How can I access a NTFS filesystem from a live Linux CD
My Win XP SP3 registry is corrupted(my own fault) so I need to move windows/repair/system to windows/system32/config/system
. I have tried DSL, Sliax? and tinycore.
DSL give me a 'cannot - as readonly filesystem' So i try a chmod 777 /dev/hda1 and a chown 777 /dev/hda1
and a mount, -oremount, rw /mnt/hda1
none work although the remount rw does remove the readonly filesystem message but then just gives a cannot complete this operation. I am logged on as SU.
Sliax however shows the hda1 drive but wont even mount it, 'error org.freedesktop.hal. device.volume.unknownfairlure bracket' error
I also have this error written done, can't remember what I did to cause this one,
' wrong fs type bad option bad superblock on /dev/hda1 or too many mounted filesystems
unable to remove operatrion not permitted'
So basically how do I move a file from a NTFS filesystem (Win XP) from a live CD?
livecd dsl
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My Win XP SP3 registry is corrupted(my own fault) so I need to move windows/repair/system to windows/system32/config/system
. I have tried DSL, Sliax? and tinycore.
DSL give me a 'cannot - as readonly filesystem' So i try a chmod 777 /dev/hda1 and a chown 777 /dev/hda1
and a mount, -oremount, rw /mnt/hda1
none work although the remount rw does remove the readonly filesystem message but then just gives a cannot complete this operation. I am logged on as SU.
Sliax however shows the hda1 drive but wont even mount it, 'error org.freedesktop.hal. device.volume.unknownfairlure bracket' error
I also have this error written done, can't remember what I did to cause this one,
' wrong fs type bad option bad superblock on /dev/hda1 or too many mounted filesystems
unable to remove operatrion not permitted'
So basically how do I move a file from a NTFS filesystem (Win XP) from a live CD?
livecd dsl
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 min ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
My Win XP SP3 registry is corrupted(my own fault) so I need to move windows/repair/system to windows/system32/config/system
. I have tried DSL, Sliax? and tinycore.
DSL give me a 'cannot - as readonly filesystem' So i try a chmod 777 /dev/hda1 and a chown 777 /dev/hda1
and a mount, -oremount, rw /mnt/hda1
none work although the remount rw does remove the readonly filesystem message but then just gives a cannot complete this operation. I am logged on as SU.
Sliax however shows the hda1 drive but wont even mount it, 'error org.freedesktop.hal. device.volume.unknownfairlure bracket' error
I also have this error written done, can't remember what I did to cause this one,
' wrong fs type bad option bad superblock on /dev/hda1 or too many mounted filesystems
unable to remove operatrion not permitted'
So basically how do I move a file from a NTFS filesystem (Win XP) from a live CD?
livecd dsl
My Win XP SP3 registry is corrupted(my own fault) so I need to move windows/repair/system to windows/system32/config/system
. I have tried DSL, Sliax? and tinycore.
DSL give me a 'cannot - as readonly filesystem' So i try a chmod 777 /dev/hda1 and a chown 777 /dev/hda1
and a mount, -oremount, rw /mnt/hda1
none work although the remount rw does remove the readonly filesystem message but then just gives a cannot complete this operation. I am logged on as SU.
Sliax however shows the hda1 drive but wont even mount it, 'error org.freedesktop.hal. device.volume.unknownfairlure bracket' error
I also have this error written done, can't remember what I did to cause this one,
' wrong fs type bad option bad superblock on /dev/hda1 or too many mounted filesystems
unable to remove operatrion not permitted'
So basically how do I move a file from a NTFS filesystem (Win XP) from a live CD?
livecd dsl
livecd dsl
edited Jan 23 '14 at 14:41
Anthon
60.7k17102166
60.7k17102166
asked Jan 23 '14 at 14:16
andyandy
11
11
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 min ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 min ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
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I'd bet Ubuntu
(12.04, maybe earlier) install CD (= live CD) would do it.
Did you give it a try ?
add a comment |
You are much better off fixing Windows with a Windows boot CD. You can use FalconFour's Ultimate Boot CD (https://www.facebook.com/F4UBCD) or standard Windows repair CDs.
If you want to use Linux, I suggest using the latest Fedora, as it generally ships the latest software, including NTFS utilities.
You can copy the data to an NTFS partition on another drive. It won't be corrupted, so you would not have a problem mounting it. But I cannot guarantee you'll be able to boot from it. There are tools to make Windows bootable, but I don't know how good they are.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
2
active
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active
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active
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I'd bet Ubuntu
(12.04, maybe earlier) install CD (= live CD) would do it.
Did you give it a try ?
add a comment |
I'd bet Ubuntu
(12.04, maybe earlier) install CD (= live CD) would do it.
Did you give it a try ?
add a comment |
I'd bet Ubuntu
(12.04, maybe earlier) install CD (= live CD) would do it.
Did you give it a try ?
I'd bet Ubuntu
(12.04, maybe earlier) install CD (= live CD) would do it.
Did you give it a try ?
answered Jan 23 '14 at 20:57
xtof pernodxtof pernod
1012
1012
add a comment |
add a comment |
You are much better off fixing Windows with a Windows boot CD. You can use FalconFour's Ultimate Boot CD (https://www.facebook.com/F4UBCD) or standard Windows repair CDs.
If you want to use Linux, I suggest using the latest Fedora, as it generally ships the latest software, including NTFS utilities.
You can copy the data to an NTFS partition on another drive. It won't be corrupted, so you would not have a problem mounting it. But I cannot guarantee you'll be able to boot from it. There are tools to make Windows bootable, but I don't know how good they are.
add a comment |
You are much better off fixing Windows with a Windows boot CD. You can use FalconFour's Ultimate Boot CD (https://www.facebook.com/F4UBCD) or standard Windows repair CDs.
If you want to use Linux, I suggest using the latest Fedora, as it generally ships the latest software, including NTFS utilities.
You can copy the data to an NTFS partition on another drive. It won't be corrupted, so you would not have a problem mounting it. But I cannot guarantee you'll be able to boot from it. There are tools to make Windows bootable, but I don't know how good they are.
add a comment |
You are much better off fixing Windows with a Windows boot CD. You can use FalconFour's Ultimate Boot CD (https://www.facebook.com/F4UBCD) or standard Windows repair CDs.
If you want to use Linux, I suggest using the latest Fedora, as it generally ships the latest software, including NTFS utilities.
You can copy the data to an NTFS partition on another drive. It won't be corrupted, so you would not have a problem mounting it. But I cannot guarantee you'll be able to boot from it. There are tools to make Windows bootable, but I don't know how good they are.
You are much better off fixing Windows with a Windows boot CD. You can use FalconFour's Ultimate Boot CD (https://www.facebook.com/F4UBCD) or standard Windows repair CDs.
If you want to use Linux, I suggest using the latest Fedora, as it generally ships the latest software, including NTFS utilities.
You can copy the data to an NTFS partition on another drive. It won't be corrupted, so you would not have a problem mounting it. But I cannot guarantee you'll be able to boot from it. There are tools to make Windows bootable, but I don't know how good they are.
answered Jan 23 '14 at 21:29
proskiproski
1364
1364
add a comment |
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