![]() The Ext2 Volume Manager application allows you to define mount points for your Linux partitions and change Ext2Fsd’s settings. Read-only support is fine, though, and doesn’t carry a risk of messing anything up. I’d be worried about this option, myself-a lot can go wrong. While you can theoretically enable support for writing to Linux partitions, I haven’t tested this. You can have Ext2Fsd launch at every boot or only open it when you need it. It allows Windows to read Linux file systems natively, providing access to the file system via a drive letter that any program can access. Is a Windows file system driver for the Ext2, Ext3, and Ext4 file systems.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |