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rated 0 times [  1] [ 0]  / answers: 1 / hits: 24656  / 1 Year ago, sun, january 1, 2023, 7:21:22

Is there any way to set up Ubuntu this way:



If I can't mount the filesystem in rw mode, then mount it in ro mode in the same directory.



In result I should not come across the notification that the system can't mount the filesystem (Skip or manual fix notification). SO when I start the system I should have my ntfs partitions mounted either in rw or ro mode depends if the windows is hibernated.



fstab entry:



#/dev/sda7
UUID=D0B43178B43161E0 /media/Dane ntfs defaults,errors=remount-ro 0 1


"mount -a" result:



The disk contains an unclean file system (0, 0).
Metadata kept in Windows cache, refused to mount.
Failed to mount '/dev/sda7': Operation not permitted
The NTFS partition is in an unsafe state. Please resume and shutdown
Windows fully (no hibernation or fast restarting), or mount the volume
read-only with the 'ro' mount option.


I have ubuntu 13.10 and win8. I use uefi secure boot.


More From » filesystem

 Answers
5

I've found a way to mount a hibernated windows partition in read-only mode when any error occurs



I hope it would work for you too. I'm describing below how to do it.




  • Open /etc/rc.local file with root privileges in any editor.



    sudo gedit /etc/rc.local

  • Now add following lines at last:



    sudo mount /dev/sda7 /media/Dane
    if [ $? -eq 14 ]
    then
    sudo mount -o ro /dev/sda7 /media/Dane
    fi
    exit 0


    If exit 0 is already written then delete the duplicate. Be sure that /etc/sda7 is your windows partition that you're going to mount when error occurs and also there is already a directory, named Dane created in /media. If not then change /dev/sdaX accordingly and crate the directory.


  • Now update using following command:



    sudo update-rc.d -f /etc/rc.local


    I'm not sure whether this command is needed or not, but just execute it what every message it gives.


  • Now finally restart your system when Windows is hibernated.




A little description:



The command written in file /etc/rc.local actually executes before and after system boots, thus acts as a startup. The first command in script will try to mount the partition and get the error code it returns. so $? is 14 when any error occurs. $? is 16 when partition is already mounted and trying to mount it again...



Reply if something goes wrong. I'll be waiting for your reply..


[#28606] Sunday, January 1, 2023, 1 Year  [reply] [flag answer]
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antebrow

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