How to mount usb drives in osx maverick?

Tried to connect external usb drive and got thel following message:
NTFS-3G could not mount /dev/rdisk5s1
at /Volumes/FreeAgent Drive because the following problem occurred:
/Library/Filesystems/fusefs.kext faailed to load - (libkern/kext) link error, check the system/kernel logs fir errors or try kextutil(8). the MacFUSE file system is not available (71)

Other t han Paragon NTFS for OS X which has been supported and works fine the others have had trouble since 10.7.3 era.
I use both Paragon NTFS and also their HFS+ for Windows. The demo is fully functional for 10 days and is under  $20 (may be on sale too).
The software that some drive cases come with are often the source of trouble and best not  to install, and to reformat the drive as well.
I believe Paragon has a utility to convert a drive to/from NTFS and HFS but check their site.
www.paragon-software.com

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    Last edited by BasiK (2009-08-28 07:22:50)

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    # How does one do that automatically ?
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    # Reboot, because it's quick and I'm too lazy to learn how to start all the daemons and others.
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    lp wheel games network video audio optical storage power users
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    realname = ''
    seat = 'Seat1'
    session-type = ''
    active = TRUE
    x11-display = ':0.0'
    x11-display-device = '/dev/tty7'
    display-device = ''
    remote-host-name = ''
    is-local = TRUE
    on-since = '2011-08-15T08:56:03.716103Z'
    login-session-id = '1'
    Session1:
    unix-user = '1000'
    realname = ''
    seat = 'Seat2'
    session-type = ''
    active = FALSE
    x11-display = ':0.0'
    x11-display-device = ''
    display-device = ''
    remote-host-name = ''
    is-local = TRUE
    on-since = '2011-08-15T08:56:03.573029Z'
    login-session-id = '1'
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    Last edited by choubbi (2011-08-15 15:05:04)

    Thanks a lot !
    That worked !
    I stumbled across this part of the wiki several times before, but didn't really understand so I had not tried.
    If anyone's interested in the script, here's the corrected version :
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    # expected environment : freshly installed archlinux, login : root.
    echo "Are you connected to internet ? If not, please Ctrl+C and reload this script when connected"
    echo "Otherwise, press ENTER to continue installation"
    read var_dummy
    echo "Creation of the user : please type in your user name :"
    read var_username
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    # Add servers for pacman to find packages
    cat >> /etc/pacman.conf << EOF
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    Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
    [archlinuxfr]
    Server = http://repo.archlinux.fr/\$arch
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    Server = http://catalyst.apocalypsus.net/repo/catalyst/\$arch
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    pacman -Syyu
    pacman -S acpi acpid alsa-oss alsa-plugins alsa-utils catalyst catalyst-utils cpufrequtils cups dbus gstreamer0.10-base-plugins iptables laptop-mode-tools mesa net-tools netcfg ntp pm-utils rfkill rsync sudo ttf-dejavu vim wireless_tools xf86-input-evdev xorg-server xorg-utils xorg-xinit xorg-xinput yaourt conky gamin gnome-icon-theme gnome-keyring gvfs-afc network-manager-applet networkmanager slim slim-themes archlinux-themes-slim hicolor-icon-theme xfce4 xfce4-goodies
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    if [[ $?!=0 ]]
    then
    echo : failed to install packages - check your network connection, or review script
    exit 1
    fi
    # Fix sound issue
    cat > /home/$var_username/.asoundrc << EOF
    pcm.!default{
    type hw
    card 1
    device 0
    ctl.!default{
    type hw
    card 1
    device 0
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    chown $var_username:users /home/$var_username/.asoundrc
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    if [[ ! -e /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d ]]
    then
    mkdir /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d
    fi
    cat > /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-fglrx.conf << EOF
    Section "Monitor"
    Identifier "aticonfig-Monitor[0]-0"
    Option "VendorName" "ATI Proprietary Driver"
    Option "ModelName" "Generic Autodetecting Monitor"
    Option "DPMS" "true"
    EndSection
    Section "Device"
    Identifier "aticonfig-Device[0]-0"
    Driver "fglrx"
    EndSection
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    EOF
    cp /root/.bashrc /home/$var_username/.bashrc
    chown $var_username:users /home/$var_username/.bashrc
    # How does one do that automatically ?
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    If all went well you now have ntfs-3g compiled with integrated fuse support.
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    3. The ntfs-3g binary must be set to setuid-root, to accomplish this you shall do the following as root:
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    4. The user must have the right access to the volume. Okay, this is the ugly part, volumes are owned by root and managed by the disk group with permissions brw-rw----, this means you have to add any users you want mounting this volume to the disk group.
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        4B. Now that you logged back in, try this:
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    5. The user must have the right permissions/access to the mount point. For a user to be able to mount something to a mount point, that user needs to have read permission (pretty self-explanatory), write permission (so the user can make any changes to the sub-structure of the mount point), and execute permission (so the user can change-dir to that mount point) to it. Mount points can be anywhere, so this really depends where you're mounting.
    In my case, I'm mounting these volumes on certain directories under /mnt/, for example /mnt/example. If you're mounting stuff there, you might as well take advantage of the fact your "mounting user" is already in the group disk, and do the following as root:
    chgrp disk /mnt/example
    chmod 774 /mnt/example
    Now users in the disk group will be able to manage these mount points.
    6. Mount it. That's it, you should now be able to mount ntfs volumes as an "unpriveleged enough" user. Here's an example of what you'd have to put in /etc/fstab:
    UUID=XXXXYYYYXXXXYYYY /mnt/example ntfs-3g noauto,noatime,user,uid=0,gid=6,fmask=137,dmask=027,rw 0 0
    uid=0 means root will be the owner of this mount-point and anything in it after it's mounted. This is due to the fact that even though users might own their mountpoints and have rwx permissions on them, you might still not want them to write to the mounted ntfs volumes. Remove this if you want them to be able to write to the volume.
    gid=6 means this will be managed by the disk group in my system. Perhaps the disk group has a different id in your system, run "id root" to find out, as root usually is part of this group.
    fmask = 137 means the owner (root) can do anything with files in this volume except executing files. Group members (disk) can only read files here, not create or execute them. And other users can't do anything in this volume.
    dmask = 027 means the owner can do anything with directories (execute here is needed to chdir), users can't write directories but they can read or execute in them (once again, needed by 'cd'), and finally other users still don't have any access.
    You can use whichever fmask and dmask makes sense to you, or use an umask instead.
    Last edited by anderfs (2010-07-15 11:34:48)

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