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I currently have a Buffalo Linkstation NAS device but becoming more and more unpleased with this. In the market for a better Mac friendly NAS solution. I have recently been having a lot of problems with the Buffalo file name length or special character problems. I want to move my entire file archive onto the NAS but there is no way I am going to go through and rename all my files.
Is there such thing as a HFS NAS?
I might have to get a Mac Mini and attach external hard drive instead of a nas, but this is a last resort.
Thanks.
1Is NTFS acceptable, or you only considering HFS at this time? – Brian Knoblauch – 2009-12-02T18:17:27.877
2why are you using FAT32? All my 3 Buffalo LS NAS are using XFS by default, which is about as 'Mac-friendly' as it gets, you can of course format the drives with Ext3 which is supported as well. HFS is a proprietary file system format and unless Apple will make such a NAS for their valued customers, i doubt you will find a HFS NAS, there is no real market for such a niche product. – None – 2009-12-02T18:30:00.457
Not married to hfs, just wondering what is the best solution. I should double check what format it is, but if i try to copy a long file name, or it contains a "/" or the curly f character (often used for fonts) it will fail. – Louis W – 2009-12-02T19:43:22.340
Upon closer inspection it looks like the internal drive is xfs, so why am i experiencing so many problems with file names? – Louis W – 2009-12-02T19:47:21.987
tried Ext3 instead of Xfs? – None – 2009-12-02T21:23:50.000
1Why is there all of this debate about the FS of the drives? If it is a NAS, then it is mapped via CIFS/SAMBA/NFS/AFP or some other protocol that doesn't care what format the drive is. – MDMarra – 2009-12-02T23:25:03.217