OSX does not provide native support for EXT2 and EXT3 file systems, thus preventing access to the data contained within.
For my first Raspberry Pi project, I had decided that I would attempt to create a speech-to-text-to-speech background service. For this concept, my Raspbian install needed to run headless, access a wireless network, and possess the ability to record and playback audio files.
In the early stages of the project, I was in the process of editing files within /etc/init.d, (initializes system processes during boot) and I made a code error in my script. Since this script was configured to run during the boot process, when it crashed, it prevented the SSH server daemon from running. Unable to use SSH and without access to a monitor, I began looking into a way to read my Raspbian file system from within OSX.
Through my research, I came across a solution that is relatively easy, but requires a few minutes to setup initially. First, you will need to download and install VirtualBox and install an image of your favorite linux distro. I used Elementary OS since Raspbian will not run on x86 architecture, but Debian or Ubuntu should work just as well. Once you have a virtual machine up and running, you will want to install Guest Additions to allow for access to USB devices.
Once installed, you can plug your EXT2/3 formatted SD card into an USB card reader and insert it into your Mac. You will now need to “eject” any of the freshly mounted partitions in OSX in order to free them for use within the virtual machine. Once ejected from within OSX, USB devices can be enabled from VirualBox’s Devices menu.
Using this process, I was able to mount my Raspbian partitions to /media/root/ from within VirtualBox and update my erroneous scripts. Good luck!
8 replies on “Access Raspbian SD Cards in OSX”
Or you can use FUSE for OS X and fuse-ext2. That way you can always access those file systems without booting up a virtual machine. By the way, VirtualBox conflicts with Parallels Desktop. Very irritating while developing on a Vbox VM while needing to check websites in Internet Explorer, but thats offtopic.
http://osxfuse.github.io/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/fuse-ext2/
Btw, you can totally run WordPress on the Raspberry Pi with nginx and MariaDB. It will run quite well after optimizing nginx and MariaDB for low memory and using nginx fastcgi_cache with long cache times.
I do have plans for WordPress integration with the project, so this is good to know. I may use a LAMP stack since I’m more familiar with it, but if I get past the experimental phase, I would want to give nginx a try.
Nginx is easier then Apache imho. Check out some of these tutorials: http://daan.kortenba.ch/wordpress-nginx-tutorials/
Wow, that is a wealth of information. Bookmarked!