On Mar 1 21:16, Hashim Aziz wrote: > This was an issue that I had previously in September of last year and > sent the issue to this mailing list ("win-mounts no longer displays > anything when doing "cat /proc/partitions") but the issue stopped > occurring before I could get around to diagnosing it. This issue has > now re-occurred and this time it seems permanent. When I run: > > $ cat /proc/partitions > major minor #blocks name win-mounts > > 8 0 0 sda > 8 16 0 sdb > 8 32 0 sdc > 8 48 0 sdd > 8 64 0 sde > 8 80 0 sdf > > ...I see nothing at all in the win-mounts column. This makes it > impossible for me to see which Windows drive letter maps to which > /dev/sdX entry. On closer inspection, this seems to be because I'm not > actually seeing any partitions of my drives, even though there are > many - for example, I see /dev/sda but no /dev/sda1 or /dev/sda2, and > because it's the partitions that are mounted, it's this that seems to > result in me seeing nothing in the win-mounts column. I'm running > Cygwin on Windows 7 (yes I'm aware it's EOL). Fortunately I just started Windows 7 for another thread here, so I gave it a try myself: $ uname -a CYGWIN_NT-6.1 vmbert764 3.1.4(0.340/5/3) 2020-02-19 08:49 x86_64 Cygwin $ id -G | grep -Eq '\<544\>' && echo elevated || echo non-elevated non-elevated $ cat /proc/partitions major minor #blocks name win-mounts 8 0 54525952 sda 8 1 102400 sda1 8 2 54420480 sda2 C:\ So, https://cygwin.com/acronyms/#WJFFM This appears to be a local phenomenon only, either some permission problem, or some BLODA, a life virus scanner or something. Two questions come to mind: - Does it work in an elevated shell? - If you run this under strace, does it show anything unusual? We could take a look if you call strace -o cat.trace cat /proc/partitions and send the cat.trace file here (assuming it still doesn't work). Corinna -- Corinna Vinschen Cygwin Maintainer