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Well, that depends on the filesystem you use.

I think OS X will read

Ntfs, Fat32,UFS,Hfs,Iso9660.

 

Unless your Suse install uses any of those then no.

(And you most likely don't)

 

Possibly a longshot, but running a util like Ext2FS in Darwine could possibly work.

Well, that depends on the filesystem you use.

I think OS X will read

Ntfs, Fat32,UFS,Hfs,Iso9660.

 

Unless your Suse install uses any of those then no.

(And you most likely don't)

 

Possibly a longshot, but running a util like Ext2FS in Darwine could possibly work.

Suse are installing ReiserFS by default so Ext2FS will not work.

It was installed as ReiserFS, I believe. I tried using Ext2FS, but not Ext2FSX. Will this app read Reiser?

No, only EXT2 and evtl. EXT3.

But at least you can mount your OSX86 partition in Suse if this helps.

How can I do this?

Open a konsole and type:

#su (be root)

#fdisk -l (shows your partitions, find your OSX86)

#mkdir /tmp/OSX86 (make OSX86 folder in /tmp)

#mount -t hfsplus /dev/hda1 /tmp/OSX86 (change /dev/hda1 with your OSX86 partition)

#cd /tmp/OSX86 (change in that directory)

#ls (same as dir)

 

It works with Suse 9.3 and 10.0 out of the box, if you have an older one give a try.

If you want to keep it after each reboot, just add it to your /etc/fstab

  • 1 month later...

If you log into Suse with the same user ID in Mac, you have read and write access for HFS+ partition/disks. you'll need to edit the /etc/fstab and add this for example:

 

/dev/hda2 	/media/OSx86 	hfsplus rw,exec,auto,users	  0 0

 

Of course you'll have to change the hda2 and OSx86 to reflect your setup.

  • 1 month later...
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