<div>thank you<br>for your advice--- i should have read this before i recently tried to install suse linux 7.3 professional then updating it using suse 10.1 everything went fine till it started deleting all the cool games suse
7.3 had not only that--- it was trying to install both grub and lilo--- i know both boot loaders being installed on the same system can cause conflicts-- right???--- soo it wont even run--</div>
<div>im thinking if i can reinstall suse 10.1 it should have everything fixed-- as long i dont go tinkering wehere im not supposed to--</div>
<div><br> </div>
<div><span class="gmail_quote">On 3/6/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Erik Ohls</b> <<a href="mailto:eohls@welho.com">eohls@welho.com</a>> wrote:</span>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid">tisdagen den 06 mars 2007 17:03:42 skrev michael tucker:<br>> so since i said it couldnt find my cdrom i put in
<br>><br>> /dev/hdc /media proc default 13<br>><br>I think the line in fstab should look more like:<br>/dev/hdc /cdrom auto user,exec,ro,noauto 0 0<br><br>I don't use Knoppix so I'm not quite certain. By default most distros mount a
<br>single cd-rom in /mnt/cdrom; some mount them in /media/cdrom; and I have a<br>vague memory of Knoppix using plain /cdrom. You can, however, mount the cdrom<br>anywhere you want so long as the mountpoint exists. The first thing you
<br>should do is consequently to check out that it does -- and if it doesn't, you<br>have to create it. (Just make a new directory that you want to use as a<br>mountpoint.)<br><br>Then let's look at the line above:
<br>/dev/hdc is the device you are trying to mount (and I can only hope that<br>you've got it right). You could probably use /dev/cdrom instead. That should<br>be a link to the right device -- if your system has created it.
<br><br>/cdrom is the mountpoint. You can use something else (e.g. /mnt/cdrom) if you<br>prefer, but the mountpoint must exist.<br><br>auto means that the system should automatically find out the filesystem of<br>your cd. If auto doesn't work we'll have to specify the filesystem, but try
<br>auto first.<br><br>user,exec,ro,noatuto: user means that you shouldn't have to be root to mount<br>your cdrom; exec means that you should be able to run programs on it; ro<br>stands for read-only (you can't normally write to a cdrom); and noauto means
<br>that the device should not be automatically mounted when you boot your<br>system.<br><br>You can ignore the first one of the two zeros. The second one means that fsck<br>needn't ever check the cdrom. (It would be meaningless as fsck couldn't fix
<br>any errors anyway.)<br><br>> then it said warning there isnt a newline "or soemthing" on fstab<br>> and couldnt link to mtab~<br><br>Well, every mountpoint should get a line of its own in fstab. Seeing the exact
<br>error message might help. (Perhaps your "proc" has confused the system.)<br><br>> so i cut and paste mtab~ to Desktop and then it said warning there isnot a<br>> newline in fstab<br>> perhaps there is a stale lock file?
<br><br>Stale lock files should be deleted, but start by changing your /ets/fstab.<br><br>> this happens even when im trying to boot knoppix 3 kings editon live cd<br>><br>> if this doenst bring any information on what my problem is exactly i'll try
<br>> to get some more info later<br><br>It would quite certainly help us helping you. But good luck.<br><br>Erik<br>___________________________________________________<br>This message is from the kde mailing list.<br>
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http://www.kde.org/faq.html</a>.<br></blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>//mike//