Mounting archives with FUSE and archivemount


 
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Old 04-16-2008
Mounting archives with FUSE and archivemount

Wed, 16 Apr 2008 15:00:00 GMT
The archivemount FUSE filesystem lets you mount a possibly compressed tarball as a filesystem. Because FUSE exposes its filesystems through the Linux kernel, you can use any application to load and save files directly into such mounted archives. This lets you use your favourite text editor, image viewer, or music player on files that are still inside an archive file. Going one step further, because archivemount also supports write access for some archive formats, you can edit a text file directly from inside an archive too.


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GPHOTOFS(1)						      Debian GNU/Linux manual						       GPHOTOFS(1)

NAME
gphotofs - filesystem to mount digital cameras DESCRIPTION
GPhotoFS is a filesystem client based on libgphoto2 that exposes supported cameras as filesystems; while some cameras implement the USB Mass Storage class and already appear as filesystems (making this program redundant), many use the Picture Transfer Protocol (PTP) or some other custom protocol. But as long as the camera is supported by libgphoto2, it can be mounted as a filesystem using this program. As libgphoto2 is a userspace library for interacting with cameras, it is natural that if one to build a filesystem ontop of it, one should use FUSE, and that is what I have done. SYNOPSIS
mounting gphotofs <mountpoint> unmounting fusermount -u <mountpoint> NOTES
You must have permission to read and write the device. By default, devices recognized by libgphoto2 are created with read/write access for group "plugdev", so users must be added to this group to use GPhotoFS. LIMITATIONS
GPhotoFS currently can't add or remove directories, rename files or directories, add or modify files and get space information. SEE ALSO
fusermount(1) AUTHOR
This manpage was written by Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution, but may be used by others under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2. Debian Project 2011-07-17 GPHOTOFS(1)