Re: Odd Flash Drive Behavior.

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Author: Mark Jarvis
Date:  
To: plug-discuss
Subject: Re: Odd Flash Drive Behavior.

> I am a bit confused at your connection description.

There is one cable. Plug a flash drive (A) in. It works. Umount it.
Unplug it. Plug the other drive (B) in. Issue mount command. New drive
(B) won't work. Unplug (B) & re-plug original drive (A). Mount (A).
Drive (A) works. It doesn't matter which drive is mounted first, the
attempt to replace it with the other always fails.

-mj-

Alan Dayley wrote:

> Mark Jarvis said:
>
>>I have two flash drives: a 128MB MicroAdvantage and a 256 SanDisk secure
>> digital card (relic of a camera that died) that is plugged into a
>>SanDisk SD card reader. They get plugged into a USB cable which snakes
>>around from a port on a USB 2 card on the back of my box to a convenient
>> spot near my keyboard. Whichever one is seen first reads OK. It
>>doesn't matter whether it is plugged in before or after boot.
>
>
> I am a bit confused at your connection description. "They get plugged
> into a USB cable..." means that two readers get plugged into one cable or
> that two flash cards are plugged into one reader that has one cable to the
> computer? I think I need a consice description of your media modules
> (card? drive?) and how they are connected.
>
>
>>The problem: if I umount the device, unplug it, then plug the other one
>>in & attempt to mount it, I get a "not a valid block device" error.
>>FWIW, XP has no trouble with this. XP can even tell the devices
>>apart--mounts one as drive J:, the other as drive K:.
>>
>>What can I do to make Linux recognize the second device to be plugged
>>in?
>
>
> I suspect, based on assumptions about your connections, that your Linux
> kernel does not support a multiple LU SCSI device. This is normal since
> most kernel binaries that ship in most (all?) distros do not support
> multiple LU devices.
>
> What distro are you running and have you done any special configurations
> to it after installing?
>
>
>>The applicable entry in /etc/fstab is:
>>
>>/dev/sdb1    /mnt/usbhd    auto    noauto,rw,umask=0,users    0 0

>>
>>The device is "sdb1" because I have a small SCSI disk which is "sda1".
>
>
> If you do need multiple LU support, you will end up with an sdc1 also.
> But, before we go there, please describe your flash reader connection(s)
> so we can go down the right path.
>
> Alan
>
>
>
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