected via USB, it can be mounted on a Linux system. However, because the file systems commonly used by Windows itself include FAT32 and NTFS, there is still a need to differentiate. Talk less and get to the chase.
The system environment is as follows:
Operating system--rhel5, detailed version: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.2 (Tikanga)
Kernel version--2.6.18-92.el5 for x86_64
Mobile HDD--500g,ntfs File system
Application target:
Without affecting the current data of the mobile hard disk, mount the hard disk, you can read and write operations.
Scenario A: Using Linux-ntfs
Features: This scheme is simple to use and easy to operate, but it is read-only when mounted successfully
Realize:
1. Download the Linux-ntfs RPM package
# wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/linux-ntfs/kernel-module-ntfs-2.6.18-92.el5-2.1.27-0.rr.10.11.x86_64.rpm
2. Install the downloaded RPM package
# RPM-IVH kernel-module-ntfs-2.6.18-92.el5-2.1.27-0.rr.10.11.x86_64.rpm
3. Check if the NTFS module is loaded into the system
#/sbin/ Modprobe ntfs
# cat/proc/filesystems
ext3
ntfs
4. View the number of the NTFS system
#/sbin/fdisk-l |grep NTFS
/DEV/SDC1 1 60801 488384001 7 hpfs/ntfs
5. Mount the NTFS file system
# mkdir-p/mnt/ntfs/
# mount-t ntfs/dev/sdc1/mnt/ntfs/
END. At this point, you should have successfully mounted a read-only NTFS system without an accident, which can be viewed using the Mount command.
Scenario B: Using Fuse and ntfs-3g
Features: The program needs to download 2 packages, the source of its installation, Mount successfully can read and write mount partition
Realize:
1. Download the source installation package
# wget Http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/fuse/fuse-2.X/2.7.4/fuse-2.7.4.tar.gz?use_mirror=ncu
# wget Http://www.ntfs-3g.org/ntfs-3g-2009.4.4.tgz
2. Install the downloaded source package
# TAR-ZXF Fuse-2.7.4.tar.gz
#./configure--prefix=/usr/local/fuse-2.7.4
# make
# make Install
# TAR-ZXF Ntfs-3g-2009.4.4.tgz
#./configure--prefix=/usr/local/ntfs-3
# make
# make Install
# Modprobe fuse
# cat/proc/filesystems
ext3
ntfs
fuseblk
[fuse should appear in the list]
4. View the number of the NTFS system
#/sbin/fdisk-l |grep NTFS
/DEV/SDC1 1 60801 488384001 7 hpfs/ntfs
5. Mount the NTFS file system
# mkdir-p/mnt/ntfs/
# mount-t ntfs-3g/dev/sdc1/mnt/ntfs/
END. You should have successfully mounted an NTFS system that can be read and written by all users and can be viewed using the Mount command.
Linux system mounts NTFS file system