Thanks for the explanation. I can upgrade to a newer kernel in-house.
I'm using the ancient kernel for backward compatibility with customers (most
of whom use RHEL3 and none of whom have progressed passed RHEL4). Will I be
safe(r) if I mount NTFS partitions read-only? It's very useful to take a
dual-boot laptop to a customer site with a compatible version of Linux on
it.
Thanks,
Jeremy
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-----Original Message-----
From: Anton Altaparmakov [mailto:ai...@ca...]
Sent: 09 May 2008 09:05
To: jer...@em...
Cc: lin...@li...
Subject: Re: [Linux-NTFS-Dev] Problem with NTFS mounted partition
Hi,
You are using an ancient kernel. This has been fixed years ago...
Thanks for the report anyway!
Best regards,
Anton
On 8 May 2008, at 16:16, Jeremy Bennett wrote:
> I had problems with an NTFS partition mounted under Centos 4.6. Here
> is the entry from dmesg
>
> NTFS-fs error (device hdb1): write_mft_record_nolock(): Writing mft
> records without existing buffers is not implemented yet. Please email
> lin...@li... and say that you saw this
> message.
> Thank you.
> NTFS-fs error (device hdb1): ntfs_write_inode(): Failed (error code
> 95):
> Marking inode as bad. You should run chkdsk.
> NTFS-fs error (device hdb1): write_mft_record_nolock(): Writing mft
> records without existing buffers is not implemented yet. Please email
> lin...@li... and say that you saw this
> message.
> Thank you.
> NTFS-fs error (device hdb1): ntfs_write_inode(): Failed (error code
> 95):
> Marking inode as bad. You should run chkdsk.
>
> Output from uname -a
>
> Linux ramsey 2.6.9-67.0.7.ELsmp #1 SMP Sat Mar 15 06:54:55 EDT 2008
> i686
> i686 i386 GNU/Linux
>
> Running on an Intel Core 2 Duo box.
>
> I'll run chkdsk now. Let me know if you need any more information.
>
> Jeremy Bennett
--
Anton Altaparmakov <aia21 at cam.ac.uk> (replace at with @) Unix Support,
Computing Service, University of Cambridge, CB2 3QH, UK Linux NTFS
maintainer, http://www.linux-ntfs.org/
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