

- #MY PASSPORT FOR MAC ON LINUX HOW TO#
- #MY PASSPORT FOR MAC ON LINUX PS4#
- #MY PASSPORT FOR MAC ON LINUX DOWNLOAD#
If your hard drive experience crashes with a frequency like once in a month or two, it is fine.
#MY PASSPORT FOR MAC ON LINUX HOW TO#

#MY PASSPORT FOR MAC ON LINUX PS4#
How to Perform PS4 External Hard Drive Format.How to Format C Drive in Windows 10/7/XP.
#MY PASSPORT FOR MAC ON LINUX DOWNLOAD#
I download Nautilus and if I open as a sudo I can access the files, copy them into my home folder and modify them, but as soon as I leave sudo I can’t access them anymore. I will try the usb thing to see if It shows on the mac after that.Ībout creating a user 99:99 it’s very interesting suggestion but I don’t really know the command to do it, I’m guessing for what I’ve found:ītw I found a workaround that is not very efficient but it allows me to access my files: I think I got you, I’m a bit of a noob so some stuff It’s difficult for me. See if operating as user 99:99 under Linux has an influence on the outcome. I would advise to take a disposable USB thumb drive, format it on the Mac, move it to the Pi, do stuff and connect it back to the Mac. It could be possible that files that do not belong to 99:99 in a shared volume upset the Mac to the point it refuses to recognize the system. You could create a user on Linux matching these uid:gid and force all activity to be done under that user in you mount options. The Mac, IIRC, will set by default a USB volume as shared, and all files belong to a special user with uid:gid 99:99. Use the Mac for sensitive operations like removing journaling or heavy file system repairs. In general hfs+ on Linux is okay but not bulletproof. It’s unclear what you did and made the drive disappear from the Mac.
