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Krivoruky Pyrych2018-07-14 19:51:09
linux
Krivoruky Pyrych, 2018-07-14 19:51:09

How to make Windows 7 see ide screw with linux?

Rough Windows sees, even loads it. But Windows does not see the linux screw in the explorer (lxde + MATE riot), I rummage in disk management, I find the linux screw, but RMB gives only "Delete volume" and "Help", everything else is unavailable.

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3 answer(s)
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Ezhyg, 2018-07-14
@Ezhyg

I am using www.ext2fsd.com

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Zettabyte, 2018-07-15
@Zettabyte

If you need to have the drive connected all the time, then use the methods recommended by the other answerers. If it is enough to "see" the disk once, for example, to copy the data, then you can use R.saver . The program is free.
Being launched under Windows, it will be able to both read and, if necessary, restore data from Ext2, Ext3, Ext4, ReiserFS, JFS, XFS and Btrfs.

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Alexander Komarchuk, 2018-07-15
@AlexanderKomarchouk

Since the days of Windows 2000, in order to see the connected disks of Unix / Linux systems, you had to install a driver.
Here is an example link :
Linux has been one of the most popular operating system that powers various NAS (Network Attached Storage), routers, gateways, IoT (Internet of Things), computers and etc. Some users may also dual-boot Windows and Linux. If a volume or partition of a storage media is formatted as a Linux filesystem, such as ext2 (second extended filesystem), ext3 (third extended filesystem) or ext4 (fourth extended filesystem), then you may have problem accessing and reading the Linux partitions in Windows system.
Even though Linux has built-in support for Windows FAT32 and NTFS partitions, but Windows does not have built-in capability to access, read and/or write to Linux partitions without third-party software. Thus whenever you plug in or connect a disk drive formatted as Linux partition to Windows, it won't recognize it, instead asking you to delete and recreate the volume or format the volume.
In order to access and connect to Linux volumes in Windows operating system, try one of the following applications, which add support to Windows so that it can access, open, read, and possibly write to partitions configured with Linux filesystem.
Ext2Fsd
Ext2Fsd (short for Ext2 File System Driver) is a free open source file system driver for Windows that adds support for ext3, ext3 and ext4 file systems. With Ext2Fsd, users can have native read and write access to the ext2, ext3 and ext4 file systems through an automatically assigned drive letter that any program can access, just like any NTFS or FAT32 volumes. The advantage is that you can access the files and folders on the Linux volumes without having to copy them to Windows volume prior to accessing them.
Ext2Fsd
Features of Ext2Fsd:
ext2/ext3 volume reading & writing
ext3 journal replay when mounting
various codepage: utf8, cp936, cp950…
mountpoint automatic assignment
large inode size: 128, 256…
large file size bigger than 4G
CIFS sharing over network
htree directory indexing
ext4 extent read-only, no size truncating and expanding support
Fast fsck (uninit_bg) and group block checksum support
64k block-size, support compatible to Linux ext4 and e2fsprogs
auto start during Windows boot
Ext2Fsd supports Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2016 or later.
Download Ext2Fsd from sourceforge.net .
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Perhaps this link will help you " How to read ext4 partition in Windows 10/8/7 ?"
Although usually both computers with Linux and Windows are on the same network and it is enough to install Samba on Linux , and this eliminates various unnecessary tricks.

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