Include local headers before system headers.

config.h must always be included before stdio.h because it can contain
defines that enable Large File Support (e.g. _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 for
glibc on 32-bit machines).
13 files changed
tree: 7bf17f2d4b0de48842d0c82587fcc05ab82b3ee7
  1. dump/
  2. fsck/
  3. fuse/
  4. label/
  5. libexfat/
  6. mkfs/
  7. .gitignore
  8. ChangeLog
  9. configure.ac
  10. COPYING
  11. Makefile.am
  12. README.md
README.md

About

This project aims to provide a full-featured exFAT file system implementation for Unix-like systems. It consists of a FUSE module (fuse-exfat) and a set of utilities (exfat-utils).

Supported operating systems:

  • GNU/Linux
  • Mac OS X 10.5 or later
  • FreeBSD
  • OpenBSD

Most GNU/Linux distributions already have fuse-exfat and exfat-utils in their repositories, so you can just install and use them. The next chapter describes how to compile them from source.

Compiling

To build this project under GNU/Linux you need to install the following packages:

  • git
  • autoconf
  • automake
  • pkg-config
  • fuse-devel (or libfuse-dev)
  • gcc
  • make

Get the source code, change directory and compile:

git clone https://github.com/relan/exfat.git
cd exfat
autoreconf --install
./configure --prefix=/usr
make

Then install driver and utilities:

sudo make install

Mounting

Modern GNU/Linux distributions will mount exFAT volumes automatically—util-linux-ng 2.18 (was renamed to util-linux in 2.19) is required for this. Anyway, you can mount manually (you will need root privileges):

sudo mount.exfat-fuse /dev/sdXn /mnt/exfat

where /dev/sdXn is the partition special file, /mnt/exfat is a mountpoint.

Feedback

If you have any questions, issues, suggestions, bug reports, etc. please create an issue. Pull requests are also welcome!