I used Disk Utility to clean up, then powered off / on, but still the issue remains. I will try to find out if there are things that can cause the OS to not properly unmount volumes. But now I was able to delete the original file-in Finder, without using sudo or rm -f or anything like that. It is of course possible I have some kind of config issue with my Mac although I am not getting any indication of other issues. Ive tried: diskutil unmount disk0 hdiutil detach disk0. I logged into the network attached drive and attempted to "check" the "foreign disk" but the check failed. I would imagine this is because I have Recovery open on this disk and thats why it is busy. After copying I couldn't delete the original because it was still "busy." I copied the file with a new name, because in my case I wanted to rename it, not delete it. It will show how many processes holding/using the filesystem. run below command to find out the processes using by a filesystem: fuser -cu /local/mnt/. PS: sudo fsck command did not work for me in command S commamd line. This will report back the named volume and location has been unmounted, like so: diskutil unmount /dev/disk1s2. That's why it show device is busy or filesystem is in use. Im getting an error saying- Cant open /dev/rdisk2s2: Resource Busy. Still using the diskutil command, we’ll point it at the drive in question to unmount. Shutting down the only other computer on the network that might conceivably be using the file did not change anything.ĭisk Utility couldn't do anything with the drive, because it wasn't just a removable device, it was a remote device, not attached directly to the Mac. we need to check is any process holding or using the filesystem. It just happened I did not understand why the system was unable to overwrite infos about the same mounting point. A reboot of the mac did not change anything. ttf TrueType font file on a "foreign disk" on a network attached drive, and therefore not likely to be opened by the system on startup. From there you can open Disk Utility which allows you to unmount the drive and perform various types of other disk-related actions. Read on, because I had a unique situation in which none of the previously suggested solutions worked, but I did manage to solve my problem. The system does not usually lie, meaning that sometimes it does.
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