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Can't write to external hd

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  • oldgeek
    replied
    One thing: I have USB 2 ports. Does that affect a USB 3.0 hard disk?

    Leave a comment:


  • oldgeek
    replied
    I did the two commands and got this:

    steve@steve-desktop:~$ cd media && ls -la
    bash: cd: media: No such file or directory
    steve@steve-desktop:~$ sudo parted -l
    [sudo] password for steve:
    Model: ATA ST3500413AS (scsi)
    Disk /dev/sda: 500GB
    Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
    Partition Table: msdos
    Disk Flags:

    Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
    1 1049kB 106MB 105MB primary ntfs boot
    2 106MB 266GB 266GB primary ntfs
    4 266GB 500GB 234GB extended
    5 266GB 496GB 229GB logical ext4
    6 496GB 500GB 4271MB logical linux-swap(v1)

    Model: TOSHIBA External USB 3.0 (scsi)
    Disk /dev/sdb: 1000GB
    Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
    Partition Table: msdos
    Disk Flags:

    Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
    1 1049kB 1000GB 1000GB primary ntfs

    I didn't understand what to do with # so I just copied everything directly from the Konsole.

    Leave a comment:


  • vinnywright
    replied
    Originally posted by oldgeek View Post
    I plug it in and auto-mount.
    strange ,,,,that usually results in allowing user access.

    lets do this ,,,,and bare with me it will take a bit of back and forth,,,,,,,,,Open a konsole and with the external drive plugged in and auto mounted do
    Code:
    cd media && ls -la
    post the output...and
    Code:
    sudo parted -l
    ,,,and post the output .

    use the # button over the text input Field hear on your reply and paste the output between the code tags that pressing the # will insert in the text field , each output in separate code tags .

    VINNY

    Leave a comment:


  • oldgeek
    replied
    I plug it in and auto-mount.

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  • vinnywright
    replied
    Originally posted by oldgeek View Post
    Thanks, but still no dice. I did have another mistake, using root as the beginning directory in the file path, since I'm already in root, it doesn't need it again, right? This time it starts to change ownership, then runs into an I/O error on one of the archives I had previously saved. What might be happening?
    how are you accessing the drive ,,,,,plug it in and auto mount ,,,or an entry in /etc/fstab that auto mounts it at boot ?

    VINNY

    Leave a comment:


  • GreyGeek
    replied
    It's a cli command that I've used often in the past. All I can tell you is consult the man page and examine carefully what you've typed. You have a mistake somewhere.
    IF you run Krusader as root perhaps you can use the GUI on that file manager to check the ownership and change it to your name and account.

    Leave a comment:


  • oldgeek
    replied
    Thanks, but still no dice. I did have another mistake, using root as the beginning directory in the file path, since I'm already in root, it doesn't need it again, right? This time it starts to change ownership, then runs into an I/O error on one of the archives I had previously saved. What might be happening?

    Leave a comment:


  • GreyGeek
    replied
    You are not escaping properly. The backslash is put in front of the space. It doesn't replace it.

    Leave a comment:


  • oldgeek
    replied
    Thanks, but I'm still getting a 'no such file' message. Here's what I typed and what I got:

    root@steve-desktop:~# chown -R steve:steve /root/media/steve/TOSHIBA\EXT
    chown: cannot access '/root/media/steve/TOSHIBAEXT': No such file or directory

    Leave a comment:


  • Snowhog
    replied
    Because there is a space in the device name, you have to ‘escape’ it. So, you would type:

    /root/media/steve/TOSHIBA\ EXT

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  • oldgeek
    replied
    Something must be wrong in my syntax, as I get a no file response. I went to root, typed chown -R then my name as specified, but the direction to the device is not understood. The device is located in root directory, in the media folder, under my name, and written in capital letters. After my name, I typed: /root/media/steve/TOSHIBA EXT, which is how it appears in Dolphin. What did I do wrong?

    Leave a comment:


  • GreyGeek
    replied
    Probably its permission changed and only allows root r/w access. All others just r access.
    As root (sudo -i) you can change ownership to yourname:yourname using chown.
    chown -R yourname:yourname <path/to/root/of/drive>

    Leave a comment:


  • oldgeek
    started a topic [SOLVED] Can't write to external hd

    Can't write to external hd

    Due to a malfunction in my Elements ext. hd I bought a new one, a Toshiba 1-tb. During a time when my computer wasn't working properly, my new ext- hd stopped accepting write commands. I can still read what I managed to get saved before it stopped listening to me, but I can neither add folders are save anything to it. Another thing: the icon does not appear under 'Devices? in the left column of Dolphin. Instead, the icon can be found in the Roots directory, under 'media.' Is this now the norm? Does this affect my ability to write to the hard disk? Is there something I can do, or is the disk probably defective?

    I'm using Neon/Kubuntu hybrid, by the way.

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