Mac OS X / Darwin man pages : mount_hfs (8)
mount_hfs (8)
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mount_hfs - mount an HFS/HFS+ file system
mount_hfs [-e encoding] [-u uid] [-g gid] [-m mask] [-o options] [-w]
[-x] special | node
The mount_hfs command attaches the HFS file system residing on the device
special to the global file system namespace at the location indicated by
node. This command is normally executed by mount(8)
at boot time.
The options are as follows:
- -e encoding (standard HFS volumes only)
-
Specify the Macintosh encoding. The following encodings are supported:
Arabic, ChineseSimp, ChineseTrad, Croatian, Cyrillic, Greek,
Hebrew, Icelandic, Japanese, Korean, Roman (default), Romanian,
Thai, Turkish
- -u uid
- Set the owner of the files in the file system to uid. The
default owner is the owner of the directory on which the file
system is being mounted.
- -g gid
- Set the group of the files in the file system to gid. The
default group is the group of the directory on which the file
system is being mounted.
- -m mask
-
Specify the maximum file permissions for files in the file system.
(For example, a mask of 755 specifies that, by default, the
owner should have read, write, and execute permissions for files,
but others should only have read and execute permissions. See
chmod(1)
for more information about octal file modes.) Only the
nine low-order bits of mask are used. The default mask is taken
from the directory on which the file system is being mounted.
- -o
- Options are specified with a -o flag followed by a comma separated
string of options. See the mount(8)
man page for possible
options and their meanings.
- -w
- Mount the HFS wrapper volume.
- -x
- Disable execute permissions on a standard HFS file system.
mount(2)
, unmount(2)
, fstab(5)
, mount(8)
Some HFS file systems with highly fragmented catalog files may not mount.
The mount_hfs utility first appeared in Mac OS X Server 1.0.
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