On Sat, 28 Apr 2007 16:13:47 +0530 Kushal Kumaran wrote: > On 4/28/07, Sjoerd Hiemstra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Sat, 28 Apr 2007 14:59:19 +0530 Kushal Kumaran wrote: > > > On 4/28/07, Sjoerd Hiemstra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > I inserted a Mac HFS formatted USB stick, and to my surprise a > > > > window popped up in Gnome, displaying its contents. > > > > Debian handles the HFS filesystem by default?? > > > > > > > > Which makes me wonder, how I could determine which filesystems > > > > are available. Are HFS+ and UFS supported? > > > > Or, to put it more precisely: support for which filesystems is > > > > compiled into the kernel. > > > > > > Try /proc/filesystems. See the manpage for proc(5). For more > > > info on the running kernel, take a look at /proc/config.gz > > > > Here's the contents of /proc/filesystems (Etch). > > Odd enough, HFS is not listed, despite the fact that it appears to > > be functioning. ??? > > > > $ cat /proc/filesystems > > <snip contents not containing hfs> > > It appears to show only those filesystems that are supported by loaded > modules or that are built into the kernel. You can look into the > /lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel/fs/ directory to see what filesystem > modules are available.
Very interesting. It appears that the recognition of HFS volumes, as I described it, is a feature of Gnome only. In KDE it bumps into errors and in window managers it does not work at all. So I prefer to forget about Gnome and do it the way you mention here: modprobe hfs Then I can mount the HFS formatted USB stick the usual way: mkdir /media/whatever mount /dev/sda2 /media/whatever Now it works everywhere without errors. Thanks a lot! -- S.H. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]