From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-ID: <37DD5EE7.51F3F340@wanadoo.fr> Date: Mon, 13 Sep 1999 22:30:31 +0200 From: Martin Costabel MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Dan Bethe CC: linuxppc-dev@lists.linuxppc.org Subject: Re: hfs resource forks in Linux References: <19990913190525.5485.rocketmail@web1006.mail.yahoo.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Sender: owner-linuxppc-dev@lists.linuxppc.org List-Id: Dan Bethe wrote: > > Hi guys. In another thread, I saw someone ask for technique to > sensibly manage HFS resource forks in Linux. Here are the following > two tools I've known. 'hfstools' is pretty flexible, and will do > encoding conversions (macbinary, binhex, etc) on the fly. Tons of > options available in that one. I dont know about hfsutils-devel other > than that it's a C library, and the rpm I found was only for i386 but > it's obviously got the docs. > I'm not sure if this is suitable for any advanced or particular use > other than general file management, but it's all I know. I found these > on www.linuxnow.com's search engine. > > ftp://ftp.varesearch.com/pub/mirrors/redhat/roughcuts/ppc/SRPMS/hfsutils-3.2-1b.src.rpm > > ftp://ftp.varesearch.com/pub/mirrors/redhat/redhat/powertools/5.2/i386/hfsutils-devel-3.2-1.i386.rpm There is a hfsutils-3.2.6-1.ppc.rpm (and a corresponding -devel-) on ftp.linuxppc.org in the contrib directory, and YDL has something similar. It is still a mystery for me why this package is not included in the LinuxPPC-dev-rel, nor on the LinuxPPC CD. I think this is a basic necessity for anyone using LinuxPPC on a Pmac. Fortunately, RedHat continues to develop it in its rawhide/powertools collection. On 2.3.xx kernels, the hfs system is broken, and it doesn't look like it will be fixed in the near future*). So for me at least, hfsutils is essential to copy things like new kernels to the MacOS system folder without having to boot MacOS. *) I saw a message on linux-kernel in which A. Sun, the maintainer of the hfs code, said that it's on his todo list, but right now "on the back burner". If that's true and nobody else steps in, we won't see HFS+ support in this century either. -- Martin ** Sent via the linuxppc-dev mail list. See http://lists.linuxppc.org/