I have a 2 GB RealTek flash drive that has worked well in the past. It's about 1 year old but lately when I plug it into my Ubuntu Intrepid system it only shows 50 MB available even though there are no files on it:
Hello all..
I have a Verbatim 2 GB flash drive. I also have Solaris 10 running on my workstation. If I am in the Windows environment, it detects the flash drive. But when I plug it while I am in solaris, nothing happens. How will solaris 10 detect my flash drive? What do I have to do?
any... (4 Replies)
hello forum..
i am using RHEL 4.0 and my system is dual boot.normally the usb flash drive should be auto mount , but in my system i am unable to mount the drive plz help...
i am a new user so plz give me in detail.
thank u in advance. (5 Replies)
I have a removable usb flash drive which is visible below as no. 2
# rmformat
Looking for devices...
1. Volmgt Node: /vol/dev/aliases/cdrom0
Logical Node: /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s2
Physical Node: /pci@0,0/pci-ide@1f,1/ide@0/sd@0,0
Connected Device: HL-DT-ST DVD+-RW... (4 Replies)
Where can I find instructions for doing this? I am running Win XP and would like to be able to run solaris 10 from my flash drive.
Thanks,
Carrie (3 Replies)
I have a flash drive which contained very important docs. But somebidy accidently dleted those files. I want to recover these files anyhow.
I have listened the Linux have best possible chances of recovering it.
Can anybody tell me how to recover that? (1 Reply)
I copied some files from my Linux EXT4 box to an ntfs flash drive. I have ntfs-3g installed, and the files copied fine, but I could not view them on a Windows box. What happened? Did it not write them using NTFS? Did it mount the drive under a different file-system (is that even possible)? (1 Reply)
Hi,
I run Fedora 17.
I created a physical volume of 30GB on a disk with 60GB of space so there is 30GB of free space. On the physical volume, I created my volume group and logical volumes. I assigned all the space in the physical volume to my volume group. I need to add the 30GB of free space... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mojoman
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
lsusb
lsusb(8) Linux USB Utilities lsusb(8)NAME
lsusb - list USB devices
SYNOPSIS
lsusb [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
lsusb is a utility for displaying information about USB buses in the system and the devices connected to them.
OPTIONS -v, --verbose
Tells lsusb to be verbose and display detailed information about the devices shown. This includes configuration descriptors for the
device's current speed. Class descriptors will be shown, when available, for USB device classes including hub, audio, HID, communi-
cations, and chipcard.
-s [[bus]:][devnum]
Show only devices in specified bus and/or devnum. Both ID's are given in decimal and may be omitted.
-d [vendor]:[product]
Show only devices with the specified vendor and product ID. Both ID's are given in hexadecimal.
-D device
Do not scan the /dev/bus/usb directory, instead display only information about the device whose device file is given. The device
file should be something like /dev/bus/usb/001/001. This option displays detailed information like the v option; you must be root
to do this.
-t Tells lsusb to dump the physical USB device hierarchy as a tree. This overrides the v option.
-V, --version
Print version information on standard output, then exit successfully.
RETURN VALUE
If the specified device is not found, a non-zero exit code is returned.
FILES
/var/lib/usbutils/usb.ids
A list of all known USB ID's (vendors, products, classes, subclasses and protocols).
SEE ALSO lspci(8), usbview(8).
AUTHOR
Thomas Sailer, <sailer@ife.ee.ethz.ch>.
usbutils-007 6 May 2009 lsusb(8)