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Date:      Sat, 07 Jul 2007 05:13:42 -0400
From:      nawcom <nawcom@nawcom.com>
To:        tls@panix.com, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Safely mount OS X UFS filesystem?
Message-ID:  <468F5946.1080702@nawcom.com>
In-Reply-To: <20070707023700.GA11829@panix.com>
References:  <20070707023700.GA11829@panix.com>

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Oh god i apologize for the unacceptable asnwer; i was probably 
half-asleep when i responded previously :-P

yes, theres no support as far as i know for darwin ufs for freebsd, from 
what i understand darwin ufs is gonna be the next filesystem for apple 
to ditch, and for 10.5 they will be using sun's zfs filesystem. theres 
also development going on for zfs support in the freebsd kernel.

the only thing ive done before in a situation like this is to backup the 
data (copy to alt disk) on the ufs, delete the ufs filesystem and 
replace it with hfs+ and restore the backup back onto it - assuming you 
didnt plan for that ufs partition to be bootable or anything. hfs+ is 
supported in freebsd.

I hope that's a more reasonable suggestion - looks like the coffee 
helped :-P
nawcom


Thor Lancelot Simon wrote:
> Can I, on a system running FreeBSD 6.2 or -current, safely mount a
> UFS filesystem created (and used) on Mac OS 10.4.10?  These filesystems
> are UFS1 (at fslevel 3) with big-endian datastructures in the metadata,
> 4k blocks and 1k fragments, and a few minor oddities in their layout;
> they are pretty much exactly the UFS NeXT used on their workstations.
>
> If so, Will such a filesystem be safe to mount under OS X after I use it
> on FreeBSD?
>
> I seem to be able to mount these under NetBSD though the snapshot code
> complains that inodes 64 and 16384 are not dedicated to snapshots.
>
>   




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