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ave13co
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by ave13co » Fri Nov 23, 2012 1:26 am
Just finished installing Mint 14 Nadia. Formatted harddrive and downloaded iso from this site.
Whats the deal with the floppy on my system? First thing after booting to new install and I see the following.....
Unable to mount Floppy Disk
Error mounting system-managed device /dev/fd0: Command-line `mount "/media/floppy0"' exited with non-zero exit status 32: mount: /dev/fd0 is not a valid block device
Thanks in advance..ave13co

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cwsnyder
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by cwsnyder » Fri Nov 23, 2012 6:59 am
First, do you actually have a floppy drive installed in your computer? Second, was said floppy drive working under your previous operating system?
LMDE Mate 64-bit, LM17.3 Cinnamon 64-bit
Debian Mate 64-bit, Xubuntu xenial 64-bit, Ubuntu-Mate 14.04 64-bit, Antergos Xfce 64-bit, PCLinuxOS Mate 64-bit
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AlbertP
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by AlbertP » Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:07 am
Please run this command in terminal to mount your floppy:
Registered Linux User #528502

Feel free to correct me if I'm trying to write in Spanish, French or German.
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remoulder
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by remoulder » Fri Nov 23, 2012 8:13 am
Another thing to check is whether there is a floppy interface enabled in the BIOS even if there's no actual drive in the machine.
[Edit] your original post and add [SOLVED] once your question is resolved.
“The people are my God” stressing the factor determining man’s destiny lies within man not in anything outside man, and thereby defining man as the dominator and remoulder of the world.
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Gord
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by Gord » Sat Nov 24, 2012 4:41 am
remoulder wrote:Another thing to check is whether there is a floppy interface enabled in the BIOS even if there's no actual drive in the machine.
That was the tip I needed to fix the problem on my VMware virtual machine: it had no floppy drive but the VM's BIOS thought that it did. Thanks!
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remoulder
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by remoulder » Sat Nov 24, 2012 10:10 am
@ave13co, if you are still having this issue, please open a terminal and copy/paste here the output of lsmod
[Edit] your original post and add [SOLVED] once your question is resolved.
“The people are my God” stressing the factor determining man’s destiny lies within man not in anything outside man, and thereby defining man as the dominator and remoulder of the world.
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remoulder
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by remoulder » Sun Nov 25, 2012 11:43 am
Further info at
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+sour ... ug/1054414 particularly #42/43. The issue may be fixed when the updates filter down
[Edit] your original post and add [SOLVED] once your question is resolved.
“The people are my God” stressing the factor determining man’s destiny lies within man not in anything outside man, and thereby defining man as the dominator and remoulder of the world.
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Anto
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by Anto » Wed Nov 28, 2012 2:51 pm
Hello,
Gord wrote:remoulder wrote:Another thing to check is whether there is a floppy interface enabled in the BIOS even if there's no actual drive in the machine.
That was the tip I needed to fix the problem on my VMware virtual machine: it had no floppy drive but the VM's BIOS thought that it did. Thanks!
I think I'm facing exactly the same issue: but how did you access your VMware Bios ? I'm hammering the F2 key during the VM's startup, but can't access it.
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Gord
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by Gord » Fri Nov 30, 2012 9:02 am
Anto wrote:Gord wrote:remoulder wrote:Another thing to check is whether there is a floppy interface enabled in the BIOS even if there's no actual drive in the machine.
That was the tip I needed to fix the problem on my VMware virtual machine: it had no floppy drive but the VM's BIOS thought that it did. Thanks!
I think I'm facing exactly the same issue: but how did you access your VMware Bios ? I'm hammering the F2 key during the VM's startup, but can't access it.
It can be a bit tricky because keyboard input needs to be directed to the virtual machine. The most reliable way to do it is to restart the virtual machine and not click anything outside the VM window while it reboots. That way the keyboard remains "connected" to the VM and passes your [F2] to the VM BIOS so you can get into the Setup menus. (You can do it on the initial boot but you have to make sure that you click inside the VM window
at just the right moment before the setup prompt goes away.)
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schubert
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by schubert » Fri Nov 30, 2012 11:28 pm
Anto wrote:Hello,
Gord wrote:remoulder wrote:Another thing to check is whether there is a floppy interface enabled in the BIOS even if there's no actual drive in the machine.
That was the tip I needed to fix the problem on my VMware virtual machine: it had no floppy drive but the VM's BIOS thought that it did. Thanks!
I think I'm facing exactly the same issue: but how did you access your VMware Bios ? I'm hammering the F2 key during the VM's startup, but can't access it.
I use VMWare Workstation 8, there is a menu item /Power->Power On to BIOS
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eco2geek
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by eco2geek » Sun Dec 02, 2012 12:58 am
Thanks for that. I got the error message the OP mentions after installing Nadia 14 MATE, and I do have a real floppy installed on my physical system. Simply blacklisting the "floppy" module in /etc/modprobe.d stopped the error message. Of course, I can no longer mount a floppy disk, but then it was hardly ever used anyway.

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smackoz
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by smackoz » Mon Dec 17, 2012 8:02 am
Gord wrote:Anto wrote:Gord wrote:That was the tip I needed to fix the problem on my VMware virtual machine: it had no floppy drive but the VM's BIOS thought that it did. Thanks!
I think I'm facing exactly the same issue: but how did you access your VMware Bios ? I'm hammering the F2 key during the VM's startup, but can't access it.
It can be a bit tricky because keyboard input needs to be directed to the virtual machine. The most reliable way to do it is to restart the virtual machine and not click anything outside the VM window while it reboots. That way the keyboard remains "connected" to the VM and passes your [F2] to the VM BIOS so you can get into the Setup menus. (You can do it on the initial boot but you have to make sure that you click inside the VM window
at just the right moment before the setup prompt goes away.)
This did the trick nicely for VMware Fusion 5.

I disabled the fdd in the the VMware Bios. No more "Unable to mount Floppy Disk" error message in Linux Mint 14.1.

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johnston73
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by johnston73 » Mon Apr 22, 2013 7:40 pm
+1
Gord wrote:remoulder wrote:Another thing to check is whether there is a floppy interface enabled in the BIOS even if there's no actual drive in the machine.
That was the tip I needed to fix the problem on my VMware virtual machine: it had no floppy drive but the VM's BIOS thought that it did. Thanks!
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oxman
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by oxman » Wed May 01, 2013 1:21 pm
My problem is that my floppy also is used to mount other types of memory storage devices such as SD or mini SD.