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> 2. Cygwin does not appear to handle the advanced file system mechanics > to support mknod properly. This may be a specific thing to my > situation, but my dev kit had a sample file system. It would not untar > into cygwin without a seg fault. Can you narrow it down to a tarball containing just a single file? Or is it a fairly small tarchive? -- File attached for review. It's just a small sample fs from my dev kit mfg. -- > My workaround was to basically do this > on a VM Ware / RH machine. Annoying, but it did work. What I may > suggest is a way to have a real linux file system that you can 'mount' > and provide this functionality. This one gets raised every so often, but it's not really a cygwin issue. It requires a windows filesystem driver that knows how to mount a linux filesystem. That's a device driver, whereas cygwin is all user-mode application; if you have such a driver on your machine, the linux drive will show up in windows and have a drive letter, and will automatically be availably through /cygdrive/letter. (Yes, it would be *possible* to provide a cygwin filesystem driver that runs in usermode, and just uses ioctls to do raw sector reads and writes. Maybe porting FUSE to cygwin would be the way to go at some stage....) -- I was thinking, just for this purpose as it would be slow, to have a 'file' you could mount and it would hold the file system inside. I personally think a lot of engineers doing development have most of their tools on Windows (ok, I'm a hardware guy) and another machine sometimes isn't in the cards. Any other ways to build an embedded fs under Cygwin? Thanks, Gabriel
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Description: target_fs.tar.gz
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