![]() Sudo fuse-xfs /dev/disk3sX/ /Volumes/Test1/ (where, again, X = 1 to 3)įailure reading signature: Is a directoryįailed to read XFS signature on /Volumes/Test1/ But when I run that from the command line I get: But that was just the OS partition of the drive, not the files I need.īased on that - and some other Googling about the NAS - I'm pretty sure that the data partition is XFS. I installed it, rebooted, and the computer then mounted 1 of the partions (the first one) - and Disk Utility recognized it as Extended File System 3 (or some wording like that). I found a free trial of a program called "ExtFS for Mac OS X" - which says it handles ext2, ext3, and ext4. I get an error (on each partition) saying:įuse-ext2: version:'0.0.7', fuse_version:'27' įuse-ext2: Failed to access '/dev/disk3s3/' ![]() "sudo fuse-ext2 /dev/disk3sX/ /Volumes/Test1/" (where X = 1 TO 3 for the 3 partitions) I installed FUSE FOR OS X with the compatibility layer, and fuse-ext2, but when I plug the disk in, I still get the error that it's unreadable by the computer. I'm trying to mount the disk to just rescue my files. ![]() I have a NAS that died, but when I connect the hard drive to my Mac it appear to work fine.
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