agalex Posted July 16, 2011 Share Posted July 16, 2011 Hi I have tried many methods and did not work. I want someone who actually did it and worked for him to describe the method to enable writing on the NTFS partition of Windows 7 from Lion. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gringo Vermelho Posted July 16, 2011 Share Posted July 16, 2011 Not sure if this will work on Lion, try it and see what happens: http://www.cocoabyss.com/sl-ntfs/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
agalex Posted July 16, 2011 Author Share Posted July 16, 2011 Not sure if this will work on Lion, try it and see what happens:http://www.cocoabyss.com/sl-ntfs/ Nope! Doesn't work. Could someone tell me which files from Snow Leopard I need because the guys in Apple has totally disabled the feature to write on NTFS in Lion. Maybe these files work also on Lion. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TH3L4UGH1NGM4N Posted July 16, 2011 Share Posted July 16, 2011 the only other alternative I've personally used aside from the tux era ntfs is MacFuse You can give it a shot and see but it hasn't been ported for 10.7 so I can't guarantee it will work as in the same situation with ntfs http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bism4rck Posted July 16, 2011 Share Posted July 16, 2011 http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/index.html Works nice with Lion, but be care full you will always have damaged file system when writing on NTFS, no matter which solution you use. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
agalex Posted July 16, 2011 Author Share Posted July 16, 2011 Yes indeed it works. Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
medwedsky Posted July 19, 2011 Share Posted July 19, 2011 Tuxera NTFS best choice, imho Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gringo Vermelho Posted July 19, 2011 Share Posted July 19, 2011 Best choice is not letting OS X have write access to your NTFS partitions at all unless you like to run chkdsk a lot. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
agalex Posted July 19, 2011 Author Share Posted July 19, 2011 Well at least not on the partition that you have the windows system files. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gringo Vermelho Posted July 19, 2011 Share Posted July 19, 2011 Definitely. I highly recommend that you keep an eye on the logs, I don't remember if it's kernel.log or system.log that show NTFS errors, probably kernel.log. If you see any, run chkdsk /r before it gets out of hand. I had a severe case of NTFS corruption caused by OS X when it was writing HFS 'resource forks' to some "alternate data streams" or some {censored} that's part of NTFS as I found out after a good bit of googling: http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tutorials/tutorial25.html I finally found out that I could use Trend Micro's "Hijack This" to clear out this "ADS" data: http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tutorials/...l42.html#adsspy before chkdisk could even fix the other problems. So be careful and check the logs from time to time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
3.14r2 Posted July 19, 2011 Share Posted July 19, 2011 If you use EFI partition to store Chameleon stuff and use Terminal to edit it, then in case such as this: sudo -s mkdir /Volumes/EFI mount_hfs /dev/disk0s1 /Volumes/EFI rm /Volumes/EFI/Extra/com.appe.Boot.plist cp ~/Desktop/com.appe.Boot.plist umount /Volumes/EFI rm -Rf /Volumes ///This will remove ALL DATA FROM ALL PARTITIONS mounted in /Volumes folder. Just a typo and Enter pressed to early... you would lose not only OS X partition(s), but all Windows partition(s) as well (unless you turn off the PC very quickly). This is not the only scenario then read/write access could do more harm then good. Just a warning. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gringo Vermelho Posted July 19, 2011 Share Posted July 19, 2011 Good god I hope that didn't happen to you. I deleted my EFI partition once that way. Only once!! Since then I make a full backup of it when ever I change something. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
3.14r2 Posted July 19, 2011 Share Posted July 19, 2011 Good god I hope that didn't happen to you.Unfortunately a sad experience Luckily NTFS is in read only mode, and non work files/system files got deleted/erased (I do my work stuff in Windows due to AutoCAD (the Mac version is worthless)). Don't do EFI edits when it's time to sleep! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tanguy_k Posted August 6, 2011 Share Posted August 6, 2011 For more informations, read this blog post "The state of MacFUSE and NTFS-3G on OS X Lion" http://www.neilturner.me.uk/2011/08/02/the...-os-x-lion.html So no real solution for now other than buy Tuxera or Paragon :/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
annunaki Posted August 7, 2011 Share Posted August 7, 2011 Found and used this for a long time. Yes, there's a risk with R/W to NTFS, but if it's important...here's an option. Got this from some other site, but worded it a little different. - First, uninstall NTFS-3G/Paragon if installed. - Backup /etc/fstab if you have it, shouldn't be there in a default install. Open Terminal Type: diskutil info /Volumes/volume_name ///copy the Volume UUID (bunch of numbers). sudo nano /etc/fstab ///create a new line in fstab with the UUID as follows: UUID=paste_the_uuid_here none ntfs rw /// or /// LABEL=volume_name none ntfs rw ///volume_name is supposed to work okay if you don't have the UUID, though I've not tried it Repeat for other NTFS partitions. Save the file (ctrl-x then y) and restart your system. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dmazar Posted August 7, 2011 Share Posted August 7, 2011 For more informations, read this blog post "The state of MacFUSE and NTFS-3G on OS X Lion"http://www.neilturner.me.uk/2011/08/02/the...-os-x-lion.html I've decided to go with "Use exFAT instead of NTFS." option. For file sharing between Win and OS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keys_3429 Posted June 23, 2012 Share Posted June 23, 2012 Yep - the exFAT is a good solution. All my USB drives are formatted in exFAT. That way it doesn't matter what computer I have access to all my stuff can be read and the device can still be written to. Perfect solution. Although too bad my windows partition came pre-installed with my new PC as it's NTFS. Maybe I need to re-install it someday, but the USB is a good go-between the two. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peposo Posted June 23, 2012 Share Posted June 23, 2012 So what would the best raid solution (format-wise)? For example if you want to share a raid volume between a mac and a pc or in this case, access the volume on a dual boot hackintosh/win 7? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
3.14r2 Posted June 24, 2012 Share Posted June 24, 2012 If all you need is read-only access, then stick with Apple provided NTFS/HFS (from bootcamp) drivers. It would be the safest choice. If you need read/write access, then use exFAT or FAT partition. FAT has single file size limit - 4GB, so if you have files larger than that, then exFAT is the only 100% safe choice. exFAT is a new file system for portable storage media like SD cards USB pen drives etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Koenkk Posted June 26, 2012 Share Posted June 26, 2012 This helped me enabling full NTFS read/write support on Lion 10.7.4. (totally free). 1. First install MacFuse 2.2.1 (http://mac.softpedia.com/get/System-Utilities/MacFUSE.shtml). 2. Then install NTFS-3G (http://macntfs-3g.blogspot.nl/2010/10/ntfs-3g-for-mac-os-x-2010102.html). 3. Reboot -> it should work now Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
coolaks Posted July 1, 2012 Share Posted July 1, 2012 I just installed Tuxera (ntfs-3g turned commercial package). Works perfect! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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