

- FUSE EXT2 FORUM HOW TO
- FUSE EXT2 FORUM INSTALL
- FUSE EXT2 FORUM UPGRADE
- FUSE EXT2 FORUM FULL
- FUSE EXT2 FORUM SOFTWARE
I’ve had this thing for a dozen years and the only issue I will have is that there were files backed up on the WD from PC’s i retired years ago that i was too lazy to move to a newer pc when i trashed the old one (so really shouldn’t be of too much value) There are a couple excel files that i used just to keep track of budgets that i would like to recover rather than repopulate - so we will see. I only used the WD as a backup - so pretty much everything is still where its supposed to be (on my other PC’s).
FUSE EXT2 FORUM FULL
The down side is it works a bit too well, as my WD Book was only half full and i had used the mybook to transfer files between pc’s, the empty space is filled with files I deleted over the years, so now they are all coming back, I delete as I go. I pulled the drive out hooked it up with a usb/sata adapter and Photorec seems to be finding stuff. Thanks for the comments on photorec that was great! I had never used the program, its very straightforward. HOWTO: Repair a broken Ext4 Superblock in Ubuntu | Linux Expresso
FUSE EXT2 FORUM HOW TO
linux - How to mount ext4 fs with block size of 65536? - Super User GitHub - alperakcan/fuse-ext2: Fuse-ext2 is a multi OS FUSE module to mount ext2, ext3 and ext4 file system devices and/or images with read write support. How to Rescue Data Off the Disk Inside a WD MyBook Live NAS. There is also a method of restoring a backup superblock, but I am uncertain this will work without a kernel compile because of the block size issue.Ī helpful suggestion by about compiling the Linux kernel might allow for better results than I have had. There are also tools like extundelete, extmagic - but I did not have success with these tools, I think, because of the block size. …but, unless you want to try compiling your kernel to increase your pagesize to 65,536, you most likely cannot mount a file system with a superblock size of 65,536 on an X86 Linux computer without using Fuse-Ext2 - but I don’t know how to tell Fuse-Ext2 to use a backup superblock. The below command could have been run on the partition - and possibly could have revealed all of the files in tact as they were… This is only an example and results may vary after running the “dumpe2fs /dev/sda4 | grep -i superblock” command. The below example applies if a backup superblock exists at inode 98304. There is a linux command to mount the file system with an alternative superblock: There is a linux command to reveal those superblocks : Usually, EXT4 file systems have backup superblocks. The odd thing about the data partition as formatted by Western Digital is that it uses block sizes of 65,536 rather than the default of 4,096. However - they don’t necessarily have names associated with them. When a file system is “formatted” all that really happens is that the superblock is deleted but the files still remain in the system. An index of file locations as well as directories are stored in what is known as a superblock. It is formatted with the EXT4 file system. The 4th partition is where everyone’s data is. The first is used to boot the system, the other two store a linux system and these two partitions are RAID configured, formatted with the EXT3 file system. Fix OSXFuse with fuse-ext2 errors on OS X El Capitain EDIT Do not download Xcode from the App Store Way too Slow Use Developer Download page This has to be one of the more frustrating installs I’ve ever done. " If what you're running calls itself MacFUSE 3.8.3, it sounds to me as if the developer simply kept the old name-or else has coincidentally used the exact latest version number as the current project.About block sizes used to format the MyBook Live - and file system.
FUSE EXT2 FORUM SOFTWARE
It is a successor to MacFUSE, which has been used as a software building block by dozens of products, but is no longer being maintained. The GitHub home page for the FUSE for macOS project says "FUSE for macOS allows you to extend macOS's native file handling capabilities via third-party file systems. I'm running MacFUSE 3.8.3 on Mojave 10.14.2
FUSE EXT2 FORUM UPGRADE
I've never used FUSE for macOS my Macs still all use glorious old HFS+, although I'm preparing to upgrade the two newer ones to Mojave and APFS. P.S.: Also read the associated Web page for the ext2 filesystem.
FUSE EXT2 FORUM INSTALL
Preceding comments say you need to install at least version 3.8.2 for it to work under macOS 10.14 Mojave, but it looks as if 3.8.3 would be better you don't say what version of macOS you are running. Read the comment by esetleges in this thread, which say he/she got it to write NTFS-which I think is not what you want.

FUSE for macOS is supposed to be the successor to MacFuse, but is now being developed by a volunteer in his/her spare time.
