
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 El 2018-07-13 a las 08:13 +0930, Rodney Baker escribió:
On Friday, 13 July 2018 2:16:46 ACST Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2018-07-11 15:30, Rodney Baker wrote:
On Wednesday, 11 July 2018 18:34:43 ACST Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2018-07-11 06:27, Linux Kamarada wrote:
2018-07-05 18:48 GMT-03:00 Carlos E. R. <robin.listas@telefonica.net>:
exfat. supported via fuse, drivers on packman.
That filesystem is new to me. I need to search...
It is used on memory cards beyond 32 GB. NTFS is better for your use case, I added the info for completeness.
Agreed. ExFAT has a file size limit of 4GB - I got tripped up on that today trying to copy a 64GB file to a 128GB USB thumb drive that I didn't realise was formatted to exFAT - it failed with a write error at 4GB! Had to reformat the thumb drive as NTFS (it was going to be transferred to a Windows machine) and start again.
No, exFAT file size limit is 128 PiB. You were probably using FAT.
Thanks for the correction. Windows was reporting the drive as exFAT, but I suspect oS was only recognising it as (and thus using the driver for) FAT32, hence the 4GB limit. Always good to learn something. :)
Despite the "fat" in the name, an exfat filesystem can not be used at all with a "FAT" driver. It is a different beast. In fact, the official Linux kernel does not support it, so it has to be done with a fuse driver downloaded from packman because of licensing issues. - -- Cheers Carlos E. R. (from openSUSE 42.3 x86_64 "Malachite" (Minas Tirith)) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iF4EAREIAAYFAltH6LQACgkQja8UbcUWM1zKZwD+PdlFho2RGpQafX3DX1Cd3pDR 7EFhbOUnFuctmjHYg0sA/3jkjBIyU4DmVk0eGerqHZfl+SbmWbibnxBssnDZ9Q+j =7T+d -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----