Re: USB pen drive

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On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 23:57, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> On Thursday, Nov 27th 2003 at 23:23 -0000, quoth Andy Wallace:
> 
> =>On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 16:13, Ross Macintyre wrote:
> =>> Hi,
> =>>   I hope someone can help.
> =>> I run a lab of RedHat Linux machines and want to be able to let the
> =>> students mount their USB pen drives.
> =>> I got a 512 MB drive, and this worked fine:
> =>>   an entry was made in /etc/fstab, and I mounted it (as the user that was
> =>> logged in), using 'mount /mnt/diskonkey'.
> =>>   mount shows this:
> =>>      /dev/sdb1 on /mnt/diskonkey type vfat (rw,nosuid,nodev)
> =>> I gor another USB pen drive (128MB), but when I insert this, no entry is
> =>> made in /etc/fstab. I am, however, able to mount it as root, by giving the
> =>> command 'mount -t vfat /dev/sda1(or /dev/sdb1 I can't remember) /mnta'
> =>>  
> =>
> =>My experiences may be of use to you - I'm responsible for tech support
> =>for a large number of testers who all have USB pen drives, and who all
> =>may at some time put them into any one of four dozen PCs running the
> =>application they're testing...
> =>
> =>My experience has been that the first pen drive inserted (after boot) is
> =>assigned /dev/sda, the 2nd, /dev/sdb etc etc, and although
> =>/proc/bus/usb/devices keeps tabs on what's attached, /proc/scsi/*
> =>remembers all previous. However, it has a property "Attached" or
> =>"Unattached" which I use in a script to parse through
> =>/proc/scsi/usb-storage-n/n (n=0-255), stopping at the first "Attached",
> =>then translating that into (0=a, 1=b) etc. to detect which device to
> =>mount.
> =>
> =>This is using SuSE 8.2, which makes an auto entry in fstab of
> =>/mnt/<randomlookingstring>, but my script mounts it elsewhere - you
> =>don't have to use fstab.
> =>
> =>If you want the code snippet that does this, let me know - I don't have
> =>it in front of me now or I'd attach it.
> 
> I'd just like to add one more thing: Read this month's Linux Journal. 
> There's a whole article there on how it works and it goes into a fair 
> amount of detail. Just one thing before you actually get to the article 
> though. When you actually mount don't forget to use -o noatime, otherwise 
> everytime you say ls it will write on the filesystem. And the drive does 
> have a limited number of writes available.
> 

I haven't received my LJ yet, but that's interesting. I know DVD-RW's
have a limited number of writes, but I didn't know the same applied to
pen drives! Do you know what the limit is?

Andy


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