commit | f6e5b657bba712220e66cbeebc9651730af98aa5 | [log] [tgz] |
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author | Steve Kondik <steve@cyngn.com> | Sun Aug 28 00:00:26 2016 -0700 |
committer | Steve Kondik <steve@cyngn.com> | Sun Aug 28 00:16:39 2016 -0700 |
tree | 472f682ca9b3efd4b039fcf9352346c4cb063163 | |
parent | 4a8592e2f673ea02c3cb1f2c89eda950d3c13850 [diff] | |
parent | 82764a7a8cdfa778efbffd59fdc7a15726ff50f4 [diff] |
Merge tag 'v1.2.4' into HEAD Change-Id: I63e7f280a38df97a5f75535d6c0a674ce791b96d
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:
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.
To build this project on GNU/Linux you need to install the following packages:
On Mac OS X:
On OpenBSD:
Get the source code, change directory and compile:
git clone https://github.com/relan/exfat.git cd exfat autoreconf --install ./configure make
Then install driver and utilities (from root):
make install
You can remove them using this command (from root):
make uninstall
Modern GNU/Linux distributions (with util-linux 2.18 or later) will mount exFAT volumes automatically. Anyway, you can mount manually (from root):
mount.exfat-fuse /dev/spec /mnt/exfat
where /dev/spec is the device file, /mnt/exfat is a mountpoint.
If you have any questions, issues, suggestions, bug reports, etc. please create an issue. Pull requests are also welcome!