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  •  NoSuchUser
      NoSuchUser
Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data
#1
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Joined: 2009/8/10
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Posts: 1
> Yes it is a FreeBSD partition.

Which version of FreeBSD was used to create the partition?

Recent FreeBSD versions default to creating UFS2 filesystems and IIRC UFS2 file systems are not recognized by the Linux UFS module.

> /dev/sda3 5802 11438 45272064 a5 FreeBSD

/dev/sda3 would be the top-level partition ("slice" in FreeBSD terminology). FreeBSD further divides its top-level partition into file systems; these are usually visible as additional /dev/sdaN device nodes under Linux.

If partition /dev/sda3 contains one or more UFS1 filesystems, then a command such as the following should work:

# mount -t ufs -o ro,ufstype=44bsd /dev/sda8 /mnt

Change "/dev/sda8" above to the appropriate device node name.
Posted on: 2009/8/10 11:40
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Subject Poster Date
     Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data skolnick 2009/7/5 0:30
       Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data toracat 2009/7/5 4:25
     Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data severino42 2009/7/6 13:26
       Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data toracat 2009/7/6 14:46
         Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data AlanBartlett 2009/7/6 15:07
           Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data toracat 2009/7/6 15:20
             Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data AlanBartlett 2009/7/6 15:29
     Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data severino42 2009/7/6 18:01
       Re: mount bsd/386 partition to recover data NoSuchUser 2009/8/10 11:40
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