Greetings, Matt D.! > On Windows you can create symbolic links which point to volume UUIDs as > a way of mounting and unmounting them without having to use the > administrative disk management tools. > For example, in cmd: > mountvol > ... > \\?\Volume{079b79c9-0000-0000-0000-100000000000}\ > C:\ > ... > mklink /d test \\?\Volume{079b79c9-0000-0000-0000-100000000000}\ > ... > dir test > I call mounvol to get a list of volumes and create a symbolic link > 'test' which points to the C:\ UUID. When I then 'dir test' it will list > all files on that volume. > If I try to access it through Cygwin Bash I get the following error: > $ dir test/ > dir: cannot access 'test/': No such file or directory > This makes it difficult to work with unmounted volumes as it's not > always possible to access the administrative disk management snap-in and > the mountvol/mklink has always been my go-to for this type of > functionality. It would be great if Cygwin would support it. $ (mountvol; cmd /C dir /N) | iconv -f CP866; dir sd?1/ ... \\?\Volume{80006d80-c2bb-4297-93c1-2f6d1a2a8acb}\ C:\ C:\dev\sda1\ \\?\Volume{6833c423-2223-11e4-b07d-806e6f6e6963}\ *** НЕТ ТОЧЕК ПОДКЛЮЧЕНИЯ *** \\?\Volume{9d412aba-0e54-4628-9c6b-b84fb18d062a}\ *** НЕТ ТОЧЕК ПОДКЛЮЧЕНИЯ *** \\?\Volume{6833c424-2223-11e4-b07d-806e6f6e6963}\ *** НЕТ ТОЧЕК ПОДКЛЮЧЕНИЯ *** \\?\Volume{51810762-adac-11e4-9801-902b3437d8e4}\ W:\ \\?\Volume{152b5e11-3180-11e4-9bb8-806e6f6e6963}\ R:\ ... 13.08.2016 23:13