This is probably buried in a discussion of the design of Puppy somewhere and my eyes glazed over a few paragraphs too soon so please bear with me.
Can someone provide a nickle explanation as to why 1.0.5RC is not able to see folders available to 1.0.4?
e.g. audio and video files I'd like to try under 1.0.5RC
Thanks! doc
1.0.5RC can't see my 1.0.4 Folders on the HD
1.0.5RC can't see my 1.0.4 Folders on the HD
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
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TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
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- Pizzasgood
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- Joined: Wed 04 May 2005, 20:28
- Location: Knoxville, TN, USA
Where are the files? Were they in the pup001 file?
1.0.5rc uses pup003 so as not to cause conflicts, so you'd have to mount the old one to get to them.
That will mount pup001 to /mnt/pupxxx. Then you can go through it and find them
1.0.5rc uses pup003 so as not to cause conflicts, so you'd have to mount the old one to get to them.
Code: Select all
mount /mnt/home/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx -o loop
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It does not recognize pup001 or pup002Pizzasgood wrote:Where are the files? Were they in the pup001 file?
1.0.5rc uses pup003 so as not to cause conflicts, so you'd have to mount the old one to get to them.That will mount pup001 to /mnt/pupxxx. Then you can go through it and find themCode: Select all
mount /mnt/home/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx -o loop
doc
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
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TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
- Pizzasgood
- Posts: 6183
- Joined: Wed 04 May 2005, 20:28
- Location: Knoxville, TN, USA
This is incorrectly marked (Solved).Pizzasgood wrote:Then it's out of my relm of knowledge. Sorry.
1.0.5RC does not see 1.0.4 (HDD install) folders on my laptop.
The first suggestion as to how to fix it did not work.
doc
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
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[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
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TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
Did you install 1.0.4 to your hard drive or did you just run it from the CD.
The same for 1.0.5. have you installed it to your hard drive or are you running it from the CD.
If you installed 1.0.4 to the hard drive is it still there or did you overwrite it with a 1.0.5 hard drive install.
If you did install 1.0.4 to the hared drive then installed 1.0.5 over the top of it chances are that you have wiped out 1.0.4s saved data.
If this is not the case and 1.0.4 is still on the hard drive or you were running it from the CD you need to know a couple of things.
In the case of a hard drive install you need to know what partition 1.0.4 is installed to and if you were just running the CD you need to know where the pup001 file or whatever it is named, is located.
Boot Puppy1.0.5 and run MUT and see what partitions you have and where it has mounted home. This will be displayed as /mnt/home.
If you only have one partition open rox and click the pointer in the ipper left corner to change to the parent directory then go to mnt/home.
If there are any pup files either pup001, pup002or pup003 files they will be displayed here and can be mounted using the following command in an rxvt window:
mount -o loop /mnt/home/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx
then go to mnt/pupxxx and the contents will be displayed
to unmount use the command umount /mnt/pupxxx
You can use the same commands to mount a pup001 or whatever file that is on a different partition by mounting the partition first and then loop mounting the pup file:
You can mount a different partition first using MUT then go to rxvt and mount the pup file i.e.
If you have mounted /hda2 with MUT it will be shown as /mnt/hda2 so just use:
mount -o loop /mnt/hda2/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx
and unmount using:
umount /mnt/pupxxx.
If your 1.0.4 install is still on your hard drive and you only have one partition and are running 1.0.5 from the CD, when you boot 1.0.5 take the option to not write to the hard drive and when it has bootes open MUT and use it to mount your partition then use rox to have a look at your files.
Hope this helps.
The same for 1.0.5. have you installed it to your hard drive or are you running it from the CD.
If you installed 1.0.4 to the hard drive is it still there or did you overwrite it with a 1.0.5 hard drive install.
If you did install 1.0.4 to the hared drive then installed 1.0.5 over the top of it chances are that you have wiped out 1.0.4s saved data.
If this is not the case and 1.0.4 is still on the hard drive or you were running it from the CD you need to know a couple of things.
In the case of a hard drive install you need to know what partition 1.0.4 is installed to and if you were just running the CD you need to know where the pup001 file or whatever it is named, is located.
Boot Puppy1.0.5 and run MUT and see what partitions you have and where it has mounted home. This will be displayed as /mnt/home.
If you only have one partition open rox and click the pointer in the ipper left corner to change to the parent directory then go to mnt/home.
If there are any pup files either pup001, pup002or pup003 files they will be displayed here and can be mounted using the following command in an rxvt window:
mount -o loop /mnt/home/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx
then go to mnt/pupxxx and the contents will be displayed
to unmount use the command umount /mnt/pupxxx
You can use the same commands to mount a pup001 or whatever file that is on a different partition by mounting the partition first and then loop mounting the pup file:
You can mount a different partition first using MUT then go to rxvt and mount the pup file i.e.
If you have mounted /hda2 with MUT it will be shown as /mnt/hda2 so just use:
mount -o loop /mnt/hda2/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx
and unmount using:
umount /mnt/pupxxx.
If your 1.0.4 install is still on your hard drive and you only have one partition and are running 1.0.5 from the CD, when you boot 1.0.5 take the option to not write to the hard drive and when it has bootes open MUT and use it to mount your partition then use rox to have a look at your files.
Hope this helps.
1.0.4 installed to HDD, 1.0.5RC from CD only.Ian wrote:If you did install 1.0.4 to the hard drive then installed 1.0.5 over the top of it chances are that you have wiped out 1.0.4s saved data.
fd0Ian wrote:Boot Puppy1.0.5 and run MUT and see what partitions you have and where it has mounted home. This will be displayed as /mnt/home.
hda::Hitachi .............etc.
1. swap 506.0Mb Use Swap
2. ext2 3,94.1Mb Rox /mnt/home
hdc:: CRN-8241B
Eject Data Mount CDROM
Ayuh, pup003 is there from 1.0.5RC and also Root and when I clicked on Root there were my 1.0.4 folders!Ian wrote:If you only have one partition open rox and click the pointer in the ipper left corner to change to the parent directory then go to mnt/home.
If there are any pup files either pup001, pup002or pup003 files they will be displayed here
Muy excellente! (please pardon my Spanglish)Ian wrote: and can be mounted using the following command in an rxvt window:
mount -o loop /mnt/home/pup001 /mnt/pupxxx
then go to mnt/pupxxx and the contents will be displayed
to unmount use the command umount /mnt/pupxxx
Question: Is there a way to mount 1.0.5RC on the HDD without overwriting 1.0.4?Ian wrote:If your 1.0.4 install is still on your hard drive and you only have one partition and are running 1.0.5 from the CD, when you boot 1.0.5 take the option to not write to the hard drive and when it has bootes open MUT and use it to mount your partition then use rox to have a look at your files.
I'd prefer to run them parallel for a while before deleting 1.0.4
Meanwhile I am going to see if I can find something in 1.0.4 that will help 1.0.5RC to communicate with my PCMCIA wireless nic.
Thanks! doc
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
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The only safe way to install 1.0.5 to the hard drive without affecting 1.0.4 is to install it in its own partition which means splitting up the existing partition.
If you have a utility that will allow you to do this safely you could create a second ext2 partition of about 500M and install 1.0.5 in that.
There is another choice, you could change the swap partition to a native Linux partition, format it as ext2 and use it to install 1.0.5. Depending on how much RAM you have this would be the easiest way to go as it does not involve any repartitioning and can be reversed if you ever need a swap partition.
If you have 256M RAM you do not really need a swap partition for Puppy. I only mention 256M RAM as I am assuming that you have a swap partition twice the size of your RAM which is the usual convention in Linux.
You can use fdisk or cfdisk in Puppy at the command line to change the type of partition and use the mke2fs command to format it as an ext2 filesystem.
If you have a utility that will allow you to do this safely you could create a second ext2 partition of about 500M and install 1.0.5 in that.
There is another choice, you could change the swap partition to a native Linux partition, format it as ext2 and use it to install 1.0.5. Depending on how much RAM you have this would be the easiest way to go as it does not involve any repartitioning and can be reversed if you ever need a swap partition.
If you have 256M RAM you do not really need a swap partition for Puppy. I only mention 256M RAM as I am assuming that you have a swap partition twice the size of your RAM which is the usual convention in Linux.
You can use fdisk or cfdisk in Puppy at the command line to change the type of partition and use the mke2fs command to format it as an ext2 filesystem.