Hi Hendrik, Hendrik Boom writes:
> I have a 32GiB microSD card an am reying to read it on my Devuan system. > I munted it with a simpel mount /dev/sdb1 /nedia/hendrik/ You might want to try adding a suitable mount option there. Not sure if it's mounted as FAT or VFAT or whatever, but scour the options part of the appropriate manual page. > It reads almost everything fine, except for a few files whose names > contain '/' characters. I can handle the other horribly weird > characters in file names Here `convmv` might come in handy. I often use that to clean up the "mess" after extracting zip archives with Shi*t_JIS file names on a UTF-8 using file system. Guessing your "horribly weird characters" are ISO-8859-{1,4,10,15}, (or whatever IBM code page Microsoft saw fit to appropriate for those). > -- emacs Rename in the directory editor works just fine. But the > names containing '/'s even have emacs stymied. # Hoping that Emacs on Windows isn't ;-) But fully expect it to be # stymied by file names with a `\` in it :-P > ls -l lists them like this: > > -rw-r--r-- 1 hendrik hendrik 0 Sep 1 2007 06 - Track 6.mq3 > -????????? ? ? ? ? ? 07/TRA~1.MP3 > -rw-r--r-- 1 hendrik hendrik 3585716 Sep 1 2007 08-URA~1.MP3 That `~1` looks a lot like you are actually dealing with a VFAT file system. How do things look after a mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /media/hendrik/ > With the slash, it can't even figure out the permissions, ownership, or > file size. Preumably some parts of the system interpret the '/' as the > directory name separator, and in this file system that's not what it > is. On any Unix-like system I've come across the '/' (and '\0') are about the only character that cannot be used in a filename. As mentioned above check the mount.vfat (or mount.fat or mount.cifs?) manual pages for options that might transparently "fix up" the file name. # Yes, you can use `\n` in a file name ... but please don't. > Does anyone have any ideas here other than begging, borrowing, or > buying a Windows system? It's an SD card, right? Asking a friendly neighbour to rename the file(s) in question may be the quickest way out of your conundrum. Hope this helps, -- Olaf Meeuwissen, LPIC-2 FSF Associate Member since 2004-01-27 GnuPG key: F84A2DD9/B3C0 2F47 EA19 64F4 9F13 F43E B8A4 A88A F84A 2DD9 Support Free Software https://my.fsf.org/donate Join the Free Software Foundation https://my.fsf.org/join _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng