o use an usb-stick
with nanobsd?
Thanks
Reinhard
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El día Sunday, November 07, 2010 a las 05:31:29PM +0530, Manish Jain escribió:
>
>Hi,
>This is the first time I am using ppp on FreeBSD : till now I had
>exclusively used ethernet.
>I just purchased a Huawei USB stick+modem and I need to configure PPP
>fo
Hi,
This is the first time I am using ppp on FreeBSD : till now I had
exclusively used ethernet.
I just purchased a Huawei USB stick+modem and I need to configure PPP
for it. Can somebody kindly give me a pointer to what steps I need to
follow ? I don't know the list of dr
On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 2:33 PM, Fbsd1 wrote:
> Christer Solskogen wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 6:26 PM, Tim Judd wrote:
>>
>>> And I agree with this 'Fbsd1' user (I wish 'Fbsd1' would update his
>>> MTA with a real name) that since Christer is who uses the product, he
>>> should look int
Christer Solskogen wrote:
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 6:26 PM, Tim Judd wrote:
And I agree with this 'Fbsd1' user (I wish 'Fbsd1' would update his
MTA with a real name) that since Christer is who uses the product, he
should look into it.
I'm probably a bit paranoid, but when someone who is not u
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 6:26 PM, Tim Judd wrote:
> And I agree with this 'Fbsd1' user (I wish 'Fbsd1' would update his
> MTA with a real name) that since Christer is who uses the product, he
> should look into it.
I'm probably a bit paranoid, but when someone who is not using their
real name, po
On 2/15/10, Christer Solskogen wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 4:55 AM, Fbsd1 wrote:
>
>> http://www.a1poweruser.com/usb.info.htm
>>
>
> Why does Websence think your site contains Potentially Unwanted Software?
>
Without even clicking his link, I've had past experience with a
"legit" website b
Christer Solskogen wrote:
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 4:55 AM, Fbsd1 wrote:
http://www.a1poweruser.com/usb.info.htm
Why does Websence think your site contains Potentially Unwanted Software?
Have no idea what you are talking about. Since your using their software
maybe you should be asking t
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 4:55 AM, Fbsd1 wrote:
> http://www.a1poweruser.com/usb.info.htm
>
Why does Websence think your site contains Potentially Unwanted Software?
--
chs,
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Hello list.
I wrote this article on the different ways to install Freebsd on a USB
stick. It covers a large range of related subjects dealing with
installing Freebsd and the use of an USB stick. It's way to large to
post here so the link below will take you to the article. Lookin
Fbsd1 schrieb:
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
I don't know why you shout. (?)
Not shouting, just making my inserted comments visible within the old
post as in different from bottom or top posting.
Ok, writing in capitals is normally treated as shouting (see
"netiquette") or only allowed when
s
In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 294, Issue 12, Message 1
On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 18:59:00 +0100 Christoph Kukulies wrote:
> Here is some more info:
>
> The file I copied to the USB stick was
>
> ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IMAGES/8.0/8.0-RELEASE-i3
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
Here is some more info:
The file I copied to the USB stick was
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IMAGES/8.0/8.0-RELEASE-i386-memstick.img
Actually, I don't remember how I got the image to the USB stick. I
believe I used a free tool from HP
.0 on an USB-stick and was able to boot it on
my Desktop PC and install 8.0
from it.
DO YOU MEAN YOU INSTALLED THE 8.0 ISO ON A USB STICK. BOOTED FROM IT
AS INSTALL SOURCE AND INSTALLED 8.0 ON A DESKTOP PC TO THE MOTHERBOARD
CABLED HARD DRIVE??? OR DO YOU MEAN YOU INSTALLED 8.0 ON A DESKTOP P
Here is some more info:
The file I copied to the USB stick was
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/i386/ISO-IMAGES/8.0/8.0-RELEASE-i386-memstick.img
Actually, I don't remember how I got the image to the USB stick. I
believe I used a free tool from HP
from within Windows XP.
I
I don't know why you shout. (?)
Fbsd1 schrieb:
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
Fbsd1 schrieb:
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
I installed FreeBSD 8.0 on an USB-stick and was able to boot it on
my Desktop PC and install 8.0
from it.
DO YOU MEAN YOU INSTALLED THE 8.0 ISO ON A USB STICK. BOOTED FR
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
Fbsd1 schrieb:
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
I installed FreeBSD 8.0 on an USB-stick and was able to boot it on my
Desktop PC and install 8.0
from it.
DO YOU MEAN YOU INSTALLED THE 8.0 ISO ON A USB STICK. BOOTED FROM IT AS
INSTALL SOURCE AND INSTALLED 8.0 ON A DESKTOP
Fbsd1 schrieb:
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
I installed FreeBSD 8.0 on an USB-stick and was able to boot it on my
Desktop PC and install 8.0
from it.
Now I plugged the same stick into my Dell Inspiron 9400 and the USB
stick (2GB) is not even listed in the F12 Bios boot menu.
Any clues
Christoph Kukulies wrote:
I installed FreeBSD 8.0 on an USB-stick and was able to boot it on my
Desktop PC and install 8.0
from it.
Now I plugged the same stick into my Dell Inspiron 9400 and the USB
stick (2GB) is not even listed in the F12 Bios boot menu.
Any clues?
--
Christoph
I installed FreeBSD 8.0 on an USB-stick and was able to boot it on my
Desktop PC and install 8.0
from it.
Now I plugged the same stick into my Dell Inspiron 9400 and the USB
stick (2GB) is not even listed in the F12 Bios boot menu.
Any clues?
--
Christoph
stick. I can install from this usb
stick (da0)to any motherboard cabled hard drive. But when i try to
target another usb stick (da1) to install to, sysinstall works normally
up to the message this is your last chance before writing to the media.
Then i get a abort message "Unable to find d
*Hello i tried creating a usb bootable for 8.0-RELEASE-amd64-disc1 and
8.0-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly using MS netbootin but i always get this error.
My MSI netbook specs are below, anyone tried installing with this netbook?
Invalid* or corrupt *kernel image
*
*AMD®* Yukon AMD Athlon™ Neo X2 *Dual-
Hi,
I'm booting FreeBSD 8 from an USB stick, but when I do so, the console
no longer works. They USB keyboard seems to do nothing, and during the
boot process when the daemons are starting it seems like there is
another keyboard attached on which the ENTER key is stuck. That is,
whil
On Sunday 22 November 2009 04:40:27 Guojun Jin wrote:
> Does anyone know if it is possible to revocer such damaged USB stick?
Hi,
There are several recovery tools in /usr/ports for this kind of task.
For example photorec .
--HPS
___
free
It seems this is more serious problem in 8.0, and I hope it could be resolved
before a formal release. I can help to diagnose this if people need more
information (this is destructive).
I have picked a USB stick (DataTraveler 2GB), that has two partitions s0 for
DOS and s1 for FreeBSD.
Both
I have a FreeBSD image that I install on USB sticks to build new systems. When
the stick boots it automatically clones itself on the system's hard drive,
creating partitions and other configuration parameters that are programmed into
the stick's cloning logic. I want to create a similar mechanis
Eric Hsieh wrote:
hello, this is my first time to ask a help from FreeBSD.
I have a question about installing FreeBSD on USB stick.
There are so many informations about how to install FreeBSD on USB
stick from Internet, but I can not find out any information about
follow :
first, if i install
hello, this is my first time to ask a help from FreeBSD.
I have a question about installing FreeBSD on USB stick.
There are so many informations about how to install FreeBSD on USB
stick from Internet, but I can not find out any information about
follow :
first, if i install FreeBSD on USB stick
If I install amd64 FreeBSD on a USB stick, should I be able to boot it up on
both PC hardware (Intel core duo) and Intel Mac hardware with rEFIt?
Thanks,
Andrew
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On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 15:35:10 +0100 (CET), Wojciech Puchar
wrote:
> > da0: Removable Direct Access SCSI-0 device
> > da0: 1.000MB/s transfers
> > da0: Attempt to query device size failed: UNIT ATTENTION, Medium not present
>
>
> this suggest defective device or USB controller/driver problems.
da0: Removable Direct Access SCSI-0 device
da0: 1.000MB/s transfers
da0: Attempt to query device size failed: UNIT ATTENTION, Medium not present
this suggest defective device or USB controller/driver problems.
if you can - check it on another computer running other OS (linux,
windoze)
_
Oops, hit the wrong reply button...
On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 16:49:53 +0300, "\"Remorque\"" wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 4:42 PM, Polytropon wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 16:33:23 +0300, "\"Remorque\""
> > wrote:
> > > Sorry for top-posting!
> >
> > No problem.
> >
> >
> >
> > > I used to ha
Hi,
I've gotten an USB stick with 8 GB which doesn not
work with FreeBSD 7-STABLE-20080811. I've googled
and found that this particular product might be
"defective by factory".
Anyone has an idea how to make it accessible with
FreeBSD?
In order to have maximal abilities for
Steve Bertrand writes:
> I run numerous systems (mostly networking gear) from 2GB USB thumb
> sticks. These systems do not have hard disks.
>
> To update one of these systems, I'd generally copy the thumb drive
> filesystem to a hard disk in another PC, upgrade it, and then transfer
> the necessa
Hi everyone,
I run numerous systems (mostly networking gear) from 2GB USB thumb
sticks. These systems do not have hard disks.
To update one of these systems, I'd generally copy the thumb drive
filesystem to a hard disk in another PC, upgrade it, and then transfer
the necessary data back to the US
"device usb". Except this line, every usb related item
> is a "nodevice" now. The USB2 modules needed are kldload'ed in
> boot/loader.conf from the USB-stick, and this really works.
>
> Hans Petter: although I am not sure if my USB-stick needs it, the
> kernel
ency problems.
I think I've found my problem. The kernel configuration really needs
the line marked "required", which builds support for the USB bus:
"device usb". Except this line, every usb related item is a "nodevice"
now. The USB2 modules needed are kldload
> Hans Petter Selasky:
> Try the attached patch to "sys/kern/vfs_mount.c"
>
> Thanks for reporting. I have been aware about this issue for some time
> now, but the patch has not been committed to current yet.
>
> I have FreeSBIE reliably up and running with USB2.
Can you tell me what to do to the
On Tue, 23 Dec 2008 21:10:23 +0100 clemens fischer wrote:
>> Hans Petter Selasky:
>
>> Try the attached patch to "sys/kern/vfs_mount.c"
>>
>> Thanks for reporting. I have been aware about this issue for some time
>> now, but the patch has not been committed to current yet.
>
> Sorry, currently I
> Hans Petter Selasky:
> Try the attached patch to "sys/kern/vfs_mount.c"
>
> Thanks for reporting. I have been aware about this issue for some time
> now, but the patch has not been committed to current yet.
Sorry, currently I get build errors, possibly unrelated:
===> zyd (depend)
@ -> /us
cher wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Dec 2008 14:47:54 +0100 clemens fischer wrote:
>
> [ re. a bootable CURRENT backup system on a USB stick]
>
> > I am very sorry for this inaccurate information. As it turns out,
> > only the GENERIC kernel is bootable, my custom configuration doe
On Sun, 21 Dec 2008 14:47:54 +0100 clemens fischer wrote:
[ re. a bootable CURRENT backup system on a USB stick]
> I am very sorry for this inaccurate information. As it turns out,
> only the GENERIC kernel is bootable, my custom configuration doesn't.
> On the bright side, this
clemens fischer wrote:
> On Fri, 19 Dec 2008 22:29:15 +0100 clemens fischer wrote:
>
>> My USB-stick (trekstore, identifies as "USB DISK SMI Corporation") is
>> sliced using sade(8), labelled using bsdlabel, accessible using "mount
>> /dev/da0s1a /mnt/usb
On Fri, 19 Dec 2008 22:29:15 +0100 clemens fischer wrote:
> My USB-stick (trekstore, identifies as "USB DISK SMI Corporation") is
> sliced using sade(8), labelled using bsdlabel, accessible using "mount
> /dev/da0s1a /mnt/usb", it has kernel and world, but doesn
Hi,
My USB-stick (trekstore, identifies as "USB DISK SMI Corporation") is
sliced using sade(8), labelled using bsdlabel, accessible using "mount
/dev/da0s1a /mnt/usb", it has kernel and world, but doesn't boot.
The kernel has the following USB modules:
#
bsdlabel -w -B /dev/da0s1
> newfs /dev/da0s1a
If you want to use the USB stick as a whole, you neccessarily
don't need to apply a disklabel to access /dev/da0s1a. You
can simply format the whole device and use /dev/da0 (which is
equivalent to the obsoleted form /dev/da0c, &q
On Wed, 20 Aug 2008 08:49:53 -0700 (PDT), Andrei Iarus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hello,
> How can I format a USB stick in FreeBSD?
The same way you can format any other disk.
I usually format my USB sticks by creating a single da0s1 slice and then
one (or more) BSD labels in th
Yes. Thank you very much.
- Original Message
From: Brie Gordon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Andrei Iarus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 7:21:28 PM
Subject: Re: Format USB stick in FreeBSD
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 11:4
On Wed, 20 Aug 2008 08:49:53 -0700 (PDT), Andrei Iarus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hello,
> How can I format a USB stick in FreeBSD?
Three possibilities in general:
1. Use FreeBSD's UFS file system:
# newfs /dev/da0
2. Use the MS-DOS file system that is present
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 08:49:53AM -0700, Andrei Iarus wrote:
> Hello,
> How can I format a USB stick in FreeBSD?
> Thank you,
> Andrei
Just like any other device.
Or, if it already has an MSDOS filesystem on it, then
you can just mount it as type msdosfs and use it like that
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 10:49 AM, Andrei Iarus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> How can I format a USB stick in FreeBSD?
> Thank you,
> Andrei
>
You should be able to use the partition and disklabel modules in
sysinstall. (Make sure you know the device name so you don&
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 11:49 AM, Andrei Iarus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> How can I format a USB stick in FreeBSD?
> Thank you,
> Andrei
>
>
>
> ___
> freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
> http:
Hello,
How can I format a USB stick in FreeBSD?
Thank you,
Andrei
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Hello,
I've an USB stick of 1 GByte and my idea is to put the FreeBSD 7.0
installation disk on this to boot from and install the system in a
laptop which does not have other external devices; in the past I've put
already a FreeBSD boot able system on such a stick, following this
re
I should have been clearer, I am running Freesbie from
a usb stick. However it is running inside Qemu with XP
being the host machine.
Michael
--- William Bulley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> According to Michael S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >
> > Then I remembered Frees
small) or couldnt connect to
the internet (ubuntu). Then I remembered Freesbie and
decided to give it a try, running it from a usb stick
using Qemu. I followed the instructions for Ubuntu
http://www.pendrivelinux.com/2008/01/11/run-ubuntu-710-from-windows/
And the only thing that I had to do was to
It seems like this thread isn't getting updated when I
post for some reason. This will be the last one I try
until I figure out what's wrong.
#I've done some more tests. In my last post I had
booted
# from the usb key. the results of lsdev from the
boot #loader prompt were:
OK lsdev
cd devi
rnel /boot/loader
#You might notice I made root hd0. This is actually
#helpful for anyone setting GRUB up for the first
time.
#You see when setting up grub from the shell within
#your computer, your first hard drive is always hd0,
#and your usb stick can be anything after that (in my
#case hd1).
--- Andrey Shuvikov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Did you copy it recursively (with sub-directories)?
> If yes then you
> didn't need to copy
> /boot/grub separately. If no, you'll probably need
> to copy at least
> /boot/defaults .
> And /boot/kernel as well if you really want to
> boot...
>
>
rnel /boot/loader
#You might notice I made root hd0. This is actually
#helpful for anyone setting GRUB up for the first
time.
#You see when setting up grub from the shell within
#your computer, your first hard drive is always hd0,
#and your usb stick can be anything after that (in my
#case hd1).
On 6/2/07, Fred Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am looking for some help to enable booting from a
USB stick. After weeks of reading, and
attempting I am at a total loss. This all began while
I was trying to follow th
I am looking for some help to enable booting from a
USB stick. After weeks of reading, and
attempting I am at a total loss. This all began while
I was trying to follow the many excellent tutorials on
encrypting whole laptop disks with
I am looking for some help to enable booting from a
USB stick. After weeks of reading, and
attempting I am at a total loss. This all began while
I was trying to follow the many excellent tutorials on
encrypting whole laptop disks with
Chess Griffin wrote:
On 3/16/07, Kevin Kinsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have installed Hal, Dbus, and polkit and have those 3 things enabled
in my /etc/rc.conf. I also installed thunar and the thunar-volman plugin.
However, when I go to the "Advanced" tab in the File Manager settings
manager
On 3/16/07, Kevin Kinsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have installed Hal, Dbus, and polkit and have those 3 things enabled
> in my
> /etc/rc.conf. I also installed thunar and the thunar-volman plugin.
> However, when I go to the "Advanced" tab in the File Manager settings
> manager in order to
Chess Griffin wrote:
Hello! My first post to the list. :)
I have FreeBSD 6.2 installed and running wonderfully. I have built
Xfce 4.4from ports and it too, is working very well, but I have one
problem -- the
new Thunar file manager does not auto-mount USB sticks.
I have installed Hal, Dbu
"Chess Griffin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It's just that nothing automounts like it's supposed to, and
> that includes both USB sticks and CDs.
>
> Should I post this in freebsd-ports as well? I don't want to double-post if
> the port maintainers also monitor this list as well. I may post in
On 3/16/07, Chris Shenton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
When you try to open a Thunar window to look at some directory, does
it work? It did for me on one box, once, but since thing the window
comes up with a gray pane and two white panels then hangs, with "top"
saying it's in state "kserel". I h
When you try to open a Thunar window to look at some directory, does
it work? It did for me on one box, once, but since thing the window
comes up with a gray pane and two white panels then hangs, with "top"
saying it's in state "kserel". I haven't been able to resolve this on
the ports or thunar
quot;localrules"
in /etc/sysctl.conf I put:
vfs.usermount=1
and in /etc/devfs.rules I have:
[localrules=1]
add path 'da*' mode 0660 group operator
I can mount a usb stick as my normal user without issues. It's just the
automount feature in Thunar that is not working.
If anyon
Warren Block wrote:
> mkisofs can be used to create bootable CDs with a DOS floppy image. The
> DOS system has to set up CD support, and the additional files end up
> being on that "drive". See
This is a problem, I think. The supplied FreeDOS boot floppies won't
support USB CD-ROM drives.
On May 25, 2006, at 6:35 PM, Warren Block wrote:
This worked for me with a Win95 install floppy, which sets up the
CD drive correctly. I don't know if FreeDOS is compatible enough
to be a safe way to try BIOS upgrades.
There are some board makers who have flashable cards who use it in
s
On Thu, 25 May 2006, Svein Halvor Halvorsen wrote:
Problem is: How do I install the boot code on the drive? FreeDOS
provides a floppy-image, so I thought I could just dd that to my USB
drive, and boot off of that. But I need to put the BIOS upgrade utility
on the disk as well, and it is 784 kiB.
Jason L. Ellison wrote:
> I had a situation with needing to boot into dos to flash firmware. I
> booted using a Freedos CD with my utilities on the same CD. I think I had
> to create a RAM drive to use the firmware upgrade utility.
How did you create such a CD?
signature.asc
Description: Op
Derek Ragona wrote:
> go to bootdisk.org and download a suitable verision. There are many
> floppy images there. For instance the win98 diskette version, when
> booted creates a ramdrive you can switch to, then change the usb disk.
> Or boot with two usb drives inserted, the bootable one and the
Svein,
I had a situation with needing to boot into dos to flash firmware. I
booted using a Freedos CD with my utilities on the same CD. I think I had
to create a RAM drive to use the firmware upgrade utility.
-Jason Ellison
On Thu, 25 May 2006, Svein Halvor Halvorsen wrote:
> Adrian Pavone w
You have a few options:
go to bootdisk.org and download a suitable verision. There are many floppy
images there. For instance the win98 diskette version, when booted creates
a ramdrive you can switch to, then change the usb disk. Or boot with two
usb drives inserted, the bootable one and th
Adrian Pavone wrote:
> What about using 2 floppies? The first, your FreeDOS disk, to boot from,
> then, once booted, change to the disk you have put the BIOS executable on?
I don't have a floppy drive. I don't think I've even seen a floppy disk
in several years, much less used one.
Svein
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
What about using 2 floppies? The first, your FreeDOS disk, to boot from,
then, once booted, change to the disk you have put the BIOS executable on?
Svein Halvor Halvorsen wrote:
> I have a problem with my laptop, and before Dell will consider taking i
I have a problem with my laptop, and before Dell will consider taking it
back, I have to go through their checklist and make sure I've tried
everything on that list first. This includes upgrading the BIOS.
The problem is that Dell provides the BIOS upgrade in two forms:
(a) A DOS executable
(b)
usually /dev/cd0 because it's a CD RW. Otherwise
non-writable drives
are /dev/acd0. My CDRW won't eject with /dev/cd0 but it works fine with
eject /dev/acd0.
As for the USB stick, I mount it using the following:
# mount_msdosfs -o longnames /dev/da0s1 /mnt/usbflash0
And umount with the
I don't have FS problems. After a umount the USB stick has still the
Power LED on. Under Linux an "eject" turns the Power LED off.
I tried /usr/ports/sysutils/eject without success (freeBSD 5.4)
I went a little bit through the source of an linux "eject" and the
*BSD &qu
On 12/20/05 07:44 Thomas Linton said the following:
Besides umount, to keep the FS consistant, I belive it would be necessary to
actually turn off the USB stick before you remove it. With Windows and Linux
there is also a way to safety remove -power off- a USB stick.
i've just unmounte
Besides umount, to keep the FS consistant, I belive it would be necessary to
actually turn off the USB stick before you remove it. With Windows and Linux
there is also a way to safety remove -power off- a USB stick.
On 12/19/05, Ivan Roth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thomas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thomas Linton wrote: (already Cc to him)
My USB stick works fine, but I can't figure out how to safty unplug the USB
stick. The LED on my stick is always on; if i try "camcontrol stop da0" or
"camcontrol eject da0" it stays on.
Under Linux
Thomas Linton wrote: (already Cc to him)
> My USB stick works fine, but I can't figure out how to safty unplug the USB
> stick. The LED on my stick is always on; if i try "camcontrol stop da0" or
> "camcontrol eject da0" it stays on.
>
> Under Linux the &
My USB stick works fine, but I can't figure out how to safty unplug the USB
stick. The LED on my stick is always on; if i try "camcontrol stop da0" or
"camcontrol eject da0" it stays on.
Under Linux the "eject"
* Dan Olson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> For me to get da0s1 to appear I use the command:
>
> cat /dev/null > /dev/da0
>
> I think there is a timing issue with my device, a Kingston Elite.
Great, thanks, that works for me as well.
I also found out it works if the stick is plugged in at boot time.
Afte
Fridtjof Busse wrote:
* Mike Jeays <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Now I have /dev/da0, but no /dev/da0s1.
No matter what I try with camcontrol, I don't get da0s1.
By accident I found out that after I mount /dev/da0 (which of course
doesn't give me any files on the stick) and umount it, I get /dev/
da0s1. Wh
* Mike Jeays <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > Now I have /dev/da0, but no /dev/da0s1.
> > No matter what I try with camcontrol, I don't get da0s1.
> > By accident I found out that after I mount /dev/da0 (which of course
> > doesn't give me any files on the stick) and umount it, I get /dev/
> > da0s1. What'
On Sat, 2005-04-23 at 15:41, Fridtjof Busse wrote:
> Hi
> I've got a problem with mounting a USB-stick on FreeBSD 5.4-RC3 (and
> according to google I'm not the only one, but noone seems to have had
> the problem I have):
> If I plug the stick in, I get lots of
>
&
Hi
I've got a problem with mounting a USB-stick on FreeBSD 5.4-RC3 (and
according to google I'm not the only one, but noone seems to have had
the problem I have):
If I plug the stick in, I get lots of
Apr 23 21:26:08 fbsd kernel: (da0:umass-sim0:0:0:0): CAM Status: SCSI
Status Error
Ap
On Tue, Sep 09, 2003 at 07:59:01PM +0200, Hendrik Hasenbein wrote:
> Christoph P. Kukulies wrote:
> >Only drawback, which probably cannot be solved, to automatically unmount
> >:-)
> >when the user is about to pull the stick.
> >
> >Is there a detach line?
>
> Yes, there is. But it is too late. I
Christoph P. Kukulies wrote:
Only drawback, which probably cannot be solved, to automatically unmount :-)
when the user is about to pull the stick.
Is there a detach line?
Yes, there is. But it is too late. If you pull the stick the system gets
noticed, but can't unmount it because the device is p
On Mon, Sep 08, 2003 at 11:57:53PM -0400, Michael W. Oliver wrote:
Content-Description: signed data
>
> Here is an entry from my custom /etc/usbd.conf:
>
>
> device "Memorex ThumbDrive"
> product 0x9988
> vendor 0x0a16
> release 0x0100
> class 0x
> subclass 0x
> protocol 0x00
+--- On Monday, September 08, 2003 17:12 ---
| Todd Stephens proclaimed:
|
| On Monday 08 September 2003 04:05 am, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
| > # mount -t msdos /dev/da0 /mnt
| > msdosfs: /dev/da0: Invalid argument
|
| This is speaking from Linux experience, as I do not have my USB CF card
| reade
On Monday 08 September 2003 04:05 am, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
> # mount -t msdos /dev/da0 /mnt
> msdosfs: /dev/da0: Invalid argument
This is speaking from Linux experience, as I do not have my USB CF card
reader working under FBSD yet, but you probably need to mount a slice
and/or partition r
Hi,
I inserted an USB stick into a 5.1 FreeBSD box and
was pleasantly surprised to see it being autodetected:
umass0: UrDisk USB FLASH DISK, rev 1.10/1.00, addr 2
da0 at umass-sim0 bus 0 target 0 lun 0
da0: Removable Direct Access SCSI-2 device
da0: 1.000MB/s transfers
da0: 15MB (32000 512
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