![]() ExFATĮxFAT is for those of you who are finding it hard to use FAT with all the limits, especially the large file transfer issue. Most drives are formatted in MS – DOS (FAT) out of the box. But apart from that, this will be the format you’ll want to use if you want a drive with cross-compatibility for quick transfers, or temporary storage. One of the major limitations of this format is that it’s not able to write files larger than 4GB, which can be quite a setback. MS-DOS (FAT) is the most popular format amongst external hard disks, as it’s both readable and writable by nearly all operating systems, Windows and OS X included. With Disk Utility, you have 3 main formats that you can erase your disk to. Once done, press Enter, and your disk should be erased and formatted completely. For example, I’d use “disk2s2” if I wanted to erase Untitled only in the example below: Use eraseDisk to erase the entire external disk, or eraseVolume if you just want to erase a particular partition. If you want to reformat, replace eraseDisk with reformat and delete the “JHFS+” and “diskname” parts of the command. ![]() Change “diskname” to the new name you want for the disk, and replace “diskidentifier” to the Disk Identifier obtained from Disk Utility. In the command above, change “JHFS+” to “ HFS+” if you want a volume that is not journalled. Diskutil eraseDisk JHFS+ diskname diskidentifier
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