Tools to access and modify a file system image without having to
mount it.
Classic commands included (prefixed with fsu_):
* cat, diff, du, find, ls
* chflags, chmod, chown, mv, rm, rmdir
* cp, ln, mkdir, mkfifo, mknod, touch
New commands:
* fsu_ecp (cp-like which allows the user to get/put files from/to the image)
* fsu_exec (executes a local command like text editor on a file from the image)
* fsu_write (writes its input in a file on the image)
* fsu_console (a command console tool that uses previous commands and adds
directory browsing)
This package is enabled only for NetBSD 4.99.72 and newer.
- assume that Python 2.4 and 2.5 are compatible and allow checking for
fallout.
- remove PYTHON_VERSIONS_COMPATIBLE that are obsoleted by the 2.3+
default. Modify the others to deal with the removals.
djmount is a UPnP AV client. It mounts the media content of
compatible UPnP AV devices as a Unix filesystem.
Djmount automatically discovers all UPnP AV Media Servers on the
network, and makes the content available in a directory tree. All
shared files (e.g. Audio or Video files) are directly visible and can
be played using your favorite media player.
[15:53:42] agc@inspiron1300 ~ 190 > df /mnt
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail %Cap Mounted on
/dev/puffs 28101396 20741466 5954862 77% /mnt
[15:53:44] agc@inspiron1300 ~ 191 > l /mnt
total 5
dr-xr-xr-x 5 root wheel 512 Jan 1 2000 .
drwxr-xr-x 37 root wheel 1536 Mar 15 13:22 ..
dr-xr-xr-x 5 root wheel 512 Jan 1 2000 .debug
dr-xr-xr-x 8 root wheel 512 Jan 1 2000 INSPIRON1300: Alistair Crooks:
dr-xr-xr-x 7 root wheel 512 Jan 1 2000 MediaTomb
-r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 41 Jan 1 2000 devices
[15:54:23] agc@inspiron1300 ~ 192 >
- Ask for a password in the terminal so that it doesn't show in ps.
- Support different codepages.
- Support for SOCKS proxy.
- Bug fixes.
Add CFLAGS.NetBSD+=-D_NETBSD_SOURCE to make it build.
I'm not sure about FUSE_VERSION vs. FUSE_USE_VERSION in different
implementations, so define FUSE_USE_VERSION from FUSE_VERSION if it
does not exist and use that.
2007-04-17 CHANGES:
- fixed a stupid bug that avoids mounting the root of a server
- documented the optional port for mounting a webdav server
- improved attribute caching for some special cases
While I can find little documentation out there, it seems to work
quite well for me (Subversion 1.4.4 + apr1). Thusfar it's seemed
quite speedy and useful. I'm thinking that fuse might be an interesting
way to get distfiles (curlftpfs) or source snapshots into pkgsrc.
* Fix: successful hard link removal may reported "Input/Output error".
* Fix: listing the content of a single directory having over 600,000 files
and subdirectories may returned "Input/Output error" or truncated
directory listing.
* Fix: atime mount option didn't work.
* Fix: POSIX file time updates (file access and modification times, inode
change time). Please note, though NTFS-3G updates the times correctly now,
FUSE may keep caching old, invalid time attributes for a short time after
rename(2), creat(2), and some file operations which involve hard links.
FUSE has fixed already the first two cases and they may be included in
the Linux kernel 2.6.24 release.
* New: relatime support was added and made the default atime update method.
* Fix: reads over the end of a file could return "invalid argument" error
using some recent kernels. This problem may have caused Thunderbird
to hang.
* Fix: some faulty versions of the gcc compiler have crashed during
compilation.
* Fix: the utimes(2) system call may incorrectly updated the last status
change filestamp.
* Change: the ntfs.streams.list extended attribute enumerates Alternate
Data Streams (ADS) '\0' separated.
- UTF8 internationalization of filenames, volumes and servers
- proper uid/gid mapping to enable environments with a common or different user directory
- DHX2 UAM from Derrik Pates
- fixes to deal with the Apple Airport Extreme quirks
- fixes to deal with netatalk quirks
- improved status output for debugging
- various small bug fixes
* fix: big-endian problems exposed by the NTFS-3G Test Suite.
* fix: free space calculation may was wrong for >1 TB volumes.
* fix: some faulty Thunderbird versions caused system log flooding.
* fix: uClibc and uClinux improvements.
* fix: logging improvements.
* fix: many other minor fixes.
* fix: unwritten sparse file regions could get corrupted if the end
of a write wasn't aligned to cluster boundary. Sparse files are very
rarely used, most typically by bittorent clients.
* fix: creation of read-only files failed.
* change: free inode calculation was CPU intensive during write activity.
This could reduce write performance when millions of files are used if
a file manager or desktop applet regularly polled for disk space usage.
Now the statfs() system call is constant time.
* change: file creation performance is improved by 40-80%.
* change: smart directory traversal is 20-200% faster for disk based and
300-600% faster for memory cache based traversals.
STABLE Version 1.913 (September 13, 2007) Release Notes
* change: free disk space calculation was highly CPU intensive during
write activity. This could reduce write performance severely, especially
for huge volumes if a file manager or desktop applet regularly polled
for disk space usage. Now the calculation is constant time, around only
10 microseconds on a typical desktop, and it's completely independent
of the volume size.
* fix: hibernation check was too rigid and mount was refused in read/write
mode unnecessarily in some cases.
* all performance improvements included unchanged from the 1.910-RC test
release. Please see those details below.
Version 1.910-RC (September 10, 2007) -- Release Notes
* change: significantly improved the performance of writing many files,
typically by 50-1000% (copying files, unpacking, untarring packages,
compilation, directory synchronization, ...).
* change: improved the performance of writing multi-GB size files,
particularly after the creation of many thousands of other files.
Previous disk space defragmentation is highly advised for the best
possible speed. File level defragmentation is not enough.
* change: improved concurrent write performance.
* fix: file rename may updated the modification time of some files which
caused some backup tools, like rsync, not to preserve always
this timestamp.
* fix: unmount (fusermount -u) was denied for an unprivileged user who
was allowed to mount a block device. FUSE 2.7.0+ user space package
is required for the full fix.
* fix: the driver could hang if there wasn't enough memory during reading
a large directory
* fix: reading a directory may reported success when there was an error
* fix: metadata update error was ignored in some very rare cases during
writing a file
* fix: permissions checking was turned on if umask, fmask and dmask was
set to the default 000 value.
* change: manual update, added Windows filename compatibility section
* change: lots of logging improvements
WikipediaFS is a mountable virtual file system that allows to read and
edit articles from Wikipedia (or any Mediawiki-based site) as if they
were real files.
It is thus possible to view and edit articles using your favourite
text-editor. Text-editors tend to be more convenient than a simple
browser form when it comes to editing large texts and they generally
include useful features such as Mediawiki syntax highlighting and
spell checking.
Advanced usage of WikipediaFS includes easy development of scripts and
bots. Programs simply have to deal with normal files because this is
WikipediaFS which takes care of the HTTP layer. For example, it would
be possible to use WikipediaFS to perform a massive content migration
from an existing site to a Mediawiki.
Features
* Reading and editing articles, including subpages.
* User * configuration : add your own Mediawiki.
* Editing with your login
* HTTPS, HTTP authentication, proxy.
* fix: move, rename and hard link could return "input/output error"
* fix: very rare, recoverable directory corruption
* fix: portability improvements
* change: more troubleshooting hints if a volume can't be mounted
* change: logging improvements
* new: install executables to the root file system otherwise mount
could fail during boot
* fix: any kind of file size change failure returned "Operation not permitted"
* fix: file close failure was not always reported
* fix: unmount failure was not always reported
* fix: file creation always gave "input/output error" if the $MFT Bitmap
wasn't up-to-date
* fix: converting very long file names to Unicode may failed
* fix: syslog messages didn't show the low level error detail
* fix: compilation improvements on OS X and NetBSD
afpfs-ng is an Apple Filing Protocol client that will allow a Linux
system to see files exported from a Mac OS system with AFP over TCP.
With thanks to Jared for the nudge.