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correction of spelling of dbpath
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In theory, YES... If your mongod dpPathdbpath is at partition what both sides can read and write. So, you cannot use linux partitions (ext2,ext3,ext4,...) because your windows don't know how to handle. It's better not to use ntfs at windows side, because linux don't always handle ntfs right. So, solution is use older vfat32 partition type. Both sides can handle that well.

In theory, YES... If your mongod dpPath is at partition what both sides can read and write. So, you cannot use linux partitions (ext2,ext3,ext4,...) because your windows don't know how to handle. It's better not to use ntfs at windows side, because linux don't always handle ntfs right. So, solution is use older vfat32 partition type. Both sides can handle that well.

In theory, YES... If your mongod dbpath is at partition what both sides can read and write. So, you cannot use linux partitions (ext2,ext3,ext4,...) because your windows don't know how to handle. It's better not to use ntfs at windows side, because linux don't always handle ntfs right. So, solution is use older vfat32 partition type. Both sides can handle that well.

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JJussi
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In theory, YES... If your mongod dpPath is at partition what both sides can read and write. So, you cannot use linux partitions (ext2,ext3,ext4,...) because your windows don't know how to handle. It's better not to use ntfs at windows side, because linux don't always handle ntfs right. So, solution is use older vfat32 partition type. Both sides can handle that well.