fat32 CF card
Posted: Fri Apr 03, 2015 9:44 am
When I installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS for the first time just over a year ago, I seem to have committed one of my many goofs. Today I was rereading the installation instructions that I had stored in an Amiga drawer and I noticed the part about making sure the CF card was formatted as fat16, and I didn't remember seeing that part before.
So I booted up Ubuntu and took a look with GParted. Sure enough, fat32!
(And 3.72 GiB of it.)
I'm not sure what kind of problems that error has caused, but I plan to fix it. I see three possible approaches.
1. The easiest would be to temporarily copy the kernel files on the card to a new folder on my linux hard drive, properly reformat the CF card, and copy the files back. But I suspect this might be impossible, because the partition would be in use and undeletable. I considered trying it to see, but I'm scared even the attempt to do so could mess things up badly.
2. Copy the kernel files to a thumb drive, boot from that, and then I could presumably replace the unused fat32 partition and copy those kernels to a nice 4 MiB fat16 one.
3. Or probably I could fix the card from the Amiga side and once more uncompress the compressed kernel files that I saved in an Archives drawer and copy them in again.
Does any one of these sound better than the others?
So I booted up Ubuntu and took a look with GParted. Sure enough, fat32!
(And 3.72 GiB of it.)
I'm not sure what kind of problems that error has caused, but I plan to fix it. I see three possible approaches.
1. The easiest would be to temporarily copy the kernel files on the card to a new folder on my linux hard drive, properly reformat the CF card, and copy the files back. But I suspect this might be impossible, because the partition would be in use and undeletable. I considered trying it to see, but I'm scared even the attempt to do so could mess things up badly.
2. Copy the kernel files to a thumb drive, boot from that, and then I could presumably replace the unused fat32 partition and copy those kernels to a nice 4 MiB fat16 one.
3. Or probably I could fix the card from the Amiga side and once more uncompress the compressed kernel files that I saved in an Archives drawer and copy them in again.
Does any one of these sound better than the others?