External HDD problems deleting

Forum Forums Freesat HD FOXSAT HDR External HDD problems deleting

Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #14483
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi, after reading up hot to on here, i have managed to format an external hard drive in ext 3 format. Can move recordings over to it no problem but when I try and delete one the following message comes up “cannot delete file due to file restrictions”

    Any help gratefully received

    Phil.

    #42976
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Phil

    Are you trying to deleate the file on the external HDD or the original on the humax?

    #42977
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I too have this issue. My drive has been filled full due to wife’s series recordings and lack of deletion of same. My Fox T2 (yes I know) says disc full, and will not let me delete any files. I thought I could take the drive out and connect up to a PC running Ubuntu, then selectively delete some of files, until the Humax allows the drive to function normally.

    Anyway is this possible, do you know ?

    Is how ??

    Thanks in advance!

    #42978
    Martin Liddle
    Participant

    VTROldBoy – 10 hours ago  » 

    My Fox T2 (yes I know) says disc full, and will not let me delete any files. I thought I could take the drive out and connect up to a PC running Ubuntu, then selectively delete some of files, until the Humax allows the drive to function normally.

    Anyway is this possible, do you know ?

    Is how ??

    The fact that the HDR-FOX T2 won’t allow you to delete files suggests to me that the file system has become corrupt and is now read only. There are two ways to correct this:

    1. There is custom firmware for the HDR-FOX T2 which sits alongside the standard Humax software and adds features. One of these is a utility to correct file system problems called fix-disk. The custom firmware can be obtained by going to https://wiki.hummy.tv/wiki/Main_Page and doing some reading. The items on “Installing the custom firmware” and the item on “Maintenance mode disk check (fix-disk)” are particularly relevant.

    2. The other way is essentially what you were suggesting, remove the hard drive from the HDR_FOX T2, connect it to the Ubuntu computer with a SATA to USB adapter (NB it needs to be the type of adapter that comes with a 12V power supply for the hard drive, cheap ones will only have a 5V supply) and then run fsck; see https://www.tecmint.com/fsck-repair-file-system-errors-in-linux/

    One other thought, the recordings on the hard drive will be owned by user “root” so you will need to use the su command to become the root user.

Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

The inner genius!