leopard.sh
osxfuse
leopard.sh | osxfuse | |
---|---|---|
3 | 74 | |
22 | 8,572 | |
- | 0.9% | |
7.7 | 2.8 | |
9 months ago | 22 days ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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leopard.sh
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macOS Sonoma is available today
Indeed!
I’ve also dabbled in this area http://leopard.sh/
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Picked up this gem for $84 it is in amazing condition. So, what kind of fun things can I use it for?
I made a package manager which makes it easy to install quake: https://leopard.sh
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If you're happy with OpenBSD, probably any computer is good enough
> the iMac wasn't really useful in a modern or a retro sense
I've been trying to fight that a bit myself: https://github.com/cellularmitosis/leopard.sh
osxfuse
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why is my mac able to read the left sd card but not the right?
Install macFUSE, thank me later: https://osxfuse.github.io
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Please someone save me from file sharing hell to windows
I didn't exactly use any 'tutorial'. Assumming you can already SSH to the target machine, you just need to install both these pkgs then reboot to 1TR Recovery Mode and choosing Reduced Security and choose to enable Kernel Extension and then reboot again goto Security & Privacy and Allow the extension, and that's it you can now use it.
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Spacedrive – an open source cross-platform file explorer
Yeah, FUSE is Linux only. But for completeness, for macs there is macFUSE, and for Windows there is winfsp. Both of these have fewer filesystems than FUSE, and I've used neither so I don't know how well they work.
https://github.com/osxfuse/osxfuse/wiki/List-of-macFUSE-File...
https://winfsp.dev/doc/Known-File-Systems/
- macOS Sonoma is available today
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How do I fix this?
Weird. Where did you download (lat/new)est MacFuse from? https://osxfuse.github.io/ I hope!
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Ask HN: What are some good resources for learning about low level disk/file IO?
I lead a project that included shipping a filesystem driver and a virtual disk on Windows.
What I did to learn the lower-level APIs, and perform initial testing on the driver, was write a "mirror" drive. The user-mode code pointed to a folder on disk, the driver made a virtual disk drive, and all reads and writes in the virtual disk drive went to the mirror folder.
On Windows, you can implement something like that using Dokany, Dokan, or Winfsp. On linux, there's the Fuse API. On Mac, there's MacFUSE.
Even if you don't do a "mirror" drive, understanding the callbacks that libraries like Dokany, Dokan, Winfsp, and Fuse do helps you understand how IO happens in the driver. Many IO methods provided in popular languages provide abstractions above what the OS does. (For example, the Windows kernel has no concept of the "Stream" that's in your C# program. The "Stream"'s Position property is purely a construct within the .Net framework.)
https://dokan-dev.github.io/
https://github.com/dokan-dev/dokany
https://osxfuse.github.io/
Another place to start is the OS's documentation itself. For example, you can start with Window's CreateFileA function. This typically is what gets called "under the hood" in most programming languages when you open or create a file: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/...
- Cross-platform disk encryption
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Possible to use VeraCrypt without OSXFuse
"FUSE-T is a kext-less implementation of FUSE for macOS that uses NFS v4 local server instead of a kernel extension. The main motivation for this project is to replace macfuse (https://osxfuse.github.io/) that implements its own kext to make fuse work. With each version of macOS it's getting harder and harder to load kernel extensions. Apple strongly discourages it and, for this reason, software distributions that include macfuse are very difficult to install. Additionally, the macfuse kext is unstable, may cause frequent system crashes and kernel lock-ups. Given those limitations many software publishers are unable to use macfuse anymore. FUSE-T doesn't make use of kernel extension, it implements its own userspace server that converts between FUSE protocol and NFS calls and let macOS mount NFS volume instead of a kernel filesystem."
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Any way to write to NTFS drives from Hackintosh?
MacFuse (ntfs-3g) and a Foolproof way of getting it working via Homebrew.
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mount harddisk with different formats
macos doesn’t support many Linux file system formats. You’ll have to use something like macFUSE https://osxfuse.github.io/
What are some alternatives?
nix-installer - Install Nix and flakes with the fast and reliable Determinate Nix Installer, with over 2 million installs.
HomeBrew - 🍺 The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)
nix - Nix, the purely functional package manager
sshfs - File system based on the SSH File Transfer Protocol
Opencore-Legacy-Patcher - [Moved to: https://github.com/dortania/OpenCore-Legacy-Patcher]
homebrew-core - 🍻 Default formulae for the missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)
InterWebPPC - Mozilla for Power Macintosh.
homebrew-ntfs-3g - homebrew tap for ntfs-3g
noTunes - A simple macOS application that will prevent iTunes or Apple Music from launching.
hammerspoon - Staggeringly powerful macOS desktop automation with Lua
dilloNG - Dillo ported from Mercurial for concept testing
macOS-GateKeeper-Helper - Simple macOS GateKeeper script.