I tell you my problem: I want to create a FAT file system and save it into a file so I can mount it in linux using something like:
sudo mount -t msdos
Maybe I'm wrong and this cannot be done.
Anyway, the problem is this: I'm trying to create the file containing a FAT file system, and I'm running this command:
sudo mkfs.vfat -F 32 -r 112 -S 512 -v -C "test.fat" 100
That, accordingly to the mkfs man page, will create a FAT32 file system with 112 rootdir entries, logical sector size of 512 bytes, 100 blocks in total, and save it into "test.fat".
But it fails, and the bash tells me:
mkfs.vfat: unable to create test.fat
What is going on? I think I am misunderstanding how mkfs works and how to use it. It is possible to write a filesystem into a file?
Answer
You have a file of 0 bytes in size. You can only create a filesystem on a file that has a specified size.
Here is how to do it properly:
dd if=/dev/zero of=fat.fs bs=1024 count=SIZE
how big do you want the filesystem; specify it asSIZE * 1024
.mkfs.vfat fat.fs
formats the file as the filesystem FAT.mount -o loop fat.fs /mnt
mounts fat.fs to/mnt
.
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