HDD mounted as media/read only
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I'm new using Ubuntu. Currently I'm using a dual boot Ubuntu 18.04/windows10 in my sdd and I have my old HDD with windows 10 installed in my laptop too.
At the first time I was able to get into my HDD from Ubuntu and delete/create files. Copy&paste and so on. But now it is mounted as read-only. Doing some search I found this command:
sudo mount -o remount,uid=1000,gid=1000,rw /dev/sda4
But if It mounts it as media. If I try to create a folder in that disk shows me an error saying no such file or directory.
What am I doing wrong?
partitioning permissions
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I'm new using Ubuntu. Currently I'm using a dual boot Ubuntu 18.04/windows10 in my sdd and I have my old HDD with windows 10 installed in my laptop too.
At the first time I was able to get into my HDD from Ubuntu and delete/create files. Copy&paste and so on. But now it is mounted as read-only. Doing some search I found this command:
sudo mount -o remount,uid=1000,gid=1000,rw /dev/sda4
But if It mounts it as media. If I try to create a folder in that disk shows me an error saying no such file or directory.
What am I doing wrong?
partitioning permissions
add a comment |
I'm new using Ubuntu. Currently I'm using a dual boot Ubuntu 18.04/windows10 in my sdd and I have my old HDD with windows 10 installed in my laptop too.
At the first time I was able to get into my HDD from Ubuntu and delete/create files. Copy&paste and so on. But now it is mounted as read-only. Doing some search I found this command:
sudo mount -o remount,uid=1000,gid=1000,rw /dev/sda4
But if It mounts it as media. If I try to create a folder in that disk shows me an error saying no such file or directory.
What am I doing wrong?
partitioning permissions
I'm new using Ubuntu. Currently I'm using a dual boot Ubuntu 18.04/windows10 in my sdd and I have my old HDD with windows 10 installed in my laptop too.
At the first time I was able to get into my HDD from Ubuntu and delete/create files. Copy&paste and so on. But now it is mounted as read-only. Doing some search I found this command:
sudo mount -o remount,uid=1000,gid=1000,rw /dev/sda4
But if It mounts it as media. If I try to create a folder in that disk shows me an error saying no such file or directory.
What am I doing wrong?
partitioning permissions
partitioning permissions
edited Feb 13 at 18:15
William Colmenares
asked Feb 11 at 18:55
William ColmenaresWilliam Colmenares
62
62
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add a comment |
2 Answers
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This is probably caused by Windows 10, the way it shutdown (which in reality is not a proper shutdown).
Quick way to solve it: in Win10, when you do Start -> Shutdown, keep SHIFT key pressed as you click on Shutdown. After that, when you boot into Ubuntu, you should have write access to all your disks and partitions.
If you find yourself in the situation of forgetting to press SHIFT while shutting down, you may want to read this answer to disable the fast startup.
add a comment |
Open the terminal (CTRL+ALT+T) and copy and paste sudo nautilus . If it does not work please restart your machine into windows and then again into ubuntu. The problem you are experiencing is usually caused by improper shutdown of windows.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is probably caused by Windows 10, the way it shutdown (which in reality is not a proper shutdown).
Quick way to solve it: in Win10, when you do Start -> Shutdown, keep SHIFT key pressed as you click on Shutdown. After that, when you boot into Ubuntu, you should have write access to all your disks and partitions.
If you find yourself in the situation of forgetting to press SHIFT while shutting down, you may want to read this answer to disable the fast startup.
add a comment |
This is probably caused by Windows 10, the way it shutdown (which in reality is not a proper shutdown).
Quick way to solve it: in Win10, when you do Start -> Shutdown, keep SHIFT key pressed as you click on Shutdown. After that, when you boot into Ubuntu, you should have write access to all your disks and partitions.
If you find yourself in the situation of forgetting to press SHIFT while shutting down, you may want to read this answer to disable the fast startup.
add a comment |
This is probably caused by Windows 10, the way it shutdown (which in reality is not a proper shutdown).
Quick way to solve it: in Win10, when you do Start -> Shutdown, keep SHIFT key pressed as you click on Shutdown. After that, when you boot into Ubuntu, you should have write access to all your disks and partitions.
If you find yourself in the situation of forgetting to press SHIFT while shutting down, you may want to read this answer to disable the fast startup.
This is probably caused by Windows 10, the way it shutdown (which in reality is not a proper shutdown).
Quick way to solve it: in Win10, when you do Start -> Shutdown, keep SHIFT key pressed as you click on Shutdown. After that, when you boot into Ubuntu, you should have write access to all your disks and partitions.
If you find yourself in the situation of forgetting to press SHIFT while shutting down, you may want to read this answer to disable the fast startup.
edited Feb 13 at 18:35
answered Feb 13 at 18:27
Davide_sdDavide_sd
415
415
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Open the terminal (CTRL+ALT+T) and copy and paste sudo nautilus . If it does not work please restart your machine into windows and then again into ubuntu. The problem you are experiencing is usually caused by improper shutdown of windows.
add a comment |
Open the terminal (CTRL+ALT+T) and copy and paste sudo nautilus . If it does not work please restart your machine into windows and then again into ubuntu. The problem you are experiencing is usually caused by improper shutdown of windows.
add a comment |
Open the terminal (CTRL+ALT+T) and copy and paste sudo nautilus . If it does not work please restart your machine into windows and then again into ubuntu. The problem you are experiencing is usually caused by improper shutdown of windows.
Open the terminal (CTRL+ALT+T) and copy and paste sudo nautilus . If it does not work please restart your machine into windows and then again into ubuntu. The problem you are experiencing is usually caused by improper shutdown of windows.
answered Feb 13 at 18:37
T.ValoyiT.Valoyi
113
113
add a comment |
add a comment |
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