Finding/Mounting your USB Memory stick / Pendrive (using TELNET)

  • Finding/Mounting your USB Memory stick / Pendrive
    (using TELNET)


    - Use to find it : fdisk -l


    What you will see (hdd installed sda, and pendrive sdb) :


    root@dm800:~# fdisk -l


    Disk /dev/sda: 60.0 GB, 60011642880 bytes
    255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 7296 cylinders
    Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes


    Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
    /dev/sda1 1 7296 58605116 83 Linux


    Disk /dev/sdb: 4059 MB, 4059561984 bytes
    229 heads, 32 sectors/track, 1081 cylinders
    Units = cylinders of 7328 * 512 = 3751936 bytes


    Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
    /dev/sdb1 * 1 1082 3964400 b Win95 FAT32


    - As you can see the USB device is on /dev/sdb1


    - To initialize (to ext3), one time only needed :
    mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1


    - Mounting the External File System / Pendrive
    mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb


    The line mounts the device at the /dev/sdb1 location to the
    /mnt/usb directory. If you want to mount it as hdd then you just
    need to send command : mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/hdd


    Now you can reference your pendrive from the command line
    using the folder /mnt/usb.


    Now your pendrive will be available at cd /media/usb/


    - Unmount if you don't use :
    umount -f -l /mnt/usb


    - See memory amount on devices : df -h (this only once mounted)



    - Automount In the Terminal


    To have your pendrive mount each time your server is restarted, you must edit your /etc/fstab file. Simply add at the bottom of your /etc/fstab file:


    /dev/sdb1 /mnt/usb ext3 defaults 0 0


    The first argument (/dev/sdb1) tells the system what device to mount, and the second argument (/mnt/usb) tells the system where to mount it. The third argument is the filesystem type (ext3). The fourth argument (defaults) tells the system what options to apply to the device, so in this case we’ll just use the defaults. The fifth and sixth arguments (both zeros) tell the system if the filesystem should be backed up using the dump utility, and the second zero tells the system whether to process the device when fsck is run. We can leave them both to zero for now.


    Thx 2 Mohamed

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