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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users how to increase cylinders on USB Flash Drive Post 302560150 by Pkumar Sachin on Thursday 29th of September 2011 03:50:09 AM
Old 09-29-2011
how to increase cylinders on USB Flash Drive

Hello All,

I faced a unique issue. I have written a script for transferring backup data on my host machine to a USB Flash drive. The Flash drive must be of 16GB size. So, my script creates two primary partitionon the USB flash drive. I require approx 5900 cylinders for the first partition on the Flash drive. Most USB flash drive have sufficient cylinders to create two primary partitions as required by my script.

However recently I used a CENTON flash drive which has 2785 cylinders. Hence, my script is not able to create partitions on it as the number of cylinders is less than required.

Anyone has any idea how to resolve this issue?? Please find below the failure

Code:
Disk /dev/sdc: 16.0 GB, 16095641600 bytes   [ USB Flash drive ]
217 heads, 52 sectors/track, 2785 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 11284 * 512 = 5777408 bytes
   Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/sdc1               1        2786    15714304    c  W95 FAT32 (LBA)



partitioning failure

Code:
First cylinder (1-2785, default 1):
Using default value 1
Last cylinder or +size or +sizeM or +sizeK (1-2785, default 2785): 5917
Value out of range.

Cheers,
Sachin

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Last edited by pludi; 09-29-2011 at 04:57 AM..
 

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SD(4)							     Linux Programmer's Manual							     SD(4)

NAME
sd - driver for SCSI disk drives SYNOPSIS
#include <linux/hdreg.h> /* for HDIO_GETGEO */ #include <linux/fs.h> /* for BLKGETSIZE and BLKRRPART */ CONFIGURATION
The block device name has the following form: sdlp, where l is a letter denoting the physical drive, and p is a number denoting the parti- tion on that physical drive. Often, the partition number, p, will be left off when the device corresponds to the whole drive. SCSI disks have a major device number of 8, and a minor device number of the form (16 * drive_number) + partition_number, where drive_num- ber is the number of the physical drive in order of detection, and partition_number is as follows: partition 0 is the whole drive partitions 1-4 are the DOS "primary" partitions partitions 5-8 are the DOS "extended" (or "logical") partitions For example, /dev/sda will have major 8, minor 0, and will refer to all of the first SCSI drive in the system; and /dev/sdb3 will have major 8, minor 19, and will refer to the third DOS "primary" partition on the second SCSI drive in the system. At this time, only block devices are provided. Raw devices have not yet been implemented. DESCRIPTION
The following ioctls are provided: HDIO_GETGEO Returns the BIOS disk parameters in the following structure: struct hd_geometry { unsigned char heads; unsigned char sectors; unsigned short cylinders; unsigned long start; }; A pointer to this structure is passed as the ioctl(2) parameter. The information returned in the parameter is the disk geometry of the drive as understood by DOS! This geometry is not the physical geometry of the drive. It is used when constructing the drive's partition table, however, and is needed for convenient operation of fdisk(1), efdisk(1), and lilo(1). If the geometry information is not available, zero will be returned for all of the parameters. BLKGETSIZE Returns the device size in sectors. The ioctl(2) parameter should be a pointer to a long. BLKRRPART Forces a reread of the SCSI disk partition tables. No parameter is needed. The SCSI ioctl(2) operations are also supported. If the ioctl(2) parameter is required, and it is NULL, then ioctl(2) will fail with the error EINVAL. FILES
/dev/sd[a-h]: the whole device /dev/sd[a-h][0-8]: individual block partitions COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2012-05-03 SD(4)
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