Hi I was trying to mount my USB flashdrive on solaris 10 and I am getting the message saying that (I have already gone through the previous blogs in the forum)
mount: Block device required.
I have tried most of the possible ways.
#rmformat(gives me the necessary information about my flash... (1 Reply)
When I attach a USB storage device to my Solaris server, the mount point is coming up as /rmdisk/unnamed_rmdisk
Is there anyway I can have this device come up as a mounted device with a predetermined mount name eg /morespace rather than unnamed_rmdisk ? (0 Replies)
When I attach a USB storage device to my Solaris server, the mount point is coming up as /rmdisk/unnamed_rmdisk
Is there anyway I can have this device come up as a mounted device with a predetermined mount name eg /morespace rather than unnamed_rmdisk ? (2 Replies)
hi, first of all, i would really like to know how to find out where my usb is in the system. if i "cd to /dev/usb i have a hub0 to hub4 and hid0 -- hid5 .. how do i know where my usb is?
and i guess once i find out which one my usb is at, i can do something like "mount /dev/usb/xxx /tmp" ... (5 Replies)
My previous post seems to be erased and I didn't get any help. I'm logged as root now but no mounting command seems to work, I've tried:
Mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /mnt/USB
Changing "sdc1" for hda1-7, and sdc1-7, and still nothing. Sometimes i get:
"special device not found" and others "device... (4 Replies)
When mounting a USB stick or pen drive on a FreeBSD machine I always issue the following command:
mount -t msdosfs /dev/da0s1 /mnt
Something I have always wondered is what the option msdosfs stands for and more importantly, why it is necessary. (7 Replies)
I am very new to Solaris.
The machine I am working with is running Solaris 10.
I have a 1.5 TB hard drive plugged into a USB dock plugged into the Solaris machine. I ran 'cfgadm -al' and can see that the usb0/1 is usb-storage that was not there before.
How do i mount this drive and format... (3 Replies)
Hi Friends
I Have a question about mounting point
This is a output of df -g
I wanted to delete the first FS /dev/lvdb2inst1 which is mounted on /db2/db2ins1
http://i43.tinypic.com/35in6ts.jpg
Here my question is, if we delete the first FS , are other two FS are unaccessble as all 3 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: atul9806
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
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)