But this is annoying, because dd will back up the entire microSD card, not just the data I want. In the past, I would use the dd utility to back up the entire card, and then I would mount that backup disk image and read data off of it. This is normally a bit tricky, because the Raspberry Pi uses the Linux ext4 filesystem-which is not compatible with either macOS or Windows! So I decided to finally try to mount the Raspberry Pi's drive directly on my MacBook Pro (running macOS Sierra 10.12). which means it could take a couple hours to copy). For my Raspberry Pi Time-Lapse App, I find myself having to either copy hundreds (or thousands!) of 3+ MB image files, or a 1-2 GB video file from a Raspberry Pi Zero W to my Mac.Ĭopying over the WiFi network works, but it's extremely slow (usually topping out around 5 Mbps.
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