Any disk can then be dumped to a file using dd ( ). As suggested by Jeroen3, you could also use a RAM disk (e.g. While the former is just a CD-ROM image, the latter can contain partitions with any supported filesystem (NTFS and the various flavors of FAT). Windows, since W8 at least, has some directly accessible support for a loop device. I am sure such tool should be quite helpful also for other people, if you know about one, please share. So is there any software tool for windows (like "losetup" command in linux) which would help me to build the binary blob of the filesystem (including putting in the desired files) which I would later upload to the NAND? Maybe this question is too much specific or too much unspecific, so if I have not explained good enough, please tell me, I will try to fix it. It is quite easy to write a bunch of code as a "flashloader" for the NAND, so I am able to download a binary blob to the NAND with my JTAG programmer. The only means for moving the initial data into the NAND is by using an in-circuit programmer/debugger. The design doesn't have any interface for bulk data transfers like SDcard, USB or so to copy the data from. Hi guys, for simplification of embeded designs with filesystems, is there any tool for windows capable of creating/mounting a binary image of a filesystem in a single file (binary blob)? Let us consider I have some design including a NAND FLASH device, which I have a filesystem on.
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