Switcher Hangout The place for switchers to discuss their new machines, and how to work with OS X. General support can be had here for newbie stuff, like "How do I restart my new iMac?" :)

Accessing NTFS Drives


Post Reply New Thread Subscribe

 
Thread Tools
Northness

 
Member Since: May 22, 2006
Location: Houston
Posts: 13
Northness is on a distinguished road
Mac Specs: Mac Mini G4

Northness is offline
I have a home network as follows:

Mac mini, hooked up to TV
NTFS formatted Maxtor USB external hard drive
Wireless network
Dell desktop
Dell laptop
MacBook

I have just got the MacBook, and was trying to set it up to see the USB hard drive, attached to the Mac Mini

Could not do it

Called Mac support, and they said that although the Mac mini can see the directly-connected drive, other Macs cannot see it (more precisely, connect to it). He said if iy was FAT32, no problem ... but that others out there may have a workaround for this.

If I hang the USB hard drive off the Dell desktop, I can connect fine from the Macbook.

I have also hung it off a Buffalo Terrastation, and that works fine.

Anyone got any workarounds on this .. the reason I need it connected directly to the MacMini is that it has media files on, and if i try to play to the TV by streaming over the wireless network I get stutter and lip-sync problems with movies.

If connected directly to MacMini these problems disappear.

Any thoughts ?

Tks
QUOTE Thanks
Aptmunich

 
Aptmunich's Avatar
 
Member Since: Mar 09, 2004
Location: Munich
Posts: 9,075
Aptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant future
Mac Specs: Aluminium Macbook 2.4 Ghz 4GB RAM, SSD 24" Samsung Display, iPhone 4, iPad 2

Aptmunich is offline
NTFS support is currently not really built into mac OS X properly (read support is supposedly there, but for me it's been hit & miss at best).

There was an article on a new ntfs driver with full read/write support for linux that will purportedly be ported to OS X at some time...
So hang in there and all might work soon...
QUOTE Thanks
Northness

 
Member Since: May 22, 2006
Location: Houston
Posts: 13
Northness is on a distinguished road
Mac Specs: Mac Mini G4

Northness is offline
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aptmunich
NTFS support is currently not really built into mac OS X properly (read support is supposedly there, but for me it's been hit & miss at best).

There was an article on a new ntfs driver with full read/write support for linux that will purportedly be ported to OS X at some time...
So hang in there and all might work soon...
Thanks. I guess my Q. now is more for curiosity, by what is the technical issue on this ? While the Macs may be nice in many departments, this type of issue is a real pain for those switching or looking to integrate Macs into their existing infrastructure, "home network" though it may be. :doctor: http://www.mac-forums.com/forums/new...eply&p=235399#
Doctor
QUOTE Thanks
dtravis7

 
dtravis7's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jan 04, 2005
Location: Modesto, Ca.
Posts: 25,895
dtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond repute
Mac Specs: iMac C2D Late 2007 20" with 10.8.3, Macbook Santa Rosa 4GB Ram OSX 10.8.3

dtravis7 is offline
That is interesting that you have had issues reading NTFS drives on a Mac. Every time I have tried with external USB2 drives with NTFS all my Macs with Tiger have had no problems mounting or reading the NTFS drive. Of course OSX can not currently Write to NTFS, but I have never had a problem reading from any external formatted with NTFS.

Thanks for the info on the new NTFS driver for Linux. That is good news and I am sure it will find it's way into OSX eventually.
QUOTE Thanks
mynameis

 
Member Since: Sep 30, 2004
Posts: 3,378
mynameis is just really nicemynameis is just really nicemynameis is just really nicemynameis is just really nice

mynameis is offline
Why not use Fat32?
QUOTE Thanks
Northness

 
Member Since: May 22, 2006
Location: Houston
Posts: 13
Northness is on a distinguished road
Mac Specs: Mac Mini G4

Northness is offline
Quote:
Originally Posted by mynameis
Why not use Fat32?
I note the other stated advantages of NTFS (http://www.anandtech.com/guides/viewfaq.html?i=63) .. for what suxh a discussion is worth.

As a practical matter, to change it requires at least 250 MB of space I do not currently have, to back off my NTFS drive, reformat and reload.

You know the Mac ad about all the time it takes to set up a PC, while he goes and goofs off doing something else ... ???
QUOTE Thanks
Aptmunich

 
Aptmunich's Avatar
 
Member Since: Mar 09, 2004
Location: Munich
Posts: 9,075
Aptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant futureAptmunich has a brilliant future
Mac Specs: Aluminium Macbook 2.4 Ghz 4GB RAM, SSD 24" Samsung Display, iPhone 4, iPad 2

Aptmunich is offline
Well that's true - they didn't mention anything about you hooking your mac up to NTFS harddrives did they?

Personally, I just format all my external drives to either FAT32 or HFS+. If a windows machine needs to access them, I'll set up an ethernet share through my macbook.
QUOTE Thanks
baggss

 
baggss's Avatar
 
Member Since: Oct 10, 2004
Location: Margaritaville
Posts: 10,306
baggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond reputebaggss has a reputation beyond repute
Mac Specs: 27" 3.4 Ghz i7 iMac-13" C2D Macbook-OSX 18.8.2-64Gb iPad 2-32 Gb iPhone 5-ATV 2-14Tb of Storage

baggss is offline
Edited. I seem to recall reading somewhere that NTFS could be written to, by a Mac, over a network, but I think it had to be through a PC or a Windows based server.



Last edited by baggss; 07-22-2006 at 01:32 PM.
QUOTE Thanks
IronMac

 
IronMac's Avatar
 
Member Since: Dec 08, 2004
Posts: 576
IronMac is a jewel in the roughIronMac is a jewel in the rough
Mac Specs: Mini C2D 2Ghz 8GB RAM, MB C2D 2.2Ghz, MBP CD 2Ghz, 1TB TC, 2 APX, iPhone 4, ATV2, 23in ACD x2

IronMac is offline
Is it me or was the issue that he couldnt see the drive attached to the mini over the network?
QUOTE Thanks
dtravis7

 
dtravis7's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jan 04, 2005
Location: Modesto, Ca.
Posts: 25,895
dtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond repute
Mac Specs: iMac C2D Late 2007 20" with 10.8.3, Macbook Santa Rosa 4GB Ram OSX 10.8.3

dtravis7 is offline
I also format all MY externals FAT 32 or Journalized HFS+ but when working with other peoples drives, I have no control how they are formatted. It's nice that OSX will at least read NTFS for now anyway for the few times I may need to work with a customers drive and not have to fire up a PC to read it.
QUOTE Thanks
Avalon

 
Avalon's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jun 25, 2004
Location: Luxemburg, Europe
Posts: 1,779
Avalon is just really niceAvalon is just really niceAvalon is just really niceAvalon is just really nice
Mac Specs: PowerMac G5 Dual 2GHz (June 2004), 2.5GB, Airport, black 5G iPod 30GB, white MacBook 2.0 2GB

Avalon is offline
Quote:
Originally Posted by Northness
Thanks. I guess my Q. now is more for curiosity, by what is the technical issue on this ? While the Macs may be nice in many departments, this type of issue is a real pain for those switching or looking to integrate Macs into their existing infrastructure, "home network" though it may be. :doctor: http://www.mac-forums.com/forums/new...eply&p=235399#
Doctor
The technical issue is pretty simple. Microsoft in it's un-openness, is not interested in supporting HFS (hence why Windows can't even see a directly connected HFS volume), and does not share much information about their NTFS filesystem. That's why, by default Linux, UNIX and OS X can only read, but not write to NTFS. I think there are some 3rd party solutions, at least for Linux.
If you connect your drive to a PC, and access it over the network, the SMB protocol takes care of the "translation", which enables other systems to write to it, and it also enables Windows to read/write a HFS volume. So integrating Macs into an existing network infrastructure is not really an issue.

Connecting an USB/Firewire device directly to a computer has nothing to do with a network, no matter if it's a home network or any kind of business network. :cool:
QUOTE Thanks
fliP
Guest
 
Posts: n/a

Newbie here, first post. I ordered a powermac pro yesterday and should get it next week. I think this thread is for me becuase I have a couple of hard drives I would like to write to but unfortunately they are NTFS of course. That would mean I have to transfer them elsewhere and then re format into Fat32? OS X can write on Fat 32 correct? Kinda sucks. I hope the NTFS write integration makes into an OS update soon.
QUOTE Thanks
Avalon

 
Avalon's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jun 25, 2004
Location: Luxemburg, Europe
Posts: 1,779
Avalon is just really niceAvalon is just really niceAvalon is just really niceAvalon is just really nice
Mac Specs: PowerMac G5 Dual 2GHz (June 2004), 2.5GB, Airport, black 5G iPod 30GB, white MacBook 2.0 2GB

Avalon is offline
Quote:
Originally Posted by fliP
Newbie here, first post. I ordered a powermac pro yesterday and should get it next week. I think this thread is for me becuase I have a couple of hard drives I would like to write to but unfortunately they are NTFS of course. That would mean I have to transfer them elsewhere and then re format into Fat32? OS X can write on Fat 32 correct? Kinda sucks. I hope the NTFS write integration makes into an OS update soon.
Yes, OS X can write to FAT32. If you plan to use those disks with both Windows and OS X, that's the way to go. Otherwise, you should use HFS.
And for NTFS writing, the lack of it is due to MS politics, so chances are that it won't ever be available, except maybe through a 3rd party developper.
Making NTFS writable on an unsupported OS means reverse engineering the NTFS protocol...something Apple can't do for legal reasons.

Another possibility would be to format them in HFS, connect them to the Mac, put the PC and the Mac on a network. Due to the SMB network protocol, it doesn't matter what physical filesystem is present, you can always read/write.
QUOTE Thanks
fliP
Guest
 
Posts: n/a

My problem with Fat32 is it only supports 32Gb partitions IIRC? At least that's what I read somewhere yesterday.
I'm going to have to find a place to dump my 300Gb drive so I can re format it into HFS. Ideally, I would like a format to use that would allow writing by OSX AND WinXP without partition size limitations.
QUOTE Thanks
dtravis7

 
dtravis7's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jan 04, 2005
Location: Modesto, Ca.
Posts: 25,895
dtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond reputedtravis7 has a reputation beyond repute
Mac Specs: iMac C2D Late 2007 20" with 10.8.3, Macbook Santa Rosa 4GB Ram OSX 10.8.3

dtravis7 is offline
FAT 32 does not have a limit of 32GB, it's XP's formatter that has that limit. The limit of FAT32 is at least 2TB. You can format with a Win 98 or ME boot CD or on OSX even.

Here is a URL that might help.

http://www.allensmith.net/Storage/HDDlimit/FAT32.htm
QUOTE Thanks

Post Reply New Thread Subscribe


« WWWWEEEEEeee it is here it is here | Cleaning macs »
Thread Tools

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
DVD R or DVD RW? (Difference?) Joeytpg Switcher Hangout 17 03-24-2010 10:09 AM
Any solution? iTunes and multible drives gribou iPod Hardware and Accessories 0 01-10-2006 08:46 AM
NTFS External HDD & my iBook? MrChris Apple Notebooks 11 02-10-2005 07:35 AM
Mounting Network Drives SogniX Internet, Networking, and Wireless 2 03-10-2004 03:09 PM
Mac unable to see network drives tzarhar Internet, Networking, and Wireless 1 03-10-2004 11:32 AM

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:47 PM.

Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
X

Welcome to Mac-Forums.com

Create your username to jump into the discussion!

New members like you have made this community the ultimate source for your Mac since 2003!


(4 digit year)

Already a member?