crash on ext3 access

speedhunt3r

New member
I am using Windows 7 32bit and I also have Ubuntu installed on a seperate partition and I can read files in the ext3 partition, I can save downloaded files to it also, however ocasionally the blue screen will come up when I browse to the disk and try to open any file. As soon as the file gets highlighted the blue screen comes.. what could be the problem?
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7, Ubuntu 10.10
CPU
Amd Athlon X2 3600+
Motherboard
Asus M2A-VM
Memory
OCZ HTC 2GB DDR2 @ 800Mhz Step 4-4-4-15
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce 9600GT
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 2494HS
Screen Resolution
1920x1680
Hard Drives
ATA ST3320620AS 320gb
Western Digital 1TB
Internet Speed
2M/1M
How did you get to see that partition under W7?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
MasterB/Custom
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
QuadCore AMD Phenom II X4 Black Edition 955 3.2 GHz
Motherboard
Asus M4A785TD-V Evo
Memory
8 GB Crucial DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
SAPPHIRE Radeon HD 4890 1GB HDMI New Edition
Sound Card
VIA VT1708S HD Audio 7.1 onboard/ ATI HDMI video card
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer H233H 23'' LCD HDMI
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
1x 500GB and 1x 1TB 7200RPM 32MB Cache WD Caviar Black
PSU
CORSAIR CMPSU-620HX 620W
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COOLER MASTER Storm Scout SGC-2000
Cooling
2x 140mm and 1x 120mm case fans, Stock CPU fan
Keyboard
Logitech MX 3200
Mouse
Logitech MX 3200
Internet Speed
15 Mbps
Other Info
My first build!
How did you get to see that partition under W7?

he is useing a driver for the ext filesystems on his computer 3rd party


but as far as i can help is to try a differant driver sorry i dont have an ext3 mine is ext2 so that is the only suggestion i can
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Apple MacBook Aluminum 5.1
OS
Windows-7 64bit, Mac OS X 10.5 leopard, Ubuntu 9.04
CPU
Intel Core 2 Duo 2.0GHZ
Memory
3GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce 9400M 256mb dedicated + shared = 1382mb
Sound Card
Realtek
Monitor(s) Displays
Built in LCD Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280 x 800
Hard Drives
500gb Western Digital
Case
Aluminum Enclosure
I am using ext3fsd which works in vista so it worked in windows 7. Disks are mounted at start up but ocasionally blue screen

either

irq_less_than_or_equal_to error or bad_pool_header
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7, Ubuntu 10.10
CPU
Amd Athlon X2 3600+
Motherboard
Asus M2A-VM
Memory
OCZ HTC 2GB DDR2 @ 800Mhz Step 4-4-4-15
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce 9600GT
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 2494HS
Screen Resolution
1920x1680
Hard Drives
ATA ST3320620AS 320gb
Western Digital 1TB
Internet Speed
2M/1M
I've found that ext2IFS is the more solid program to access ext3.

However, it only supports an ext3 inode size of 128, which means that you have to format the partition as such before installing Ubuntu - the Ubuntu installer uses inode size 256, which ext2IFS cant see.

Use the following command in terminal (which you can run from the Ubuntu live cd:
mkfs.ext3 -I 128 /dev/sda[your partition number]

to create the 128 inode ext3 partition, before running the Ubuntu installer.
Install ext2IFS from windows, and then use the mountvol command from windows to keep the ext3 partition in my computer after next reboot.

I haven't had a crash or a blue screen yet
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha x64, Mac OS X Snow Leopard
Agreed with Petejk (nice post)

+1

Ext2IFS is great, I haven't tested on the latest build but normally one has to install using vista compatibiltiy mode (I used SP1)

Also I noticed probably because of the UAC or something for most of the windows 7 builds on startup your drive is not automatically mounted to the drive letter chosen again. Tend to have to open the control panel item and reassign a letter every time.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell E6400, HP nc6320, Samsung NC10 netbook
OS
Ubuntu Jaunty, Windows 7 RC 7100,7127,7137 VM,7264 x64
CPU
Core 2 Duo 2.26ghz, Core 2 Duo 2.0Ghz, 1.6Ghz atom
Memory
4 Gb, 4Gb, 2Gb
Hard Drives
320 Gb, 320Gb (WD scorpio Black), 160Gb
To keep the drive letter assigned to the volume, open cmd, and type
mountvol d: /L
where d: is whichever drive letter you assigned to the ext3 volume with the ext2IFS control panel app.
it'll then stick after the next boot..
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha x64, Mac OS X Snow Leopard
I've found that ext2IFS is the more solid program to access ext3.

However, it only supports an ext3 inode size of 128, which means that you have to format the partition as such before installing Ubuntu - the Ubuntu installer uses inode size 256, which ext2IFS cant see.

Use the following command in terminal (which you can run from the Ubuntu live cd:
mkfs.ext3 -I 128 /dev/sda[your partition number]

to create the 128 inode ext3 partition, before running the Ubuntu installer.
Install ext2IFS from windows, and then use the mountvol command from windows to keep the ext3 partition in my computer after next reboot.

I haven't had a crash or a blue screen yet


To keep the drive letter assigned to the volume, open cmd, and type
mountvol d: /L
where d: is whichever drive letter you assigned to the ext3 volume with the ext2IFS control panel app.
it'll then stick after the next boot..
Sorry about this old thread
I installed ext2IFS the way petejk said to do in post # 6 & it worked.
But I tried the mountvol (drive #): /L in cmd & it does not mount the drives (y & z) at startup does anyone know of a way to make it mount at startup?
Thanks Jerry

Edit: It's on a desktop with Window 7 Pro 32 Bit
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Sager NP9170
OS
Win 7 Pro x64 / Win 10 Pro
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz
Motherboard
CLEVO P170EM
Memory
12 GB
Graphics Card(s)
(1) Intel(R) HD Graphics 4000 (2) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 675M
Sound Card
(1) Realtek High Definition Audio (2) Intel(R) Display Aud
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
(1) Samsung 860 EVO 500GB(OS) (1) Samsung 860 EVO 500GB(Data)
Keyboard
Backlite
Antivirus
MSE, Malwarebytes Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
DESKTOP: Custom-built.
OS: Win 10 Pro x64.
CASE: Rosewill R5.
CPU: Intel I5 4670K CPU @ 3.40GHz.
CPU COOLER: Cool Master Hyper 212 EVO.
MOTHERBOARD: Asus Z87-A.
MEMORY: Kingston HyperX 2x4 GB.
GPU: Nvidia Geforce 650 TI.
PSU: Corsair TX750.
DRIVES: (1) Samsung 840 120 GB SSD (2) Western Digital blue 500 GB 7200 RPM.
Try this,

cmd
mountvol (drive letter: ) /L

I got

mountvol e: /L (e: is my ext3 partition)
\\?\Volume{7b57b5c0-b2f9-11de-b93e-806e6f6e6963}\

(this gave me the partition UUID)

Create a .bat file
mountvol E:\ \\?\Volume{7b57b5c0-b2f9-11de-b93e-806e6f6e6963}\

save the file and the drag it into your start menu startup folder.

partition will now mount on windows startup - only annoyance being a cmd window appearing every time you start windows.

Hope this helps
pete
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha x64, Mac OS X Snow Leopard
above post edited a couple of times because the forum system kept playing funny with the UUIDs
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha x64, Mac OS X Snow Leopard
Try this,

cmd
mountvol (drive letter: ) /L

I got

mountvol e: /L (e: is my ext3 partition)
\\?\Volume{7b57b5c0-b2f9-11de-b93e-806e6f6e6963}\

(this gave me the partition UUID)

Create a .bat file
mountvol E:\ \\?\Volume{7b57b5c0-b2f9-11de-b93e-806e6f6e6963}\

save the file and the drag it into your start menu startup folder.

partition will now mount on windows startup - only annoyance being a cmd window appearing every time you start windows.

Hope this helps
pete

Thanks for the quick reply I will try it tomorrow & let you know.
Jerry
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Sager NP9170
OS
Win 7 Pro x64 / Win 10 Pro
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz
Motherboard
CLEVO P170EM
Memory
12 GB
Graphics Card(s)
(1) Intel(R) HD Graphics 4000 (2) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 675M
Sound Card
(1) Realtek High Definition Audio (2) Intel(R) Display Aud
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
(1) Samsung 860 EVO 500GB(OS) (1) Samsung 860 EVO 500GB(Data)
Keyboard
Backlite
Antivirus
MSE, Malwarebytes Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
DESKTOP: Custom-built.
OS: Win 10 Pro x64.
CASE: Rosewill R5.
CPU: Intel I5 4670K CPU @ 3.40GHz.
CPU COOLER: Cool Master Hyper 212 EVO.
MOTHERBOARD: Asus Z87-A.
MEMORY: Kingston HyperX 2x4 GB.
GPU: Nvidia Geforce 650 TI.
PSU: Corsair TX750.
DRIVES: (1) Samsung 840 120 GB SSD (2) Western Digital blue 500 GB 7200 RPM.
Try this,

cmd
mountvol (drive letter: ) /L

I got

mountvol e: /L (e: is my ext3 partition)
\\?\Volume{7b57b5c0-b2f9-11de-b93e-806e6f6e6963}\

(this gave me the partition UUID)

Create a .bat file
mountvol E:\ \\?\Volume{7b57b5c0-b2f9-11de-b93e-806e6f6e6963}\

save the file and the drag it into your start menu startup folder.

partition will now mount on windows startup - only annoyance being a cmd window appearing every time you start windows.

Hope this helps
pete

Thank you Pete this works great! You show me something new. Jerry
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Sager NP9170
OS
Win 7 Pro x64 / Win 10 Pro
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz
Motherboard
CLEVO P170EM
Memory
12 GB
Graphics Card(s)
(1) Intel(R) HD Graphics 4000 (2) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 675M
Sound Card
(1) Realtek High Definition Audio (2) Intel(R) Display Aud
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
(1) Samsung 860 EVO 500GB(OS) (1) Samsung 860 EVO 500GB(Data)
Keyboard
Backlite
Antivirus
MSE, Malwarebytes Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
DESKTOP: Custom-built.
OS: Win 10 Pro x64.
CASE: Rosewill R5.
CPU: Intel I5 4670K CPU @ 3.40GHz.
CPU COOLER: Cool Master Hyper 212 EVO.
MOTHERBOARD: Asus Z87-A.
MEMORY: Kingston HyperX 2x4 GB.
GPU: Nvidia Geforce 650 TI.
PSU: Corsair TX750.
DRIVES: (1) Samsung 840 120 GB SSD (2) Western Digital blue 500 GB 7200 RPM.
Cool, pleased it works
Us dual booters have to tinker a bit sometimes!
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha x64, Mac OS X Snow Leopard
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