Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
Thanks -- under Windows, to list the volumes (partitions) please use the
mountvol
command, and then run the VMFS tools with the appropriate volume device name.
Be sure
to run in elevated mode, otherwise you will see a FileNotFound error with
"Access is
denied".
Original comment by fluidops...@gmail.com
on 3 Jun 2009 at 10:41
Thanks for the answer, but i can't see the vmfs partitions in mountvol's list.
Please
check this screenshot:
http://kepfeltoltes.hu/090603/mountvol3_www.kepfeltoltes.hu_.gif
Disk1 is an esx harddisk. I think mountvol only lists/handles ntfs and fat
partitions, but esx disk only has ext3 and vmfs partitions.
Original comment by gtermi...@gmail.com
on 3 Jun 2009 at 6:01
Hi,
we have the same problem !
How can we mount VMFS volume into Windows with mountvol (with writing any bad
information) ?
After that, we will try to read the vmfs volume via the driver.
Thanks a lot !
Original comment by francois...@gmail.com
on 26 Jun 2009 at 8:42
Hi,
same problem here.
Original comment by 84ferna...@gmail.com
on 25 Aug 2009 at 9:25
we simply were not able to make this thing work on windows (and I was not even
sure
that it is working on windows with USB drives), so the fastest way to get rid
of this
problem was solved within a Linux VM, after that we are encountered the same
problem
as mentioned in comments on issue 10
http://code.google.com/p/vmfs/issues/detail?id=10
Original comment by 84ferna...@gmail.com
on 25 Aug 2009 at 11:39
Merged into enhancement request.
Original comment by fluidops...@gmail.com
on 28 Sep 2009 at 9:23
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
gtermi...@gmail.com
on 26 May 2009 at 11:17