OS X cannot natively read the popular Ext2 and Ext3 filesystems, though support for these filesystems can be implemented if needed. Topher, an avid Mac user for the past 15 years, has been a ...
If you've been running Linux for a while, you're probably using the now slightly-outdated EXT2 or EXT3 file system. Technology blog Ghacks has a guide to converting those formats to the newer, faster, ...
I'm building a program that will write large numbers of small files (under 1mb) to a given folder on a Linux server.<BR><BR>How many files can I write to a given folder before performance will begin ...
Mac OS X supports a handful of common file systems—HFS+, FAT32, and exFAT, with read-only support for NTFS. It can do this because the file systems are supported by the OS X kernel. Formats such as ...
ACLs, or Access Control Lists, are available for a variety of Linux filesystems including ext2, ext3, and XFS. With XFS, ACL support is available pretty much “out of the box” and with ext2/ext3, it’s ...
Subject line covers it all. I'm not having much luck successfully mounting the ext3 under windows. Well, I can mount it, but it keeps crashing my system after a while.<BR><BR>So I think I'm now going ...
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