On Mon, Apr 23, 2018, at 10:44, Frank J. wrote:
> Pointing DT to the mount point is only possible with "import folder".
> This will leave the fotos on the card and write the moint-point-path to
> the database and write sidecars on the card.
Ah, good point. I never use darktable to access a dev
It sounds as if this is an issue with the 'gphoto2' library, rather than
Darktable itself -- 'gphoto2' will recognize a card mounted through a
kernel driver, but not one mounted through FUSE.
--
August Schwerdfeger
aug...@schwerdfeger.name
On Mon, Apr 23, 2018 at 1:07 PM, Jean-Luc Coulon (f5ibh)
> The system mounts the card with a card reader.
>
> Pointing DT to the mount point is only possible with "import folder".
> This will leave the fotos on the card and write the moint-point-path to
> the database and write sidecars on the card.
>
This is the expected behaviour.
DT reads the files w
Am 23.04.2018 um 04:37 schrieb junkyardspar...@yepmail.net:
On Sun, Apr 22, 2018, at 00:34, Frank J. wrote:
...
After installing "exfat-fuse" and "exfat-utils" linux can read the
exfat-filesystem.
But darktable still shows in the import-tab:
"no supported devices found"
I copied the RAW-
On Sun, Apr 22, 2018, at 00:34, Frank J. wrote:
> Hallo,
> is the exFAT-Filesystem supported by darktable?
>
> In the past I used SD-Cards up to 16 GB which are formatted whith a
> FAT-filesystem. My new card is a SDXC-card with 64 GB space. My camera
> (Olympus) formatted the card with an exF
Hallo,
is the exFAT-Filesystem supported by darktable?
In the past I used SD-Cards up to 16 GB which are formatted whith a
FAT-filesystem. My new card is a SDXC-card with 64 GB space. My camera
(Olympus) formatted the card with an exFAT-filesystem.
On the first import linux (Ubuntu 16.04) and