top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Desktop in an unmounted state on fedora! How can I fix this?

+1 vote
442 views

A little while ago, I tried to install Google Earth. It told me there was a file conflict so I forced it. Then, I decided I didn't want it and uninstalled it. Now, my external USB hard disk isn't mounting and
I can't make it mount at all.

It used to be I'd leave it plugged in and it would show up on my desktop in an unmounted state. I'd click it and it would mount. Now, it's nowhere to be found.

Did I just really screw up or is this reversable?

posted Jun 2, 2013 by anonymous

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

2 Answers

0 votes

This kind of thing has happened to me rarely, both on Fedora and Debian-based systems. *Almost* always, it's a permissions thing.

Watch your logs as you plug in your usb drive. Was it recognized? Is there something there saying that sdb (or c or d or whatever) was seen, and that there's a /dev/sdb1 or whatever?

If so, try to mount in manually as root. Did that work? If it did, then your problem is almost certainly a permissions issue.

answer Jun 2, 2013 by anonymous
0 votes

You could try:

yum reinstall filesystem

(it's the filesystem pkg google earth rpm has conflicts with)

answer Jun 2, 2013 by anonymous
Similar Questions
0 votes

I was wondering if their is a way to have multiple desktop environment on a fedora system without one messing with other. Anytime you have multiple desktop environment on a system they will start writing each others configuration files messing up with themes. Not to mention populated application menus.

Would it be possible to create different users for different desktop environment? Or something like that.

+1 vote

I am running scientific linux 6.3 with kde 4.3.4 and my problem is that for some reason or other, i have now killed off the desktop by accidentally clicking the "x" that appears in the 'sidebar' [which may not be proper name] that pops out to right of desktop.

I searched through files that i thought would be associated with desktop without finding something related to 'sidebar'.

Only way I have found to restore 'sidebar' is by renaming my user name and creating user again, then copying files over from a backup.

I ran a search of internet with "ixquick", but found nothing related directly to such.

+1 vote

How can I add an application launcher to the favorites menu in Fedora 19?

+2 votes

I'm running gnome3, and I'm missing a feature to expand the table of colors which gnome offers for changing the gnome3 desktop background color (for example adding "black" to this table).

+1 vote

So I wanted to remove libimobiledevices since I *though* I was the one who'd installed it and it was no longer needed (I'm ditching the iPod).

I typed
sudo yum remove blahblah

where blahblah was the actual package name for libimobiledevices.

All of a sudden, I saw it removing all sorts of stuff I didn't want to: blueman, banshee, empathy, etc. It then dropped me to a terminal screen where it had started blueman again. It stayed there.

Finally, I restarted the computer and it only starts at runlevel 3 (non-graphical mode). I have to log in and type startx every time to bring up the desktop. BUT, it only automatically starts GNOME3 and not
XFCE. I also have no way to select XFCE as I no longer get the login screen in graphical mode. It just starts the desktop.

How can I fix this? Did I just do something that will require me to reinstall my system?

Oh, I also tried to do

sudo yum install libimobiledevices and it told me that it was already installed.

...