No, I wasn't referring to the DVD, just that strange folder with 10.4.11 in the name, and the truly bizarre permissions, where not even the owner has read or write permissions. In short, this one:
d--x--x--x 3 root admin 102 Oct 30 2008 Q16Q41Q54 10.4.11
as its still 'locked'
I don't think it is locked, I think it is just that NO ONE, not even the file's owner (root), has read permissions. Also, I was making a guess as to the ".bak" extension you mentioned, and what it probably means.
I don't have VMware Fusion, I use Sun's free Virtual Box, so I don't know how Fusion handles the Windows (or Linux) file system in manages in its virtual machine. It might have an actual mount point, in which case it would mount and have alias in Volumes when it runs. Or it might not have a mount point at all. Virtual Box doesn't--my Windows XP install isn't a partition, it is just a Virtual Box file that loads in the program when it runs. I do have BootCamp installed, and Vista is installed there. It IS an actual disk partition, and shows up in Volumes as an alias.
In short, what ought to be present in the invisible /Volumes folder are the mount points of file systems, shown as aliases when viewed in the Finder. If you open the /Volumes folder in
Finder and see an actual folder, rather than an alias, it is NOT supposed to be there. This is one occasion where Finder is actually clearer than using Terminal, where all the mounts, except the startup drive, show as directories.
Francine
Francine
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