You must specify the file system type




















When you know the problem in your heart, there also lies the solution like a twin brother. Paul, damnnnnn, so many years and it feels like you are a brother to me. We never seem to stop laughing and questioning these kind of things, do we? I hope life still treats you well. But I definitely think Wipro, 3i Infotech, outsource2india. If it does not exist run lvscan and check if the lvm exists or not 3. And mount using the above cmd. I passed a driving test, and I can drive a car.

My own car is a Volvo V70 Estate, manual gearbox. The traffic flows, mechanical constraints, signage, routes are the same. A few of the switches are in different places, or called different names. No Account? Sign up. By signing in, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Already have an account? Sign in. By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Ask Ubuntu is a question and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers.

It only takes a minute to sign up. Connect and share knowledge within a single location that is structured and easy to search. I want to mount a partition to an auxiliary folder via mount to fix a damaged grub. This specifies the filesystem type of the filesystem to be mounted. Some common, valid filesystem types are:. I tried finding out the issue and the issue was, I had partitioned it but no filesystem was assigned. There is more to the story here. Usually if you mount a partition with a common filesystem type using mount , it will auto-detect the partition type.

You haven't installed filesystem tools for the chosen filesystem. If you did a standard desktop install of Ubuntu, this shouldn't normally be a problem. For example, to mount ntfs drives in recent versions of Ubuntu you need the ntfs-3g package. The partition is corrupt or unformatted. In this case, you should probably do a filesystem check fsck on it before mounting it.

You may then want to proceed to mount it manually, specifying the filesystem type, as read-only. If all else fails you may need special recovery software such as testdisk photorec. Please use parted -l to check the partition type and make sure you are mounting an actual data partition with known partition types for example, ntfs, fat, etc.

Here is what you would see from an 8TB drive, the first partition is not the actual data partition and instead, you should mount the second partition, which is the actual data partition. Yes, I am now in the rescue mode. When the rescue environment attempt to find my linux installation, I was prompted that I don't have any Linux partitions. Currently, The fstab file is following:. There is still a possibility your data is there, but this is a fairly advanced recovery at this point and I don't want to risk providing invalid instructions and causing data loss for you.

There are ways to recover alternate superblocks and some other tricks. You can try searching our knowledge base and solutions docs to see if there is one that matches your situation. But in the directory tree, the owner name for these files or directories is missing instead of its groupid and userid, like the following:. If you are seeing the UID and GID while booted in rescue mode, that is OK and sometimes expected that likely means your installation had a user configured that the rescue image does not - and that is not a big deal.

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