Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | |
| 2 | Macintosh HFS Filesystem for Linux |
| 3 | ================================== |
| 4 | |
| 5 | HFS stands for ``Hierarchical File System'' and is the filesystem used |
| 6 | by the Mac Plus and all later Macintosh models. Earlier Macintosh |
| 7 | models used MFS (``Macintosh File System''), which is not supported, |
| 8 | MacOS 8.1 and newer support a filesystem called HFS+ that's similar to |
| 9 | HFS but is extended in various areas. Use the hfsplus filesystem driver |
| 10 | to access such filesystems from Linux. |
| 11 | |
| 12 | |
| 13 | Mount options |
| 14 | ============= |
| 15 | |
| 16 | When mounting an HFS filesystem, the following options are accepted: |
| 17 | |
| 18 | creator=cccc, type=cccc |
| 19 | Specifies the creator/type values as shown by the MacOS finder |
| 20 | used for creating new files. Default values: '????'. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | uid=n, gid=n |
| 23 | Specifies the user/group that owns all files on the filesystems. |
| 24 | Default: user/group id of the mounting process. |
| 25 | |
| 26 | dir_umask=n, file_umask=n, umask=n |
| 27 | Specifies the umask used for all files , all directories or all |
| 28 | files and directories. Defaults to the umask of the mounting process. |
| 29 | |
| 30 | session=n |
| 31 | Select the CDROM session to mount as HFS filesystem. Defaults to |
| 32 | leaving that decision to the CDROM driver. This option will fail |
| 33 | with anything but a CDROM as underlying devices. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | part=n |
| 36 | Select partition number n from the devices. Does only makes |
| 37 | sense for CDROMS because they can't be partitioned under Linux. |
| 38 | For disk devices the generic partition parsing code does this |
| 39 | for us. Defaults to not parsing the partition table at all. |
| 40 | |
| 41 | quiet |
| 42 | Ignore invalid mount options instead of complaining. |
| 43 | |
| 44 | |
| 45 | Writing to HFS Filesystems |
| 46 | ========================== |
| 47 | |
| 48 | HFS is not a UNIX filesystem, thus it does not have the usual features you'd |
| 49 | expect: |
| 50 | |
| 51 | o You can't modify the set-uid, set-gid, sticky or executable bits or the uid |
| 52 | and gid of files. |
| 53 | o You can't create hard- or symlinks, device files, sockets or FIFOs. |
| 54 | |
| 55 | HFS does on the other have the concepts of multiple forks per file. These |
| 56 | non-standard forks are represented as hidden additional files in the normal |
| 57 | filesystems namespace which is kind of a cludge and makes the semantics for |
| 58 | the a little strange: |
| 59 | |
| 60 | o You can't create, delete or rename resource forks of files or the |
| 61 | Finder's metadata. |
| 62 | o They are however created (with default values), deleted and renamed |
| 63 | along with the corresponding data fork or directory. |
| 64 | o Copying files to a different filesystem will loose those attributes |
| 65 | that are essential for MacOS to work. |
| 66 | |
| 67 | |
| 68 | Creating HFS filesystems |
| 69 | =================================== |
| 70 | |
| 71 | The hfsutils package from Robert Leslie contains a program called |
| 72 | hformat that can be used to create HFS filesystem. See |
| 73 | <http://www.mars.org/home/rob/proj/hfs/> for details. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | |
| 76 | Credits |
| 77 | ======= |
| 78 | |
| 79 | The HFS drivers was written by Paul H. Hargrovea (hargrove@sccm.Stanford.EDU) |
| 80 | and is now maintained by Roman Zippel (roman@ardistech.com) at Ardis |
| 81 | Technologies. |
| 82 | Roman rewrote large parts of the code and brought in btree routines derived |
| 83 | from Brad Boyer's hfsplus driver (also maintained by Roman now). |