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Ligne 104 : | Ligne 104 : | ||
exemple de réponse : | exemple de réponse : | ||
Journaling has been disabled on /Volumes/160gig | Journaling has been disabled on /Volumes/160gig | ||
Testing shows that this information may no longer be valid in Mountain Lion, so I thought I'd post a working solution. I'm afraid it involves the Terminal and Disk Utility together, and requires Administrator privileges. | |||
: 1) Launch Disk Utility, select the partition in the sidebar from which you wish to remove Journaling. | |||
: 2) Get Info… on this partition (File > Get Info or Command-i) | |||
: 3) Note the Disk Identifier value, of the type diskXsY, where X and Y are numbers | |||
: 4) Now, unmount this partition by clicking the Unmount button in the toolbar | |||
: 5) Launch Terminal, and type the following: | |||
: sudo diskutil disableJournal force diskXsY | |||
: Replace diskXsY with the value you obtained in (3), then hit Enter. | |||
: 6) Authenticate with the login password of the Admin user you're using - NB: nothing will appear as you type the password: this is normal. | |||
: 7) You may receive the following error message: | |||
: "An error occurred journaling the file system: The underlying task reported failure on exit (-69860)" - ignore it. | |||
: 8) Safely eject the whole disk containing the partition you just disabled journaling on, and then re-attach it and mount the partition you just modified. | |||
Journaling should now be permanently disabled on the partition in question. You can verify this by typing mount in the Terminal and hitting Enter, or by Getting Info in Disk Utility (as in (2) above). | |||
== WinCDEmu == | == WinCDEmu == |
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