Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

BeSweeet

macrumors 68000
Original poster
Apr 2, 2009
1,566
1,269
San Antonio, TX
So, my Windows 7 partition is FAT (not FAT32 or NTFS). Does OS X have native read/write support for FAT partitions? I had NTFS-3G + MacFUSE installed since day one, but if I don't need it, I'd like to remove it.
 

Bengt77

macrumors 68000
Jun 7, 2002
1,522
7
Europe
Before answering your question, I'd like to state that it's not very sensible to install Windows 7 on a FAT partition. Much of the progress Windows has made since Windows 2000 and much of the stability it has gained is due to NTFS. It is just a much better file system than FAT32 could ever be, let alone FAT16. By the way, are you sure it actually is FAT16? I can't imagine Windows 7 would want to run on FAT16...

As for you question: yes, Mac OS X can both read from and write to FAT16 and FAT32 partitions. So in a way you don't need NTFS-3G, but I suggest you keep it installed and reformat your Boot Camp drive. All newer Windows versions run much, much better on NTFS.
 

Stridder44

macrumors 68040
Mar 24, 2003
3,973
198
California
So, my Windows 7 partition is FAT (not FAT32 or NTFS). Does OS X have native read/write support for FAT partitions? I had NTFS-3G + MacFUSE installed since day one, but if I don't need it, I'd like to remove it.


:confused: Well that's impossible because 7 (and Vista for that matter) will only install on NTFS.

From a Microsoft article (couldn't find an exact page outlining it for 7, but the same rules would apply):

To perform the Windows Vista installation, the drive on which you want to install Windows Vista must use the NTFS file system.
 

BeSweeet

macrumors 68000
Original poster
Apr 2, 2009
1,566
1,269
San Antonio, TX
I read an article earlier today that tells you how to enable native NTFS read/write in Snow Leopard without NTFS-3G or MacFUSE. So while I was installing those two things, I noticed that Disk Utility said it was MS-DOS (FAT). When I did a Get Info on my Windows 7 drive on my desktop, it says "NTFS-3g (MacFUSE)". I'm pretty sure it's NTFS now. I was just getting a little bit confused.

Oh wait: Now I remember why I got confused. Here: http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20090913140023382 it says I have to get my UUID for my NTFS partition. But in Disk Utility, it doesn't give me that:
screenshot20091002at123.jpg


Maybe this is what was causing my VMWare Fusion/Parallels problems...

The last thing I did to this partition was use WinClone (when I made an image of the partition, deleted it, made it bigger, formatted it to NTFS, then restore the image).
 

Bengt77

macrumors 68000
Jun 7, 2002
1,522
7
Europe
That's quite weird, as on my MacBook Disk Utility definitely identifies my Windows Vista partition as a Windows NT File System (NTFS) volume.
 

balamw

Moderator emeritus
Aug 16, 2005
19,365
979
New England
That's quite weird, as on my MacBook Disk Utility definitely identifies my Windows Vista partition as a Windows NT File System (NTFS) volume.

Here too. BeSweet, did you use the latest Winclone? I just did something similar on my 13" (backup with Winclone, move and enlarge on a larger drive) and it looks fine as NTFS, but I used the latest Winclone that is Snow Leopard happy.

B
 

Bengt77

macrumors 68000
Jun 7, 2002
1,522
7
Europe
No, I'm not using Winclone. I've used it in the past, but now it wants to install some software it needs to run, which I won't let it. So now I can't use it anymore. I might try the latest version to see if that doesn't need to install anything extra.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.