83mercedes Posted August 8, 2003 Report Share Posted August 8, 2003 Hey all, time again to ask you all for advice! No matter what I try to do, I cannot get my floppy to work right. I have tried the following, not in any order: 1. Disabling supermount 2. Disabling the icon in 'configure desktop' 'behavior' then creating a new icon. 3. Changing the 'dev' name in the icon properties 4. Enabling 'user' in options 5. Enabling supermount. And probably more, I'm dizzy from messing with it. Now, with my 'self-created' icon, which labels it as /dev/fd0, and mounted at /mnt/floppy, when I boot up, the error message comes up saying that "/dev/fd0 is not a valid block device. Any ideas are greatly appreciated, as usual. Thanks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chris z Posted August 8, 2003 Report Share Posted August 8, 2003 hi 83mercedes, silly question perhaps, but have you tried inserting a floppy, right clicking the icon to "mount", then trying to read the floppy contents? if you disabled supermount, then you must mount the drive before you can read it. how did you disable supermount? by editing your fstab file? if so, it might be helpful to post the contents of your /etc/fstab file. also (i'm not at my MDK machine right now) but if memory serves me, your floppy icon should not point to /dev/fdo, but /dev/floppy instead. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest GorGor Posted August 8, 2003 Report Share Posted August 8, 2003 83mercedes Another way is to run mcc and change the mounts points graghically. I disable supermount and allow USER to mount, this may be want you are after? I then have a menu or shortcut to a kde program called kdf or kde disk free which shows your drives and floppy and cdrom, you right hand click the device and choose MOUNT to mount it. hope this helps Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
83mercedes Posted August 10, 2003 Author Report Share Posted August 10, 2003 chris z, thanks, and here is fstab: /dev/hda1 / ext2 defaults 1 1 none /dev/pts devpts mode=0620 0 0 /dev/hda6 /home ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/scd0 /mnt/cdrom auto user,noauto,ro,exec 0 0 /dev/hdd /mnt/cdrom2 auto ro,noauto,user,exec 0 0 /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy auto user,iocharset=iso8859-1,sync,codepage=850,umask=0 0 0 none /proc proc defaults 0 0 /dev/hda5 swap swap defaults 0 0 I changed this in mcc, under 'mount points'. Now, I have deleted my self-made floppy icon, and gone back to the 'default' floppy icon, the floppy does work now, but still, during boot-up, I get the error saying /dev/fd0 is not a valid block device. (I don't think I changed that... but I could have...) I'll try changing it to /dev/floppy like you said there. Nope, changing it to /dev/floppy results in the same error 'not a valid block device'. hmmm... THANKS again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pmpatrick Posted August 10, 2003 Report Share Posted August 10, 2003 Your fstab entry for the folppy is screwed up. It should have a noauto option included otherwise the system will try and mount the floppy during boot and report an error if it can't. Here's my floppy fstab entry: /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy auto noauto,user,sync 0 0 Give it a try and see if it works for you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
83mercedes Posted August 11, 2003 Author Report Share Posted August 11, 2003 Yep - it sure did. Thanks a lot. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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