You can only get there in Finder click Go in the menu bar and select Go to Folder.
Once it has remounted, it will be available in /Volumes. Hit Ctrl + O to save the file, then Ctrl + X to quit Nano. LABEL=DRIVENAME none ntfs rw,auto,nobrowse Then copy this line into the file, replacing DRIVENAME with the actual name of the drive you want to access:
You need to follow these instructions for each drive you want to write to. But while macOS can read NTFS drives by default, its write capability hides behind a Terminal hack. Sometimes you may need to write some files to a locked drive only once, and you can do this with built-in Mac tools. We recommend you do not rely on this method for writing to important volumes or as a long-term solution. There is a very real chance that something could go wrong, resulting in a loss of data on the target drive. Warning! The following steps describe a method of enabling the experimental NTFS support in macOS.