When finished, press Control-O to save the file, followed by Control-X to exit, and then unmount your NTFS drive and attach it again.
Be sure to change the word NAME to the name of your drive (it is case-sensitive): The Terminal should now show an editor window for the fstab file, in which you can enter the following all on one line. In here, run the following command to edit the fstab file (supply your password when prompted): Enter this line into the fstab file, changing the label 'NAME' to match that of your drive. To enable this feature, you have to do so on a per-volume basis, by editing the system's hidden fstab file to adjust the way the drive is automatically handled when attached and mounted.įirst ensure that your NTFS drive has a simple single-word name, and then go to the Applications > Utilities folder and launch the Terminal program. Therefore, the use of a third-party driver such as Paragon NTFS or Tuxera NTFS has been required for those seeking full NTFS support however, OS X does support writing to NTFS, but this feature is just not enabled by default. OS X supports the option to read NTFS-formatted drives, but has not supported writing to these drives.