Accessing a Windows Partition
I have a dual-boot system with Red Hat Linux and Windows 98. Is
there a way to access my Windows partition while I am running
Linux?
You can access another partition on your system (for example, a
Windows partition), in two different ways.
First, assume that your Windows partition is on your first IDE
hard drive, in the first partition (/dev/hda1).
At a shell prompt, log in as root (type su and
then enter the root password).
Create a directory at which the Windows partition will be mounted by
typing the following command:
Before you can access the partition, you will need to mount it at the
directory you just created. As root, type the
following command at a shell prompt:
mount -t vfat /dev/hda1 /mnt/windows |
To automatically mount a Windows partition, you must modify the
/etc/fstab file.
At a shell prompt,
su to root, following the above example.
Next, open the /etc/fstab in a text editor by
typing (for example):
Add the following on a new line (the /dev/hda1
may vary, but for most users this is correct):
/dev/hda1 /mnt/windows vfat auto,owner,users 0 0 |
Press [Ctrl]-[x] and
then press [y] for yes when prompted to save the changes.
The next time the system is rebooted, the /etc/fstab
file is read, and the Windows partition is automatically mounted in the directory
/mnt/windows. To access the partition, at a shell prompt,
type the command cd
/mnt/windows. To navigate through directories or files
with spaces, surround the name of the directory or file with quotation
marks, as in ls "Program Files".