From: David C. <da...@pa...> - 2011-02-23 09:24:49
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Hi, Note that Ext2IFS in its current version only supports ext2/3 filesystems that have an inode size with maximum size of 128. Most linux variants by default use higher (eg 256), so unless you specified the -I option when you first created the filesystem, Ext2IFS can't read it. -- Dave On 23/02/11 18:35, Qingning Huo wrote: > On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 5:00 AM, Shai Vaingast<sva...@gm...> wrote: >> Hi Qingning, >> You can try to read it from Windows using Ext2 IFS. See >> http://www.fs-driver.org/ >> Hope this helps, >> > Hi Shai, > > This looks very cool. I do not need to use it right now because my > problem is already resolved. But I believe this will be a handy tool > in the future. > > Thanks for your advice. > > Qingning > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Free Software Download: Index, Search& Analyze Logs and other IT data in > Real-Time with Splunk. Collect, index and harness all the fast moving IT data > generated by your applications, servers and devices whether physical, virtual > or in the cloud. Deliver compliance at lower cost and gain new business > insights. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > coLinux-users mailing list > coL...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/colinux-users > > |