Yeah, that's what the status tab says: Unsupported filesystem. Do you need NTFS? (i.e. is it necessary to mount this device on Windows?)
If not, you can reformat the partition in the DD-WRT web GUI.
EDIT: Did some checking, NTFS may be supported. I'd recommend you use ext4, though, unless there is that requirement to also mount the drive on Windows. Mind you, the UI is saying "not supported" so either the partition isn't properly formatted, or the NTFS (variant, there's more than one) is truly not supported by your DD-WRT build.
I had glossed over "not supported" for sda and sda1 because it claims to have successfully mounted /dev/sda2 to /tmp/mnt/sda2. Also "ntfs" is a formatting option at the bottom of the NAS tab, so I thought that would imply support for it.
I don't think the drives are formatted incorrectly as they both seem to run fine under both Windows and Linux. I'd like to access the drive in Windows, if possible.
edit: as an experiment I used the dd-wrt interface to format my ext4 drive to ntfs to see if that would produce a ntfs drive dd-wrt would recognize, but unfortunately it behaves the same as my other ntfs drives.
Joined: 13 Aug 2013 Posts: 6858 Location: Romerike, Norway
Posted: Sun May 30, 2021 5:44 Post subject:
I will recommend ext4.
Your drive has 3 partitions. Only one mounts.
The only reason to keep the ntfs, is if you may remove the drive and mount it in a Windows Machine. Accessing the drive on the router over Samba from Windows works with EXT4.