USB Flash Drive Format OK?

Hope I'm posting to the right forum for this question.

Just purchased a 2gig USB flash drive that supposed to be Mac and PC compatible but will use mostly with Mac. I have some files that are formatted for example: 08/13/2007 - 13 .

When copying to the flash drive, says file name too long, but it isn't too long on the Mac so I'm guessing the Flash drive is choosing the PC formatting limitations - right?

Do I need to reformat the Flash, go for another brand, or what am I doing wrong?

TIA for any help.

TiBook G4 667, AlBook 1.25, Mac OS X (10.2.x), Also running OS X 10.3.9, 10.4.10

Posted on Aug 23, 2007 11:52 AM

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5 replies

Aug 23, 2007 12:30 PM in response to Murman

Most flash drives come formatted MSDOS - FAT16. That means you must use short filenames and no special characters. For example the '/' is a file path separator and cannot be used in a filename.

If you plan to use the device only on a Mac then format it Mac OS Extended. If you plan to use it on both a PC and a Mac, then you will need to rename Mac files for compatibility. There are utilities that will do that for you - VersionTracker or MacUpdate.

Aug 23, 2007 12:36 PM in response to Murman

The USB flash disk here and most other portable storage devices used between Windows and most any other platforms are very likely using the Microsoft FAT structures, and FAT uses short filenames of 8.3 characters -- eight character filename, and three character type -- and the more common visible filename is a long filename, and long filenames can be comprised of up to 255 characters.

In your case, / is not permitted in a FAT filename.

That's probably the trigger for the error here.

Try a different filename, and see if it copies out to the drive.

IIRC, \, *, /, :, >, <, and a few other characters are not permitted.

Aug 23, 2007 12:41 PM in response to Kappy

Kappy, FAT16 itself does provide and work with long filenames just fine. LFNs are overlaid using multiple directory entries and a particular combination of bits in the flags field bitmask. Whether a particular implementation of FAT16 (or FAT12 or FAT28, err, FAT32) deals with LFNs is another issue.

(I've written a FAT file system for another platform...)

Message was edited by: MrHoffman

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USB Flash Drive Format OK?

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