This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=____1062698487252_03guEkk_Y8 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Sorry this is a newbie question. When a mount point is created at say /sdb and then mounted and a file is copied to /sdb it is going to be put on the device that is mounted to /sdb What if it is not mounted yet and then when the copy is made it is just being copined to a local folder on the hard drive and not the optical-magneto drive that /sdb actually refers to How can one make a mountpoint where they can only write to it when it is mounted, is it just a permissions issue? Also how can I check what is really on the optical magneto disk? I can do a ls on /sdb when it is mounted although is there another way to do this, I just do not want mixups with thinking that the files that ls is reporting on are on the optical-magneto disk while in reality they are just in the folder /sdb on the local hard drive Jim ------=____1062698487252_03guEkk_Y8 Content-Type: text/html; name="reply" Content-Disposition: inline; filename="reply"
I have an older version of Red Hat (6.?).  Trying to use samba to backup work related folders on Windows NT.  The sum of all files is in access of 2 GB.  Is there a setting or just a limitation of samba or the kernel that prevent large file creation?  I know in UNIX you can go into the SAM (System Admin Menus) and change a drive to allow large files, is there something similar in linux.
 
Thanks
 
Chris


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