![mount xfs windows mount xfs windows](https://www.maketecheasier.com/assets/uploads/2020/08/Access-ext4-windows-linuxreader-mount-partition.jpg)
Of course you need to replace 1313-F422 with the UUID of the device you want to mount.Īgain, this will mount your partition in /media/ which is not consistent with how nautilus mounts partitions. You can now determine the command you need for mounting the device by UUID. Type ls -al /dev/disk/by-uuid/ you will see an entry that matches the name you saw before:
![mount xfs windows mount xfs windows](https://www.cyberciti.biz/media/new/faq/2017/09/Installing-XFS-Creating-XFS-File-System-on-Debian.png)
A UUID will remain the same if you put an internal disk into an external USB caddy, or change the name of the partition. A UUID is a globally unique name for the partition.
#MOUNT XFS WINDOWS SOFTWARE#
It's possible for this to happen just from a software upgrade. Ī device name like /dev/sdb1 is based on where your physical drive is plugged in and the order the drives were made available to the computer, so if your computer changes the same command could mount a different partition. dev/sdb1 on /media/My-Happy-Disk type vfat. You should see a line with your disk name on it like: