Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
Please see my response to your previous report of this:
http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/issues/detail?id=372
There is no "MacFuse 1.2 Beta 3". There is no "MacFuse program" that you need
to "run". MacFUSE is not a "remote" file
system. (You can write remote file systems using MacFUSE as a building block
though.)
I think you are talking about this:
http://groups.google.com/group/MacFusion-devel
If so, you should report issues on that web site. MacFusion requires MacFUSE,
but is otherwise an entirely different project.
Original comment by si...@gmail.com
on 21 Aug 2008 at 10:52
Yes, you are right
I was a bit confused about MacFuse and MacFusion and see a bit clearer now. And
even the "Issue" got solved in a way: The big file needs longer housekeeping
procedures at the end of copying so the timeout is issued. If I just let him
"retry", it works as expected
Thank you for mentioning the proper address to report this timeout problem.
And thank you for for delivering this great feature to the MacOs, so we can use
remote servers just the same as a volume within the computer itself: this is
how it should be!
WiLi
Original comment by wi...@gmx.de
on 21 Aug 2008 at 11:55
> I was a bit confused about MacFuse and MacFusion and see a bit clearer now.
And
> even the "Issue" got solved in a way: The big file needs longer housekeeping
> procedures at the end of copying so the timeout is issued. If I just let him
> "retry", it works as expected
On Leopard, there's no timeout dialog. (Mainly because the kernel interface
needed to display that dialog is
deprecated in Leopard.) So, on Leopard, MacFUSE will have no choice but to
unceremoniously eject any
volume upon timeout. Jarring as it may sound, this is to protect the system
from locking up.
If you know that the file system you are mounting will be performing operations
that outlast the timeout, you
can use a custom value for the timeout. It's the daemon_timeout mount-time
option. The value you specify
represents the timeout in seconds.
Original comment by si...@gmail.com
on 22 Aug 2008 at 12:14
No, I do not use Leopard, since my computer is a G3 iBook. I use 10.4.11 . It
is a
pity that many programs and system additions are not continued for the G3. Is
it not
a computer anymore?
Also MacFusion in the newer release is for Leopard only.
I am a bit uncertain now whether I have a possibility to change the timeout
value in
Tiger and would be happy if can advise further.
Thank you
WiLi
Original comment by wi...@gmx.de
on 22 Aug 2008 at 7:39
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
wi...@gmx.de
on 21 Aug 2008 at 10:31