Fuck you. I paid for every DVD and Blu-ray in my collection, and then spent hours ripping them to files for backup. I still have most of the original disks, in some cases, those are my only backups... which is why it's a big deal when a drive suddenly crashes for no apparent reason... I still have all the data and files, it just takes days or even weeks to recover it from optical disks. So go fuck yourself with your illegal and false accusations.
This is not the way of speaking in this forum, so please hold back a bit.
You can do a blkid from CLI to check which file systems are identified by the kernel and system.
You did not have answered my question, so please do not wonder that we can not help you. this is very sad because at the end we might get some ideas how to prevent such issues in the future or at least you have been helped.
But as things stand we can only assume that the problem is with you in front of the PC as you have absolutely not provided us with any data and information that we have requested. Instead you insult the moderators of this forum and the developers (i.e. me) and all other contributors.
hiding behind the EULA when their software causes serious damage to people's data.
Would you please share with us where to find that? If you refer to the GPL, the OSS license OMV is based on, then you do not have understand how open source works.
and sick of devs that are clearly not doing their due diligence in testing their software before releasing it for public use
I am testing the software as thoroughly and conscientiously as I can before releasing. But i can not test the software on thousands of different systems to include all contingencies. There are simply edge cases that only occur on certain systems.
I finally decided to just get rid of OMV altogether and just run the latest release of Bullseye and simply install NFS server
I wish you all the best with your system.