[sugar] usb stick in the terminal?
Dan Williams
dcbw at redhat.com
Wed Dec 6 07:50:09 EST 2006
On Wed, 2006-12-06 at 00:45 -0500, Ivan Krstić wrote:
> Erik Blankinship wrote:
> > 1) We are asked for filesystem type (we use sysfs, and get it to
> > accept... the drive was formatted "unix" on a mac :-) )
>
> mount(8) can't autodetect your fs, which means it's at least not among
> {vfat, ext2, ext3}. I suggest reformatting the drive on a Linux machine,
> by plugging it in and doing:
>
> # mke2fs /dev/sda1
If you formatted it on a Mac, it's likely going to be UFS, or Unix File
System. Don't Do This :) You want to format the thing as VFAT/FAT or
HFS. Linux can ready either of those.
"sysfs" is a special file system type that Linux uses for configuration
and information about the internal file system, so that's not what you
want to mount it as either.
If you initialized it as FAT:
su -
mkdir /mnt/foo
mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /mnt/foo
If you initialized it as HFS+:
su -
mkdir /mnt/foo
mount -t hfs /dev/sda1 /mnt/foo
Dan
>
> That'll clearly erase any files that are already on it. I'm not sure if
> we include the vfat formatter, and don't have my XO handy to check.
>
> > 2) When we go to /mnt, we get a directory which is not our usb stick.
>
> Yes, because 'sysfs' is a virtual filesystem that exports system
> information from the kernel.
>
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