On Sun, 2003-11-23 at 16:27, A.J. Bonnema wrote:
A.J. Bonnema wrote:
[changed the subject from USB pen drive to USB card reader]
Dee-Ann LeBlanc wrote:
It's probably /dev/sda1 ... Linux sees USB devices as SCSI.
Hi Dee-Ann,
No, it's not sda1. And I tried a lot of other sd's, is it possible to issue a command that shows which device it is, some kind of scanning, so that I know which device to enter in the mount command?
Ok, I found out I'm wrong: it *is* sda1. In one of the log files this was mentioned. Anyway, I formatted the disk in Windows and still get the same result.
I strongly suspect that the filesystem is not a regular vfat and I have no idea how to mount this filesystem or how to find out how it is formatted.
Doing "fdisk -l /dev/sda" gives no result (it just returns).
The device is being recognized as a ND5010 Card Reader from Neodio Technologies Corp. using lsusb and lsusb -s 003:002 -v. Furthermore the disk is recognized correctly by cat /proc/bus/usb/devices as a USB Storage Device.
Anyone know what's wrong?
You may have a problem like I did this weekend:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=110653
The Fedora/Red Hat kernels don't have multi-LUN support (basically one device with multiple disks). You can manually add the LUNs in /proc:
echo "scsi-add-single-device 0 0 0 1" > /proc/scsi/scsi echo "scsi-add-single-device 0 0 0 2" > /proc/scsi/scsi echo "scsi-add-single-device 0 0 0 3" > /proc/scsi/scsi
See if that helps.
Forrest