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USB storage

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This article explains how to mount and unmount a USB removable drive. To provide users access to mounting removable drives see [[removable drives]].
 
  
Okay, I just mounted my own 512MB Lexar JumpDrive (USB keychain storage device) on ph34r (my FreeBSD 5.2.1 amd64 box) for the first time.  It was pretty easy!
 
 
First, I plugged in the JumpDrive.  Since I was shelled in instead of logged in at the console, I couldn't see the console messages that pop up when you change devices.  So the next thing I did was check the end of /var/log/messages for the kernel messages about the newly attached JumpDrive:
 
 
ph34r# '''tail /var/log/messages'''
 
Sep  9 14:18:09 ph34r kernel: umass1: LEXAR MEDIA JUMPDRIVE, rev 2.00/20.00, addr 3
 
Sep  9 14:18:09 ph34r kernel: GEOM: create disk da4 dp=0xffffff003c46e068
 
Sep  9 14:18:09 ph34r kernel: da4 at umass-sim1 bus 1 target 0 lun 0
 
Sep  9 14:18:09 ph34r kernel: da4: <LEXAR JUMPDRIVE 2000> Removable Direct Access SCSI-0 device
 
Sep  9 14:18:09 ph34r kernel: da4: 1.000MB/s transfers
 
Sep  9 14:18:09 ph34r kernel: da4: 493MB (1010784 512 byte sectors: 64H 32S/T 493C)
 
 
Great!  It auto-discovered fine, and it was detected as device '''da4'''.  Knowing that, let's check to see what we've got in the way of disk [[partitions]] and [[slices]] on the drive:
 
 
ph34r# '''ls /dev | grep da4'''
 
da4
 
da4s1
 
 
Okay, cool - it's a simplified system, one partition, unsliced.  No problem.  As standard for USB mass storage devices, I already know this device is going to have a FAT file system on it - but if I wasn't sure, I could of course have plugged it into a Win2K/XP machine, gone to Disk Manager, and checked the properties on it.  You never know, ONE day they might start making these things with NTFS as the standard filesystem... but I wouldn't hold my breath, if I were you.  Anyway, yes, it's FAT, so off we go with making a directory to mount it on and mounting it:
 
 
ph34r# '''mkdir /mnt/usbdrive'''
 
ph34r# '''mount -t msdos /dev/da4s1 /mnt/usbdrive'''
 
ph34r# '''ls /mnt/usbdrive'''
 
FireFox 0.9.2 + MPClassic      Partition Magic 8.0
 
Malware Removal                Undelete
 
NFS-Server(true-grid-pro)1.0    NT - 2K password reset util
 
putty.exe                      OpenOffice 1.1.2
 
OpenVPN-Win32                  vnc-4.0-x86_win32.exe
 
vnc-4.0-x86_win32_viewer.exe
 
ph34r#
 
 
Tada!  Everything's mounted, and I can see all of my work-related files are in there just where they're supposed to be.  Now I'll just add an entry to /etc/fstab to make mounting it a little easier next time:
 
 
ph34r# '''cat /etc/fstab'''
 
# Device                Mountpoint      FStype  Options        Dump    Pass#
 
/dev/ad4s1b            none            swap    sw              0      0
 
/dev/ad4s1a            /              ufs    rw              1      1
 
/dev/ad4s1e            /tmp            ufs    rw              2      2
 
/dev/ad4s1f            /usr            ufs    rw              2      2
 
/dev/ad4s1d            /var            ufs    rw              2      2
 
/dev/ad6s1e            /data          ufs    rw              2      2
 
/dev/acd0              /cdrom          cd9660  ro,noauto      0      0
 
/dev/da4s1              /mnt/usbdrive  msdos  rw,noauto      0      0
 
 
And voila!  Now from here on out I can just '''mount /mnt/usbdrive''' and '''umount /mnt/usbdrive''' without issues.  Notice that for the USB drive, I set FStype to msdos, Options to rw (read and write) and noauto (do not automatically attempt to mount the volume at boot time - the media won't always be present!), and set dump and pass to 0 each, to tell the system also not to try to automatically [[fsck]] the USB drive at boot time either.
 
 
One final note: don't forget to [[umount]] the USB drive before you disconnect it - you could lose data or even leave the filesystem itself with some problems if you just yank the drive out and it turns out that there were still cached writes pending that you didn't know about.
 
 
[[Category:Common Tasks]] [[Category:FreeBSD for Workstations]]
 

Revision as of 18:28, 27 February 2009

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