I was playing a game, alt-tabbing froze my system so I waited a bit and then rebooted by using the button on the case, since I couldn’t do differently.

It now throws an error when mounting a drive: error mounting /dev/sdb1 at /media/user/local disk 1: unknown error when mounting (udisks-error-quark, 0)

This drive doesn’t have anything I was using on it, since it’s a media storage drive. I booted up Windows on my second drive and it can see and access this one without problems. How to fix?

  • Something Burger 🍔
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    241 year ago

    What filesystem is on the disk? If it’s NTFS, you’ll need to fix it on Windows (right click, Properties, Tools, Check).

    • さようならOP
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      101 year ago

      It worked, thanks a lot! What would be the Linux alternative to do that?

      • Atemu
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        251 year ago

        There is none. NTFS is a filesystem you should only use if you need Windows compatibility anyways. Eventhough Linux natively supports it these days, it’s still primarily a windows filesystem.

        • さようならOP
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          81 year ago

          Oh, I see. So you’re saying that, when I have the chance, I should move to a different filesysten and that would avoid me issues as the one in the OP?

          • Atemu
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            91 year ago

            If you’re only using this filesystem on Linux anyways, absolutely.

            • さようならOP
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              21 year ago

              Yes, I’ve basically moved permanently over to Linux and do 99.9% of the things on it. Had to boot Windows for the first time in days only to check whether or not my HDD died after I couldn’t mount it

              I’m still in the process of optimizing stuff around Linux (e.g. media drive filesystem) but I’ll get there haha

              • Atemu
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                21 year ago

                I’m still in the process of optimizing stuff around Linux (e.g. media drive filesystem)

                What do you mean by that?

              • Possibly linux
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                21 year ago

                You could use btrfs on Linux and install the windows driver. The Windows driver isn’t what I would call stable but it will work if your mostly using Windows.

                Another option is a windows virtual machine instead of dual booting. With a VM you could simple transfer files with magic wormhole or something similar

                • さようならOP
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                  11 year ago

                  Nah, all Linux is good. I don’t really need to use Win and since all my HDDs are for media storage I have no reason not to use them on Linux only. They’re only mine and don’t have to hop from PC to PC. Thanks for the input though

                • Atemu
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                  11 year ago

                  From what I’ve seen, that’s a great way to corrupt your filesystem.

          • If otherwise you don’t plan to use windows on that machine anymore (on bare metal, a virtual machine is not relevant here), it would be better to transfer your data to a Linux native file system. Unless you have a solid preference, ext4 is a good choice.

            Basically you just need to copy your files over, but you may need to do it in chunks (and resize the 2 partitions in every round) if you can’t hold the files if the NTFS file system safely while you reformat it.
            Also, if you want to keep attributes like file creation time and last modification time, that’ll require a bit more copy parameters, if you want this let me know and I’ll fill you in on the details.
            What distro do you use by the way?

            • さようならOP
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              11 year ago

              I’ll keep it in mind, but since I’m getting new, bigger drives I think I’ll just wait for and format them directly in the better filesystem. I tried formatting an external HDD and I think I could only pick FAT or NTSC (I’ll double check), hopefully on the internal drives it will be different!

              I’m on Pop!

              • @SteveTech@programming.dev
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                1 year ago

                If you’re using gnome disks, it hides the more Linuxy file systems behind an ‘Other’ option.

                Personally, for removable drives I prefer to use

                • ext4 for HDDs
                • f2fs for SSDs
                • exfat for Windows compatibility

                If it’s grayed out or you’re getting errors try searching up ‘how to format as [file system] in [Pop OS/Ubuntu/Linux]’, you might need some extra packages.

                • さようならOP
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                  1 year ago

                  Yeah, most options were greyed out. I’ll have to visit the wiki of my distro haha thanks for the tips though

                  edit: actually, just checked, EXT4 isn’t greyed out, but it says “internal disk for use with Linux only” and since it’s an external/portable HDD I didn’t pick that option

          • @allywilson@sopuli.xyz
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            41 year ago

            Can you reformat that drive as exFAT? That should remove NTFS as being a reason to keep Windoze around (and even if you do need Windoze, it should be able to read that format fine as well).

            • さようならOP
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              11 year ago

              Yes, I just learned I can use a different filesystem to avoid (or at least minimize) these issues in future. I tried formatting a portable HDD and I could only pick FAT, that should be OK since I picked “Linux compatibility” or something like that in the format wizard!

      • If it’s just the dirty flag (it was uncleanly unmounted) you can try

        ntfsfix -d /dev/sdc1

        Still probably better to boot into Windows and let it deal with it (ntfs tools are still reverse engineered stuff after all), and check journalctl before doing it, but it works in a pinch.

  • taanegl
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    1 year ago

    Firstly, check the logs directly to get a more concise error that we can analyse. journalctl is the standard systemd logging client you can use in the terminal. By specifying the unit (units can be socket files, timers, services) you can get logs specifically for said unit.

    journalctl -u udisks2.service
    

    You can also specify binary, if said binary logs to journalctl, like so (if the binary path exists):

    journalctl /usr/lib/udisks2/udisksd
    

    You can also check kernel messages (dmesg) by using the -k flag, like so:

    journalctl -k
    

    You can utelize flags such as -e to scroll to the end of a journal, -f to follow a journal in realtime and utelize the -p flag to set priorities like error, crit, warning (-o error) and others to filter away common journal entries so you don’t have to scroll through every line in the log.

    Secondly, and this is gonna sound weird, but reboot into windows twice. The first time you boot windows run diskchk on the partition(s) in terminal/powershell/command as administrator. If it tells you it needs to do an offline scan, reboot and you’ll see an offline diskchk screen on boot before login. If not, reboot again into windows anyways, and then reboot into Linux.

    The reason is that NTFS has a weird failsafe flag that NTFS on Linux considers a no-go, and it’s usually set if the system crashes more than twice, but not always. If Linux NTFS drivers see the flag, it won’t mount as a precaution. The only way to reset the flag is to reboot in windows twice. Not once, not three times, but twice.

    This might be outdated info, but that was the fact some years ago. There might be a way to fix it with modern day Linux, but I don’t know, especially when I have no direct and informative errors to go by.

    journalctl is your friend :)