Unable to access volume
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I installed Ubuntu 16.04 in my Acer Aspire A315,51 i3 64-bit alongside Windows 10. When I start my computer, I have to choose Windows 10 or Ubuntu. It was working good, then I got a problem in Ubuntu, that it cannot access the hard disk. When I press on the hard disk it gives me this error:
Unable to access volume.
Error mounting /dev/sda4 at media/f/volume.
command line mount -t "ntfs" -o
mount ntfs
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
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I installed Ubuntu 16.04 in my Acer Aspire A315,51 i3 64-bit alongside Windows 10. When I start my computer, I have to choose Windows 10 or Ubuntu. It was working good, then I got a problem in Ubuntu, that it cannot access the hard disk. When I press on the hard disk it gives me this error:
Unable to access volume.
Error mounting /dev/sda4 at media/f/volume.
command line mount -t "ntfs" -o
mount ntfs
What happened before this issue?
â George Udosen
Apr 21 at 12:59
"Hibernated" or "Quick Boot" Windows partitions are in some Windows-secret strange state. Ubuntu can't
â waltinator
Apr 21 at 14:59
Could you please add a little more detail? What exactly did you do, what did you expect to happen and what happened instead? Did you encounter any warning or error messages? Please reproduce them in their entirety in your question. You can select, copy and paste terminal content and most dialogue messages in Ubuntu. Please edit your post to add information instead of posting a comment. (see How do I ask a good question?)
â David Foerster
Apr 21 at 17:56
2
Possible duplicate of Unable to mount Windows (NTFS) filesystem due to hibernation
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
Apr 23 at 3:59
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I installed Ubuntu 16.04 in my Acer Aspire A315,51 i3 64-bit alongside Windows 10. When I start my computer, I have to choose Windows 10 or Ubuntu. It was working good, then I got a problem in Ubuntu, that it cannot access the hard disk. When I press on the hard disk it gives me this error:
Unable to access volume.
Error mounting /dev/sda4 at media/f/volume.
command line mount -t "ntfs" -o
mount ntfs
I installed Ubuntu 16.04 in my Acer Aspire A315,51 i3 64-bit alongside Windows 10. When I start my computer, I have to choose Windows 10 or Ubuntu. It was working good, then I got a problem in Ubuntu, that it cannot access the hard disk. When I press on the hard disk it gives me this error:
Unable to access volume.
Error mounting /dev/sda4 at media/f/volume.
command line mount -t "ntfs" -o
mount ntfs
edited Apr 23 at 0:53
![](https://i.stack.imgur.com/zqElV.png?s=32&g=1)
![](https://i.stack.imgur.com/zqElV.png?s=32&g=1)
karel
50.3k11107127
50.3k11107127
asked Apr 21 at 12:16
maha
1
1
What happened before this issue?
â George Udosen
Apr 21 at 12:59
"Hibernated" or "Quick Boot" Windows partitions are in some Windows-secret strange state. Ubuntu can't
â waltinator
Apr 21 at 14:59
Could you please add a little more detail? What exactly did you do, what did you expect to happen and what happened instead? Did you encounter any warning or error messages? Please reproduce them in their entirety in your question. You can select, copy and paste terminal content and most dialogue messages in Ubuntu. Please edit your post to add information instead of posting a comment. (see How do I ask a good question?)
â David Foerster
Apr 21 at 17:56
2
Possible duplicate of Unable to mount Windows (NTFS) filesystem due to hibernation
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
Apr 23 at 3:59
add a comment |Â
What happened before this issue?
â George Udosen
Apr 21 at 12:59
"Hibernated" or "Quick Boot" Windows partitions are in some Windows-secret strange state. Ubuntu can't
â waltinator
Apr 21 at 14:59
Could you please add a little more detail? What exactly did you do, what did you expect to happen and what happened instead? Did you encounter any warning or error messages? Please reproduce them in their entirety in your question. You can select, copy and paste terminal content and most dialogue messages in Ubuntu. Please edit your post to add information instead of posting a comment. (see How do I ask a good question?)
â David Foerster
Apr 21 at 17:56
2
Possible duplicate of Unable to mount Windows (NTFS) filesystem due to hibernation
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
Apr 23 at 3:59
What happened before this issue?
â George Udosen
Apr 21 at 12:59
What happened before this issue?
â George Udosen
Apr 21 at 12:59
"Hibernated" or "Quick Boot" Windows partitions are in some Windows-secret strange state. Ubuntu can't
â waltinator
Apr 21 at 14:59
"Hibernated" or "Quick Boot" Windows partitions are in some Windows-secret strange state. Ubuntu can't
â waltinator
Apr 21 at 14:59
Could you please add a little more detail? What exactly did you do, what did you expect to happen and what happened instead? Did you encounter any warning or error messages? Please reproduce them in their entirety in your question. You can select, copy and paste terminal content and most dialogue messages in Ubuntu. Please edit your post to add information instead of posting a comment. (see How do I ask a good question?)
â David Foerster
Apr 21 at 17:56
Could you please add a little more detail? What exactly did you do, what did you expect to happen and what happened instead? Did you encounter any warning or error messages? Please reproduce them in their entirety in your question. You can select, copy and paste terminal content and most dialogue messages in Ubuntu. Please edit your post to add information instead of posting a comment. (see How do I ask a good question?)
â David Foerster
Apr 21 at 17:56
2
2
Possible duplicate of Unable to mount Windows (NTFS) filesystem due to hibernation
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
Apr 23 at 3:59
Possible duplicate of Unable to mount Windows (NTFS) filesystem due to hibernation
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
Apr 23 at 3:59
add a comment |Â
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
This is caused by Windows 10 not doing a true shutdown so the partition is marked as still in use. You can mount the partition as read only with the mnt
command.
sudo mount -o ro /dev/sda4 /mnt
Or log back into Windows and from the command prompt run
shutdown /r /f /t 0
This will force windows to perform a full shutdown instead of the hybrid shutdown.
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Brownm's answer is exactly right about the cause, but his solution is only good for a single shutdown. If you switch frequently there's an easier long-term solution buried in the Control Panel.
From your control panel navigate to "System and Security" and then "Power Options"
Click the link labeled "Change what the power button does" in the sidebar.
Click the link labeled "Change settings that are currently unavailable"
Uncheck the box that says "Fast startup"
add a comment |Â
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
This is caused by Windows 10 not doing a true shutdown so the partition is marked as still in use. You can mount the partition as read only with the mnt
command.
sudo mount -o ro /dev/sda4 /mnt
Or log back into Windows and from the command prompt run
shutdown /r /f /t 0
This will force windows to perform a full shutdown instead of the hybrid shutdown.
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
This is caused by Windows 10 not doing a true shutdown so the partition is marked as still in use. You can mount the partition as read only with the mnt
command.
sudo mount -o ro /dev/sda4 /mnt
Or log back into Windows and from the command prompt run
shutdown /r /f /t 0
This will force windows to perform a full shutdown instead of the hybrid shutdown.
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
This is caused by Windows 10 not doing a true shutdown so the partition is marked as still in use. You can mount the partition as read only with the mnt
command.
sudo mount -o ro /dev/sda4 /mnt
Or log back into Windows and from the command prompt run
shutdown /r /f /t 0
This will force windows to perform a full shutdown instead of the hybrid shutdown.
This is caused by Windows 10 not doing a true shutdown so the partition is marked as still in use. You can mount the partition as read only with the mnt
command.
sudo mount -o ro /dev/sda4 /mnt
Or log back into Windows and from the command prompt run
shutdown /r /f /t 0
This will force windows to perform a full shutdown instead of the hybrid shutdown.
answered Apr 21 at 14:40
Brownm8501
213
213
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Brownm's answer is exactly right about the cause, but his solution is only good for a single shutdown. If you switch frequently there's an easier long-term solution buried in the Control Panel.
From your control panel navigate to "System and Security" and then "Power Options"
Click the link labeled "Change what the power button does" in the sidebar.
Click the link labeled "Change settings that are currently unavailable"
Uncheck the box that says "Fast startup"
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Brownm's answer is exactly right about the cause, but his solution is only good for a single shutdown. If you switch frequently there's an easier long-term solution buried in the Control Panel.
From your control panel navigate to "System and Security" and then "Power Options"
Click the link labeled "Change what the power button does" in the sidebar.
Click the link labeled "Change settings that are currently unavailable"
Uncheck the box that says "Fast startup"
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Brownm's answer is exactly right about the cause, but his solution is only good for a single shutdown. If you switch frequently there's an easier long-term solution buried in the Control Panel.
From your control panel navigate to "System and Security" and then "Power Options"
Click the link labeled "Change what the power button does" in the sidebar.
Click the link labeled "Change settings that are currently unavailable"
Uncheck the box that says "Fast startup"
Brownm's answer is exactly right about the cause, but his solution is only good for a single shutdown. If you switch frequently there's an easier long-term solution buried in the Control Panel.
From your control panel navigate to "System and Security" and then "Power Options"
Click the link labeled "Change what the power button does" in the sidebar.
Click the link labeled "Change settings that are currently unavailable"
Uncheck the box that says "Fast startup"
answered Apr 23 at 2:51
![](https://i.stack.imgur.com/3xjCK.png?s=32&g=1)
![](https://i.stack.imgur.com/3xjCK.png?s=32&g=1)
Different55
1314
1314
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What happened before this issue?
â George Udosen
Apr 21 at 12:59
"Hibernated" or "Quick Boot" Windows partitions are in some Windows-secret strange state. Ubuntu can't
â waltinator
Apr 21 at 14:59
Could you please add a little more detail? What exactly did you do, what did you expect to happen and what happened instead? Did you encounter any warning or error messages? Please reproduce them in their entirety in your question. You can select, copy and paste terminal content and most dialogue messages in Ubuntu. Please edit your post to add information instead of posting a comment. (see How do I ask a good question?)
â David Foerster
Apr 21 at 17:56
2
Possible duplicate of Unable to mount Windows (NTFS) filesystem due to hibernation
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
Apr 23 at 3:59