The officially official Devuan Forum!

You are not logged in.

#1 2024-09-01 22:38:42

delgado
Member
Registered: 2022-07-14
Posts: 212  

USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

The USB stick was factory formated with 'vfat' and allowed a file size of up to 4GB. I need more.
Formating it with mkfs.vfat /dev/sde1 -S 4096 should allow 16GB file size, but it's still 4GB. Using -S 32768 makes the drive disappear.
Using ntfs (NeanderTal File System) is as always slow as fuck.

Two questions:
(a) How to formate vfat, that can have files bigger than 4GB?
(b) Where is Paragon's (compared to ntfs-3g) super-fast-kernel-ntfs-driver? Or how can it be enabled?

What really makes me sick is the following: That little box I want to feed most likely runs on Linux, but it reads fuck Microsoft file systems only. Such s**t costs hours for nothing.

Offline

#2 2024-09-01 23:21:59

GlennW
Member
From: Brisbane, Australia
Registered: 2019-07-18
Posts: 644  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

If you don't need window$ formatting for window$ machines, format to ext4.

fat32 or vfat has a file size limit of 4096Mb (4gig) that's it, split the file or else...

ntfs-3g package is in "otherosfs main" ver 1.2022.10.3-1+b1

I keep mine at vfat so they work in the car, on the tv and my friends pc's.


pic from 1993, new guitar day.

Offline

#3 2024-09-02 10:12:50

pcalvert
Member
Registered: 2017-05-15
Posts: 215  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

Use GParted and format the drive as exFAT. Before doing this, make sure that exfatprogs is installed.


Freespoke is a new search engine that respects user privacy and does not engage in censorship.
Another one is called Luxxle.

Offline

#4 2024-09-02 12:58:16

delgado
Member
Registered: 2022-07-14
Posts: 212  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

Thanks for the replies.

The stick is for a TV set-top-box.
4 GB file size is easy to hit. Sadly, ext[3,4] file systems are not recognised.
Tried exfat: File size is good, but the file system is not recognised either.

Found some information on Paragon's "ntfs3" driver, e.g. https://forum.manjaro.org/t/how-to-enable-ntfs3/86049/4

$ cat /boot/config-6.9.12-amd64 | grep -i ntfs3
# CONFIG_NTFS3_FS is not set

Means recompiling the kernel to enable it.

Offline

#5 2024-09-02 22:22:14

pcalvert
Member
Registered: 2017-05-15
Posts: 215  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

It sounds like that TV box may be running a very old version of Linux, in which case it may only support the older filesystems. Try formatting the USB stick as XFS and, if that doesn't work, try ext2.


Freespoke is a new search engine that respects user privacy and does not engage in censorship.
Another one is called Luxxle.

Offline

#6 2024-09-03 08:20:58

s1mple
Member
Registered: 2023-11-13
Posts: 8  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

delgado wrote:

Using ntfs (NeanderTal File System) is as always slow as fuck.

If formatting is slow you can pass -f to mkfs.ntfs to skip zeroing the drive.

Offline

#7 2024-09-03 11:15:07

pcalvert
Member
Registered: 2017-05-15
Posts: 215  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

delgado wrote:

Found some information on Paragon's "ntfs3" driver, e.g. https://forum.manjaro.org/t/how-to-enable-ntfs3/86049/4

$ cat /boot/config-6.9.12-amd64 | grep -i ntfs3
# CONFIG_NTFS3_FS is not set

Means recompiling the kernel to enable it.

If it turns out that you absolutely must use NTFS, then I recommend using a Liquorix kernel. According to my research, ntfs-3g is enabled in Liquorix kernels.

See: https://liquorix.net/


Freespoke is a new search engine that respects user privacy and does not engage in censorship.
Another one is called Luxxle.

Offline

#8 2024-09-04 12:20:36

delgado
Member
Registered: 2022-07-14
Posts: 212  

Re: USB Stick, File Size > 4GB

Great advice, thanks a lot! Totally forgot about liquorix.

My shiny new computer does not suffer on windows, but the old one has a (more or less) big data partition formated with ntfs. For the fist time the transfer speed is in a reasonable dimension. I'm quite happy with that.

No news on the USB-stick front so far.

Offline

Board footer