I'm not sure about the exact reasons why these users use exFAT. When
aiming to mount a filesystem on Windows as well, NTFS performs just as
bad and vfat has file and filesystem size limitations, so I can imagine
cases where one needs to stick with exFAT.
Some of the SBCs have a quite powerful
I would also love to be able to ship recent Linux versions in all cases,
but as of sadly common practice of many SoC and SBC manufacturers, to
not produce open source hardware/firmware/drivers, and to provide own
outdated kernel versions with driver and firmware blobs instead of
contributing
Package: exfat-fuse
Version: 1.3.0-2
Since Debian Bullseye (also tested on Bookworm), the exfat-fuse package
does not provide the (FUSE-based) "exfat" filesystem driver, i.e. the
following commands fail if the exfat kernel module is not present, e.g.
when a different kernel is used, often th
3 matches
Mail list logo