[Q] Which kernel/ROMS support > 4GB camera files - Sprint Samsung Galaxy S III

I am trying to find the right ROM which would let me take > 33 min videos with the camera. I am trying Chemistry ROM now (LJ7, android 4.1.1).. while it is working with my exFAT formatted SD card, the camera stops @ 4.2GB file size.
Any suggestions would be GREATLY appreciated for a webcast I'm doing soon.

In case anyone falls upon this same problem, I found a better solution. Instead of using exFAT, use NTFS. It is better supported on all platforms. Simply format the card with NTFS on any modern Windows machine. Then search and install Paragon NTFS on Google Play. It will simply work.
mycall0 said:
I am trying to find the right ROM which would let me take > 33 min videos with the camera. I am trying Chemistry ROM now (LJ7, android 4.1.1).. while it is working with my exFAT formatted SD card, the camera stops @ 4.2GB file size.
Any suggestions would be GREATLY appreciated for a webcast I'm doing soon.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Re: [Q] Which kernel/ROMS support > 4GB camera files
mycall0 said:
In case anyone falls upon this same problem, I found a better solution. Instead of using exFAT, use NTFS. It is better supported on all platforms. Simply format the card with NTFS on any modern Windows machine. Then search and install Paragon NTFS on Google Play. It will simply work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was about to suggest that it probably has to do with your card being formatted to some sort of FAT filesystem....but anyway, nice :good:
Put "SOLVED" in your threads title, thanks

Related

What filesystem should I format my 32GB microsd card to?

So I got a great deal on a class 10 32GB Samsung card, it came pre-formatted to fat32, however I had the wild idea that android supported NTFS based on something I read in the past so I formatted it to NTFS on a windows system and copied some files over (some being over 5GB each)...plugged in my card and turned on my phone and I get a message saying my card is blank or the wrong file format...guess it doesn't support NTFS
I know if I use the phones built in format utility it will format to fat32 which I don't really want because of the filesize limitation, I'd like to be able to copy 8-10GB files every so often so I can use my phone as a little shuttle drive in between places...
But I also want the ability for windows to be able to read my sd card if I change my phone into USB mode so I think that excludes the ext3, ext4 format which I think android will read...
Any ideas?
Won't happen search and you will find threads on this before
You will also find a Q&A section that this belongs in
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
There's an app in the market that will mount any file formatted sdcard in the device I but I haven't used it out remember the name but you can check it and yes this belongs in Q&A but The way you format is fat 32
Touched by an Epic 4G w/Cm9 & Fueled by the NY Giants 2012
Got that Newegg deal as well! Can't wait for it to arrive. Interested in the answer as well as I hope to put some high quality movies there.
Sent from my badass Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1.
So I found an ntfs app in the market that'll mount ntfs at startup but I gotta root for it work. Guess I now have a reason to root
Oh but it says it was made for the galaxy tab...but it opens fine on my s ii
Sent from my SPH-D710 using the XDA mobile application powered by Tapatalk
btw where is the Q&A section i should be looking for? xda has gotten so huge i'm lost at least i can find the e4gt forum
maybe i should change the title of my thread to what filesystems can i format my sd card to that my phone will read?
if you use windows, fat32 is the way to go so then you can connect the phone to computer and still can access the files
t0mmyr said:
btw where is the Q&A section i should be looking for? xda has gotten so huge i'm lost at least i can find the e4gt forum
maybe i should change the title of my thread to what filesystems can i format my sd card to that my phone will read?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is a Q&A section right under general in the epic touch
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
charles98 said:
if you use windows, fat32 is the way to go so then you can connect the phone to computer and still can access the files
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The reason the op doesn't want fat32 is because he has single files that exceeds 4 GB that he wants to transfer, so fat32 would not work for him.
im0rtalz said:
The reason the op doesn't want fat32 is because he has single files that exceeds 4 GB that he wants to transfer, so fat32 would not work for him.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
maybe drive mount in market but lots of bad reviews....May work don't know
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
Windows also recognized NTFS by the way.
out of curiosity, does anyone know if any custom roms support ntfs sd cards nativey?
t0mmyr said:
out of curiosity, does anyone know if any custom roms support ntfs sd cards nativey?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
None because Android does not.....
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
format it ext3/4 and then install an ftp server app on your phone.
There is an app that works fine
I have exactly the same problem. I want to have the sdcard in NTFS so then I do not have the 4GB limitation of FAT32. The is possible to have .mkv files on your phone or tablet.
In the case of my table the N8010, I have formatted the sd card on Windows with NTFS. Then installed the "paragon" app from market which works very good. It recognized the sd card in NTFS and mount perfectly. But it seems that when your card is overloaded with thounsands of files and some big 6GB file, then comes the problem. Android JB everytime that comes out of sleep, it will check for errors the sd card. Everytime! Then, I get the message "sd card checking for errors" and never gets back. The sd card is not recognized anymore until I reboot the device.
I think that the paragon app is not perfect and might have bugs, but
Is there any way to disable the "sd card check for error" functionality? Have read some threads about it, to delete some file from system, but that method produces inconsistencies with other apps.
By the way, I have tried to format on ExFat, and had the same problem. When the card is almost full it will never end up checking for errors. I finally broke the sd card when I formated it with ExFat and 64k allocation size. It was not regoznized neither by windows and android afterwards
thanks
cla20000 said:
By the way, I have tried to format on ExFat, and had the same problem. When the card is almost full it will never end up checking for errors. I finally broke the sd card when I formated it with ExFat and 64k allocation size. It was not regoznized neither by windows and android afterwards
thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't think you broke it unless you fried the flash chips. You can try using the disk manager in windows and try to see if it sees it. Or just learn how to use Linux command line tools and fix it that way. I recovered 80% of my pictures off of a dead SD card using dd and a file recovery utility. I don't recall which one. That 16GB SD card now works just fine as a 12GB card. I don't trust it for any more than shuttling between systems though.
Also, I've never had good luck with exFAT. I much prefer the EXT filesystems, but they aren't natively supported in windows or most cameras. Maybe try NTFS without journaling (If that's even possible)
Please read forum rules before posting
Questions and help issues go in Q&A
Thread moved
Thank you for your cooperation
Friendly Neighborhood Moderator
exfat is proprietary windows and needs licenses. android won't support it.
ntfs is a journaling file system and will impact performance if you can get android to read it.
ext2/3 is the best solution. there are utilities you can install so windows can read it.
calisro said:
exfat is proprietary windows and needs licenses. android won't support it.
ntfs is a journaling file system and will impact performance if you can get android to read it.
ext2/3 is the best solution. there are utilities you can install so windows can read it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ext2Fsd is excellent for Windows 7, I don't know what I'd do without it.
sent from my ET4G on Paranoid Android using XDA Premium HD in hybrid mode

Problems Formatting SD Card/Working In Phone

I seem to be having problems formatting my Sandisk 64GB MicroSDXC (Class 10) card in FAT32 & having it work in my AT&T Galaxy S3. The card comes preformatted in exFAT, and it works in the phone just fine that way. But, I heard it's best to format it in FAT32 due to some issues I saw about some people having some of their music files not show-up (if they have a rather large music collection, which I do - 85GB's worth!) in whatever music playing program they're using, so I'm attempting to format it with FAT32 to avoid that. Now, Windows 7 (x64) does NOT allow you to format drives via FAT32 (unless you go into DOS), so I've used a couple of different programs (Fast32Format, EASEUS PartiionMaster); I got a message on my Galaxy S3 saying my SD card was damaged or missing when I used Fast32Format); a bunch of services stopped working on the phone when I formatted it using EASEUS PartionMagic, and I even tried formatting it in NTFS (which I think that Android doesn't support) & got a message my SD card was blank and Android wouldn't even mount it!
What am I doing wrong? How can I format it in FAT32 and have it work in my Galaxy S3?!! Do I even really need to use FAT32 instead of exFAT?
Thanks,
Dennis
dmw_4814 said:
I seem to be having problems formatting my Sandisk 64GB MicroSDXC (Class 10) card in FAT32 & having it work in my AT&T Galaxy S3. The card comes preformatted in exFAT, and it works in the phone just fine that way. But, I heard it's best to format it in FAT32 due to some issues I saw about some people having some of their music files not show-up (if they have a rather large music collection, which I do - 85GB's worth!) in whatever music playing program they're using, so I'm attempting to format it with FAT32 to avoid that. Now, Windows 7 (x64) does NOT allow you to format drives via FAT32 (unless you go into DOS), so I've used a couple of different programs (Fast32Format, EASEUS PartiionMaster); I got a message on my Galaxy S3 saying my SD card was damaged or missing when I used Fast32Format); a bunch of services stopped working on the phone when I formatted it using EASEUS PartionMagic, and I even tried formatting it in NTFS (which I think that Android doesn't support) & got a message my SD card was blank and Android wouldn't even mount it!
What am I doing wrong? How can I format it in FAT32 and have it work in my Galaxy S3?!! Do I even really need to use FAT32 instead of exFAT?
Thanks,
Dennis
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
EaseUS worked fine for me - the one thing that screwed me up the first time is when you tell it to format it, you also have to tell it to apply it. And hopefully the "Fast32" was autocorrect - you should just be using FAT32 - and I don't think I changed the block size. HTH
alacrify said:
EaseUS worked fine for me - the one thing that screwed me up the first time is when you tell it to format it, you also have to tell it to apply it. And hopefully the "Fast32" was autocorrect - you should just be using FAT32 - and I don't think I changed the block size. HTH
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I apologize for bringing up this old-ish thread, but I always see that every time someone makes a new thread, they get bombarded with "use the search feature", so uhh, I did .
I've got a Class 10 SanDisk Ultra 64GB MicroSD XC card, that refuses to work with my Galaxy S3. I've got CM10 on it, do you think that might be the issue? If so, how do you think I can rectify it (what format would work?)
I've used EaseUS to delete the partition, and recreate using FAT32, but no dice, still getting a "damaged card" notification. I can seemingly use the card fine on my PC and my Mac, but nothing on the phone.
Any help would be greatly greatly appreciated
Vaesar said:
I apologize for bringing up this old-ish thread, but I always see that every time someone makes a new thread, they get bombarded with "use the search feature", so uhh, I did .
I've got a Class 10 SanDisk Ultra 64GB MicroSD XC card, that refuses to work with my Galaxy S3. I've got CM10 on it, do you think that might be the issue? If so, how do you think I can rectify it (what format would work?)
I've used EaseUS to delete the partition, and recreate using FAT32, but no dice, still getting a "damaged card" notification. I can seemingly use the card fine on my PC and my Mac, but nothing on the phone.
Any help would be greatly greatly appreciated
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, this is ominous given that I ordered this micoSD and it just shipped. I read lots of reviews on Amazon and those with S3 phones seemed to have no issues using card as is, although they didn't specify precisely which version of S3 they had. The S3 natively supports 64 GB, so I would think it would work out of the box, so to speak. A number of reviewers said they used this microSD in older phones that supposedly supported only up to 32 GB. They formatted in phone, getting something like 59 GB of usable space.
I'm using stock ROM with CWM on I747.
cm10
it is an cm10 issue
mrky said:
it is an cm10 issue
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A more complete response...its a known issue with AOSP based JB ROM's. This is pulled from the AOKP FAQ, since it is an AOSP based ROM as well this should help you out.
Will my 64 gb sd card work? Except it works fine with a 64GB card. http://rootzwiki.com/topic/28124-doe...card-standard/ The SGSIII is the first phone to support exfatl, but the support is Kernel based, some people are having trouble with the replacement kernels and exfat support. The solution is to force it to format in FAT32. http://www.online-tech-tips.com/comp...ive-to-fat-32/ I know, because I've done it. --- Don't respond without actually doing research. I have no problem spoon feeding information, especially when the information you put out there can increase misinformation. The SGSII also supports a 64GB card as well. http://androidforums.com/samsung-gal...ing-sgsii.html naturefreak85l;
EDIT - Apparently the links are dead, but there a many methods to choose from to format and SD in FAT32.

FAT Sd card to NTFS

Hello folks!
What happens if I switch my sd card from FAT to NTFS?
And also, I experience a weird problem. Whenever I connect my phone at the PC or I restart my phone, the music and photos are all gone ( from gallery ) but when I search within my sd card I find them all there. What should I do? Do I need another SD?
Every answer will be appreciated,
Thank you for your assistance,
Regards, FranticOrge
Slower
FranticOgre said:
Hello folks!
What happens if I switch my sd card from FAT to NTFS?
And also, I experience a weird problem. Whenever I connect my phone at the PC or I restart my phone, the music and photos are all gone ( from gallery ) but when I search within my sd card I find them all there. What should I do? Do I need another SD?
Every answer will be appreciated,
Thank you for your assistance,
Regards, FranticOrge
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Slower n always unable to read by Windows 7, I changed my A-RAM 32GB USB 3.0 flash drive from FAT32 to NTFS so that I can be able to transfer file larger than 4GB, but than after I've changed to NTFS, my flash drive start to slow down n my PC not always be able to read it as well. Therefore I changed it back to FAT32 n everything is alright again.
The problem with NTFS on Linux (based) systems is, as I know from the desktop/server Linux, is that Microsoft never released any open source or Linux-based drivers for the NTFS filesystem. Hackers then reverse-engineered the NTFS filesystem and made their own drivers, which made NTFS work on Linux. The problem is, that is is never as good or as fast as the NTFS is on Windows. If you use NTFS under Linux there is a huge CPU load when accessing a NTFS partition. Defragmenting the NTFS drive (within a Windows environment) makes the CPU load under Linux less.
I do not know the precise details how it works on Android, but since it is based on Linux somehow, I expect the same problem.

[Q] I just bought a 64GB MicroSD Card but it the S4 won't recognize it?

I just installed:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2305214
Does MicroSD mounting not work? I format it as NTFS. When I go to storage > mount SD card it just says preparing to mount ...
re: 64gb card
ragingazn628 said:
I just installed:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2305214
Does MicroSD mounting not work? I format it as NTFS. When I go to storage > mount SD card it just says preparing to mount ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Remove the card and plug it into the converter and plug that into your computer or card
reader then re-format using FAT32 ONLY then put it back in your phone and then your 64gb
sdcard shall work!
Misterjunky said:
Remove the card and plug it into the converter and plug that into your computer or card
reader then re-format using FAT32 ONLY then put it back in your phone and then your 64gb
sdcard shall work!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it only gives me exFAT and NTFS
ragingazn628 said:
it only gives me exFAT and NTFS
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Use the Windows drive manager to delete the partition on the MicroSD, do not reformat it with windows, plug it into the phone, and attempt to mount, it should do so but with 0 space now. Format it with the phone. Or look for the tool "fat32format" on the internet (Google is your friend) in order to force a format in FAT32.
ragingazn628 said:
it only gives me exFAT and NTFS
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
exFAT
Maybe this will help: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2041679
ragingazn628 said:
it only gives me exFAT and NTFS
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Then try exFAT but if you have a windows computer, the default is FAT32.
If that don't work you will need to find a friend or relative who has
a windows computer which you can use to format the card using FAT32.
thanks for the help guys, got it to work now. Can I install apps on the microsd?
re: install to external sd
ragingazn628 said:
thanks for the help guys, got it to work now. Can I install apps on the microsd?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
nope, you cannot install apps on external sd on the s4 yet.
even the apps2sd is not compatible with the S4.
Misterjunky said:
nope, you cannot install apps on external sd on the s4 yet.
even the apps2sd is not compatible with the S4.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can I put MP3s on external SD?
ragingazn628 said:
Can I put MP3s on external SD?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Anything but the applications installed themselves. You can store whatever you want on your SD, no limits, just no APPS2SD yet.
re: external sd
ragingazn628 said:
Can I put MP3s on external SD?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can have all your mp3's, videos, movies, pictures and documents plus backups of the rom and new roms or other
stuff but you just cannot use it to install apps until one of the devs finds a way to create a compatible app which will allow
for app installation on external sd.
Something similar to the apps2sd app which is not compatible with the S4.
Perhaps the developer of that app will upgrade it making it compatible with our phones.
Misterjunky said:
Then try exFAT but if you have a windows computer, the default is FAT32.
If that don't work you will need to find a friend or relative who has
a windows computer which you can use to format the card using FAT32.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This isn't actually true after a certain version of windows i think since vista(May be wrong) exFat is the only option you get.
re: exFAT
mike105217 said:
This isn't actually true after a certain version of windows i think since vista(May be wrong) exFat is the only option you get.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Google it and look it up,
Ever since windows xp fat32 was always the default when formatting usb flash drives(memory sticks) and sdcards.
Right now I am running windows 8 but I ran all the other prior versions of windows including windows xp.
When formatting hard drives, even external usb hard drives then windows (all versions) default to NTFS.
I never seen any versions of windows operating systems defaulting to exFAT.
Misterjunky said:
Google it and look it up,
Ever since windows xp fat32 was always the default when formatting usb flash drives(memory sticks) and sdcards.
Right now I am running windows 8 but I ran all the other prior versions of windows including windows xp.
When formatting hard drives, even external usb hard drives then windows (all versions) default to NTFS.
I never seen any versions of windows operating systems defaulting to exFAT.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your right actually I got confused its actually partition space anything over 32Gb is out of a normal fat range for windows.
1) Make a LiveUSB stick of Ubuntu.
2) Boot into the USB stick.
3) Use GParted to format to Fat32.
blackknightavalon said:
1) Make a LiveUSB stick of Ubuntu.
2) Boot into the USB stick.
3) Use GParted to format to Fat32.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Or you could search for 1 of the thousand formatting utilities that will do it and not have to download a 2gb file.
Do you know if due to the size of the memory card the phone takes a lot more time to load stuff??? I do not want to buy a 64gb if it will slow my phone a lot. If that's the case i may have to buy a 32gb card. Please tell me your input on this.
tones160 said:
Do you know if due to the size of the memory card the phone takes a lot more time to load stuff??? I do not want to buy a 64gb if it will slow my phone a lot. If that's the case i may have to buy a 32gb card. Please tell me your input on this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What slowdown? My phone boots and loads VERY fast.
blackknightavalon said:
What slowdown? My phone boots and loads VERY fast.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well not in that sense but let's say if you would like to play a video or a song you have saved in your 64GB card. Does it still play it right away or have you experienced any slow downs? Someone who i know that works closely with phones informed me that it slows down the phone when loading files such as mp3 files or video files. Thanks dude.

[Q] MicroSD formating FAT32,NTFS?

I can not transfer larger flies on my microsd via usb cable,for example some HD videos,the only way to put that on microsd,is to unmount card put in microsd adapter format NTFS in windows and then tranfer large file,but when i put back sd in my phone i cannot use it until i do formatting again ,so i suppose that phone format card fat32 so i am not able again to transfer large files...Any suggestion? Does ARHD sense rom support that format?
Try to format exFAT
redpoint73 said:
Try to format exFAT
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you for reply,that solve the problem now when i format with adaper in windows exfat phone doe not ask me to format again so i am now able to transfer large files,tnx again
legadema said:
Thank you for reply,that solve the problem now when i format with adaper in windows exfat phone doe not ask me to format again so i am now able to transfer large files,tnx again
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're quite welcome. FAT32 was the old reliable standard for so long. But as you know, it doesn't support file sizes over 4 GB (along with some other limitations). Now different devices use different formats, and there seems to be no "go to" format. Windows seems to default to NTFS, exFAT seems to play better on Android phones (at least HTC), etc. At least from what I can gather by searching online, there don't seem to be any easy "silver bullet" answers on what format to use when. So your confusion is quite understandable.
redpoint73 said:
You're quite welcome. FAT32 was the old reliable standard for so long. But as you know, it doesn't support file sizes over 4 GB (along with some other limitations). Now different devices use different formats, and there seems to be no "go to" format. Windows seems to default to NTFS, exFAT seems to play better on Android phones (at least HTC), etc. At least from what I can gather by searching online, there don't seem to be any easy "silver bullet" answers on what format to use when. So your confusion is quite understandable.[/QUOTE
Tnx, now is much more clear to me ,as you say i know difference between FAT32 and NTFS but i didn't know about android compatibility,so i guess i learned something today
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

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