Hi! Maybe someone on this list can shed some light on my following observations. I have a machine running Linux (2.6.23 / 2.6.24) as its main OS, a Windows XP test installation on a physical primary partition and one logical drive formatted as VFAT32 for exchanging data (/dev/sda11 / "d:"). I'm running the Windows inside QEMU/KVM, using "-hda /dev/sda" to provide my physical disk to the VM. Of course, sda11 is never mounted if I start the VM. My expectation was that it should work fine to mount sda11, copy files to it, umount sda11, start the VM, and access the files from there. Short story: To my surprise this doesn't work, and I'd like to know the reason, just out of curiosity. Symptoms are that the freshly copied files do not show up in Windows in the VM and chkdsk (sometimes) reports data corruption. (Reminder: sda11 had been unmounted before starting the VM.) If I shut down the VM and mount sda11 in Linux again, the files are gone from there as well. If I mount sda11 again immediately after copying and umounting and without starting the VM in between, the files show up just fine. If I really shut of Linux and boot my Windows test installation natively, the files are also visible and working ok. I've both tried to format sda11 using mkdosfs and within Windows itself, and made sure to run chkdsk regularily to avoid suprious follow-up filesystem errors during my tests. Why doesn't it work as I expected? Greetings, Gunter --
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 002/196] Chinese: rephrase English introduction in HOWTO |
| Tarkan Erimer | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Amit K. Arora | [RFC] Heads up on sys_fallocate() |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: 2.6.25-rc2 System no longer powers off after suspend-to-disk. Screen becomes g... |
git: | |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| Jarek Poplawski | Re: [PATCH] pkt_sched: Destroy gen estimators under rtnl_lock(). |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 27/37] dccp: Integration of dynamic feature activation - part 2 (server side) |
| Ray Lee | Re: [BUG] New Kernel Bugs |
