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I'm experiencing a weird problem regarding mounting usb sticks. Archlinux stopped auto-mounting usb sticks on my machine, but only those that contains an operating system. Empty or data usb sticks mount without problem.
A few weeks or month ago, I don't remember exactly, still everything was all right, but due to updates(?) usb sticks won't auto mount any more.
I have two arch partitions none of them mount usb sticks anymore with operating systems on them.
Today, I wanted to test a new operating system and write it on my usb stick, and of course I couldn't because arch didn't mount it. Luckily, on my other partitions a few old distos are still installed – I don't use them anymore for years- I booted them up and they mounted the usb stick without problem; it seems only the up-to-date system have problem handling the usb sticks. I have two Arch system installed on two different partitions, Gnome 3 and Enlightenment, both system are up to date.
Here are some info:
[mak@myhost ~]$ dmesg | grep -E "sd[a-z]"
[ 1.369732] sd 2:0:0:0: [sda] 234441648 512-byte logical blocks: (120 GB/111 GiB)
[ 1.369819] sd 2:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off
[ 1.369821] sd 2:0:0:0: [sda] Mode Sense: 00 3a 00 00
[ 1.369872] sd 2:0:0:0: [sda] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
[ 1.369924] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdb] 625142448 512-byte logical blocks: (320 GB/298 GiB)
[ 1.369982] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdb] Write Protect is off
[ 1.369985] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 00 3a 00 00
[ 1.370070] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdb] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
[ 1.371642] sda: sda1 sda2 sda3 sda4 sda5 sda6
[ 1.372298] sd 2:0:0:0: [sda] Attached SCSI disk
[ 1.429438] sdb: sdb1 sdb2 sdb3 sdb4 sdb5 sdb6 sdb7 sdb8 sdb9
[ 1.430159] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdb] Attached SCSI disk
[ 2.244580] EXT4-fs (sda5): mounted filesystem with ordered data mode. Opts: (null)
[ 2.348031] systemd[1]: Expecting device dev-sdb8.device...
[ 2.362842] EXT4-fs (sda5): re-mounted. Opts: discard,data=ordered
[ 3.358252] Adding 2097148k swap on /dev/sdb8. Priority:-1 extents:1 across:2097148k FS
[ 5.458907] EXT4-fs (sda5): re-mounted. Opts: discard,data=ordered,commit=0
[ 52.120360] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] 15679488 512-byte logical blocks: (8.02 GB/7.47 GiB)
[ 52.121310] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] Write Protect is off
[ 52.121319] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] Mode Sense: 43 00 00 00
[ 52.122191] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] No Caching mode page present
[ 52.122199] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] Assuming drive cache: write through
[ 52.125825] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] No Caching mode page present
[ 52.125838] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] Assuming drive cache: write through
[ 52.126999] sdc: sdc1 sdc2
[ 52.131071] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] No Caching mode page present
[ 52.131084] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] Assuming drive cache: write through
[ 52.131093] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdc] Attached SCSI removable disk
[mak@myhost ~]$ [root@myhost mak]# fdisk -l
WARNING: fdisk GPT support is currently new, and therefore in an experimental phase. Use at your own discretion.
Disk /dev/sda: 120.0 GB, 120034123776 bytes, 234441648 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk label type: gpt
# Start End Size Type Name
1 2048 18431 8M BIOS boot parti BIOS boot
2 18432 56641478 27G Linux filesyste sda2
3 56641536 113264582 27G Linux filesyste sda3
4 113264640 169887686 27G Linux filesyste sda4
5 169887744 226510790 27G Linux filesyste sda5
6 226510848 234441614 3.8G Linux filesyste Spare
WARNING: fdisk GPT support is currently new, and therefore in an experimental phase. Use at your own discretion.
Disk /dev/sdb: 320.1 GB, 320072933376 bytes, 625142448 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk label type: gpt
# Start End Size Type Name
1 2048 18431 8M BIOS boot parti Bios boot
2 18432 54544383 26G Microsoft basic Partition 2
3 54544384 109070335 26G Linux filesyste Partition 3
4 109070336 163596287 26G Microsoft basic
5 163596288 218122239 26G EFI System Partition 5
6 218122240 272647630 26G Microsoft basic Partition 6
7 272648192 327174143 26G Linux filesyste Partition 7
8 327174144 331368447 2G Linux swap Swap
9 331368448 625142414 140.1G Linux filesyste Storage
Disk /dev/sdc: 8027 MB, 8027897856 bytes, 15679488 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk label type: dos
Disk identifier: 0x5fadc669
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sdc1 * 0 4040703 2020352 0 Empty
/dev/sdc2 4036 38595 17280 ef EFI (FAT-12/16/32)
Disk /dev/sdc1: 2068 MB, 2068840448 bytes, 4040704 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk label type: dos
Disk identifier: 0x5fadc669
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sdc1p1 * 0 4040703 2020352 0 Empty
/dev/sdc1p2 4036 38595 17280 ef EFI (FAT-12/16/32)
[root@myhost mak]# [root@myhost mak]# blkid -o list -c /dev/null
device fs_type label mount point UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/sda1 (not mounted)
/dev/sda2 ext4 (not mounted) 0a76a275-1798-495b-aa27-732626029de2
/dev/sda3 ext4 (not mounted) 0e9363ef-3791-409c-8db9-393385007689
/dev/sda4 ext4 (not mounted) 8f043c02-8b56-4689-a0ee-ed34ccc6f21f
/dev/sda5 ext4 / 82699b0e-8fe9-41e2-be13-65c798ed8a73
/dev/sda6 ext4 (not mounted) 3eaab6bf-2d05-4a7b-a6f7-8675e5f18723
/dev/sdb1 (not mounted)
/dev/sdb2 ext4 (not mounted) 17069311-9f14-4430-8298-be48194eb874
/dev/sdb3 ext4 (not mounted) 2e3b383d-3fa7-40df-b52d-c5d07caf252e
/dev/sdb4 ext4 (not mounted) 9d9b0656-d4ca-4efa-b6f8-1797bd4ead1f
/dev/sdb5 ext4 (not mounted) 05abf58a-ae6e-4377-9b3d-d6bacd92226d
/dev/sdb6 ext4 (not mounted) 8d7c6d55-dc47-471f-84f6-aae8864dfdd7
/dev/sdb7 ext4 (not mounted) b2155741-8f88-4063-bd1b-39b210004b17
/dev/sdb8 swap <swap> 97cf7cdf-299c-4e0d-a438-c8b79766699c
/dev/sdb9 ext4 (not mounted) 426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c
/dev/sdc1 udf Sabayon GNOME (not mounted) 2013-07-29-13-08-13-27
/dev/sdc2 vfat (not mounted) CF68-C2B6
[root@myhost mak]# Thanks for the help.
jmak
Last edited by jmak (2013-08-14 00:12:54)
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So the second doesn't show in blkid?
The partition tables look really weird. The second partition in each case is contained within the first. The second is allegedly the EFI partition but the first one is marked bootable. Also the system seems to think at least one is scsi?
How did you create them? You say you installed an iso on them but then you talk about them having an OS on. Did you install a regular OS on there? Or are they meant to be live media? Either way, information about exactly what you did might be helpful.
EDIT: Also, is it that they won't mount or just that they won't automount? What happens when you try to mount them manually?
Last edited by cfr (2013-08-13 01:21:35)
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So the second doesn't show in blkid?
The partition tables look really weird. The second partition in each case is contained within the first. The second is allegedly the EFI partition but the first one is marked bootable. Also the system seems to think at least one is scsi?
How did you create them? You say you installed an iso on them but then you talk about them having an OS on. Did you install a regular OS on there? Or are they meant to be live media? Either way, information about exactly what you did might be helpful.
EDIT: Also, is it that they won't mount or just that they won't automount? What happens when you try to mount them manually?
Sorry, I ment ISO. I use usb sticks to install new distros only. I used gpt partition method to partition both harddrives. I don't use the sdb harddrive for about 2 years. It came with the computer when I bought it about 6 years ago. 2 years ago, I bought an ssd (sda) harddrive, which I use exclusively.
When I try to mount it manually I get this:
[root@myhost mak]# mount /dev/sdc1
mount: can't find /dev/sdc1 in /etc/fstabLast edited by jmak (2013-08-13 01:48:45)
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See the man page for mount. Since these are removable devices, you need to pass mount the information it otherwise gets from fstab.
You haven't said how you created the USB sticks. I take it the problems concern sdc (and sdc1p??) rather than sda or sdb, correct?
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See the man page for mount. Since these are removable devices, you need to pass mount the information it otherwise gets from fstab.
You haven't said how you created the USB sticks. I take it the problems concern sdc (and sdc1p??) rather than sda or sdb, correct?
I burned the iso to the usb stick by using the “dd” method. I always use this method when burn iso because this is foolproof.
Yes, the sdc is the usb stick, which is the problem.
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Well foolproof or not, it has created a really weird partition table. What is sdc1p? Is that another USB stick? It seems to have an equally weird partition map.
By the way, you can't create an Arch USB bootable in EFI mode with dd. Obviously don't know about sabayon.
EDIT: Did you dd to the disk or to a partition? What command exactly did you use? Because it almost looks as if you did something like dd once and create one thing and then dd over the top of one of the partition so you've got a partition which itself has a partition map. Not sure that's possible but it sure looks weird.
I would wipe the key and start over.
Last edited by cfr (2013-08-13 02:25:10)
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Just in comparison, when I put a data usb stick into the computer, this is what I get. The usb stick gets mounted immediately.
[root@myhost mak]# blkid -o list -c /dev/null
device fs_type label mount point UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/sda1 (not mounted)
/dev/sda2 ext4 (not mounted) 0a76a275-1798-495b-aa27-732626029de2
/dev/sda3 ext4 (not mounted) 0e9363ef-3791-409c-8db9-393385007689
/dev/sda4 ext4 (not mounted) 8f043c02-8b56-4689-a0ee-ed34ccc6f21f
/dev/sda5 ext4 / 82699b0e-8fe9-41e2-be13-65c798ed8a73
/dev/sda6 ext4 (not mounted) 3eaab6bf-2d05-4a7b-a6f7-8675e5f18723
/dev/sdb1 (not mounted)
/dev/sdb2 ext4 (not mounted) 17069311-9f14-4430-8298-be48194eb874
/dev/sdb3 ext4 (not mounted) 2e3b383d-3fa7-40df-b52d-c5d07caf252e
/dev/sdb4 ext4 (not mounted) 9d9b0656-d4ca-4efa-b6f8-1797bd4ead1f
/dev/sdb5 ext4 (not mounted) 05abf58a-ae6e-4377-9b3d-d6bacd92226d
/dev/sdb6 ext4 (not mounted) 8d7c6d55-dc47-471f-84f6-aae8864dfdd7
/dev/sdb7 ext4 (not mounted) b2155741-8f88-4063-bd1b-39b210004b17
/dev/sdb8 swap <swap> 97cf7cdf-299c-4e0d-a438-c8b79766699c
/dev/sdb9 ext4 /run/media/mak/426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c 426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c
/dev/sdc vfat /run/media/mak/2969-1F71 2969-1F71
[root@myhost mak]# Offline
Yes. The other one is weird.
Oddly, KDE has just started refusing to recognise my USB sticks. On the other hand, it does that from time to time. Good thing the system is saner than the DE.
EDIT: See my edit above. As I say, I would wipe it and start over. If the partition map still looks that weird, get another key.
Last edited by cfr (2013-08-13 02:27:50)
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What is sdc1p? Is that another USB stick? It seems to have an equally weird partition map.
By the way, you can't create an Arch USB bootable in EFI mode with dd. Obviously don't know about sabayon.
EDIT: Did you dd to the disk or to a partition? What command exactly did you use? Because it almost looks as if you did something like dd once and create one thing and then dd over the top of one of the partition so you've got a partition which itself has a partition map. Not sure that's possible but it sure looks weird.
I would wipe the key and start over.
I don't know what is that. It is a partition on the same usb stick, it was the “dd” that made that partition automatically, I guess. When I burn images into usb, I always use this command:
# dd bs=4M if=/path/to/archlinux.iso of=/dev/sdx && sync
I used this when burned Sabayon and it works perfectly.
The problem is that Arch can't auto-mount its own installation usb either. I put the arch install usb in and I get the following output:
[root@myhost mak]# blkid -o list -c /dev/null
device fs_type label mount point UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/sda1 (not mounted)
/dev/sda2 ext4 (not mounted) 0a76a275-1798-495b-aa27-732626029de2
/dev/sda3 ext4 (not mounted) 0e9363ef-3791-409c-8db9-393385007689
/dev/sda4 ext4 (not mounted) 8f043c02-8b56-4689-a0ee-ed34ccc6f21f
/dev/sda5 ext4 / 82699b0e-8fe9-41e2-be13-65c798ed8a73
/dev/sda6 ext4 (not mounted) 3eaab6bf-2d05-4a7b-a6f7-8675e5f18723
/dev/sdb1 (not mounted)
/dev/sdb2 ext4 (not mounted) 17069311-9f14-4430-8298-be48194eb874
/dev/sdb3 ext4 (not mounted) 2e3b383d-3fa7-40df-b52d-c5d07caf252e
/dev/sdb4 ext4 (not mounted) 9d9b0656-d4ca-4efa-b6f8-1797bd4ead1f
/dev/sdb5 ext4 (not mounted) 05abf58a-ae6e-4377-9b3d-d6bacd92226d
/dev/sdb6 ext4 (not mounted) 8d7c6d55-dc47-471f-84f6-aae8864dfdd7
/dev/sdb7 ext4 (not mounted) b2155741-8f88-4063-bd1b-39b210004b17
/dev/sdb8 swap <swap> 97cf7cdf-299c-4e0d-a438-c8b79766699c
/dev/sdb9 ext4 /run/media/mak/426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c 426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c
/dev/sdc1 iso9660 ARCH_201305 (not mounted) 2013-05-01-07-12-33-00
[root@myhost mak]# It doesn't appear in nautilus side panel.
Last edited by jmak (2013-08-13 02:44:45)
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But can you mount it? If you don't know that, you don't know where the problem is. Is it just not automounting it? Or is it that it can't be mounted at all? So far, all you've shown is that you can't automount these for some reason. Automounting regularly fails for me. I'm not saying it should but that's very different from not being able to mount at all which is what your thread title says.
I still wouldn't trust that other USB - if all four of those partitions are on one key, there is something seriously twisted in it. Still, maybe it is some magic I know not what.
Creating the Arch USB that way works fine so long as you only need it to boot in bios mode.
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But can you mount it? If you don't know that, you don't know where the problem is. Is it just not automounting it? Or is it that it can't be mounted at all? So far, all you've shown is that you can't automount these for some reason. Automounting regularly fails for me. I'm not saying it should but that's very different from not being able to mount at all which is what your thread title says.
I still wouldn't trust that other USB - if all four of those partitions are on one key, there is something seriously twisted in it. Still, maybe it is some magic I know not what.
Creating the Arch USB that way works fine so long as you only need it to boot in bios mode.
It mounts manually, but it still doesn't show up in nautilus left bar. Here is the result:
[root@myhost mak]# blkid -o list -c /dev/null
device fs_type label mount point UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/sda1 (not mounted)
/dev/sda2 ext4 (not mounted) 0a76a275-1798-495b-aa27-732626029de2
/dev/sda3 ext4 (not mounted) 0e9363ef-3791-409c-8db9-393385007689
/dev/sda4 ext4 (not mounted) 8f043c02-8b56-4689-a0ee-ed34ccc6f21f
/dev/sda5 ext4 / 82699b0e-8fe9-41e2-be13-65c798ed8a73
/dev/sda6 ext4 (not mounted) 3eaab6bf-2d05-4a7b-a6f7-8675e5f18723
/dev/sdb1 (not mounted)
/dev/sdb2 ext4 (not mounted) 17069311-9f14-4430-8298-be48194eb874
/dev/sdb3 ext4 (not mounted) 2e3b383d-3fa7-40df-b52d-c5d07caf252e
/dev/sdb4 ext4 (not mounted) 9d9b0656-d4ca-4efa-b6f8-1797bd4ead1f
/dev/sdb5 ext4 (not mounted) 05abf58a-ae6e-4377-9b3d-d6bacd92226d
/dev/sdb6 ext4 (not mounted) 8d7c6d55-dc47-471f-84f6-aae8864dfdd7
/dev/sdb7 ext4 (not mounted) b2155741-8f88-4063-bd1b-39b210004b17
/dev/sdb8 swap <swap> 97cf7cdf-299c-4e0d-a438-c8b79766699c
/dev/sdb9 ext4 (not mounted) 426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c
/dev/sdc1 iso9660 ARCH_201305 /mnt/usbstick 2013-05-01-07-12-33-00
[root@myhost mak]# Offline
OK. So can you mount the other USB stick in the same way i.e. manually? If so, I suggest changing the threat title to more accurately reflect the problem i.e. that the issue in automounting in Nautilus. If not, then the problems are distinct.
Regardless, I think the partition map of the sabayon still looks scarily weird. But I suppose if it works...
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OK. So can you mount the other USB stick in the same way i.e. manually? If so, I suggest changing the threat title to more accurately reflect the problem i.e. that the issue in automounting in Nautilus. If not, then the problems are distinct.
Regardless, I think the partition map of the sabayon still looks scarily weird. But I suppose if it works...
I already reformatted the sabayon usb stick. Now, the stick is empty and auto mounts as it should be. I put both sticks in the computer, here is the result: the empty sabayon stick now mounts and the arch install stick doesn't.
[root@myhost mak]# blkid -o list -c /dev/null
device fs_type label mount point UUID
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/dev/sda1 (not mounted)
/dev/sda2 ext4 (not mounted) 0a76a275-1798-495b-aa27-732626029de2
/dev/sda3 ext4 (not mounted) 0e9363ef-3791-409c-8db9-393385007689
/dev/sda4 ext4 (not mounted) 8f043c02-8b56-4689-a0ee-ed34ccc6f21f
/dev/sda5 ext4 / 82699b0e-8fe9-41e2-be13-65c798ed8a73
/dev/sda6 ext4 (not mounted) 3eaab6bf-2d05-4a7b-a6f7-8675e5f18723
/dev/sdb1 (not mounted)
/dev/sdb2 ext4 (not mounted) 17069311-9f14-4430-8298-be48194eb874
/dev/sdb3 ext4 (not mounted) 2e3b383d-3fa7-40df-b52d-c5d07caf252e
/dev/sdb4 ext4 (not mounted) 9d9b0656-d4ca-4efa-b6f8-1797bd4ead1f
/dev/sdb5 ext4 (not mounted) 23ccb8bc-8d20-4c9f-972b-f50ebde26640
/dev/sdb6 ext4 (not mounted) 8d7c6d55-dc47-471f-84f6-aae8864dfdd7
/dev/sdb7 ext4 (not mounted) b2155741-8f88-4063-bd1b-39b210004b17
/dev/sdb8 swap <swap> 97cf7cdf-299c-4e0d-a438-c8b79766699c
/dev/sdb9 ext4 (not mounted) 426648fd-98f5-4fb0-9114-bdbdfea9047c
/dev/sdc1 iso9660 ARCH_201305 (not mounted) 2013-05-01-07-12-33-00
/dev/sdd1 vfat /run/media/mak/Sabayon GNOME 7AD3-980C
[root@myhost mak]# As I said in my first post, empty and data sticks mount properly no problem, only sticks with install media on it don't. I've never experienced anything like this before. I repeat older installs have no problem mounting the usb stick, only the up-to-date systems have this problem.
My gnome 3 otherwise, works perfectly.
Last edited by jmak (2013-08-13 21:45:04)
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I'm just wondering, isn't it possible that this is a new safety feature? I mean not mounting the install media automatically. Perhaps, to prevent users from overwriting it. Because, the bios sees the usb stick, so I can boot from it. I wonder, whether other gnome 3 users experience the same behaviour?
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But it is a problem with automounting - not mounting per se. So I think changing your thread title will help people figure out what you are asking.
I know nothing about gnome or nautilus, for example. If it couldn't be mounted, I might be able to say something. Or if you wanted to mount it manually without needing to be root. Or if you used KDE and wanted to (dis)enable automounting. But this is a nautilus/gnome question as far as I can see concerning automounting and you want your thread title to stand out to people who might know about automounting in that environment.
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What is the output of `mount`?
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For whatever it is worth, I can reproduce equivalent behaviour in KDE. I don't have KDE automount at all but KDE does show a notification which allows me to choose to mount. It now does this with a blank memory stick but not with the Arch 2011-08 install media. Or with the 201207/09 install media. (For some reason the usb key has label 201207 but the partition has label 201209.)
Journal:
In the case of the install media (2011-08):
scsi 9:0:0:0: Direct-Access Generic Flash Disk 5.00 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2
sd 9:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 0b 00 00 08In the case of the other install media (2012):
scsi 11:0:0:0: Direct-Access USB DISK PMAP PQ: 0 ANSI: 0 CCS
sd 11:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 23 00 00 00In the case of the blank memory stick:
scsi 10:0:0:0: Direct-Access Generic UFD 1.00 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2
sd 10:0:0:0: [sdc] Mode Sense: 03 00 00 00On the other hand, fdisk isn't keen on the memory stick:
Disk /dev/sdc: 32.3 GB, 32312918016 bytes, 63111168 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk label type: dos
Disk identifier: 0x6f20736b
This doesn't look like a partition table
Probably you selected the wrong device.
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sdc1 ? 778135908 1919645538 570754815+ 72 Unknown
/dev/sdc2 ? 168689522 2104717761 968014120 65 Novell Netware 386
/dev/sdc3 ? 1869881465 3805909656 968014096 79 Unknown
/dev/sdc4 ? 2885681152 2885736650 27749+ d Unknown
Partition table entries are not in disk orderNot sure why it has Novell Netware on it (or even what that is) or why fdisk doesn't like its partition table. (Somebody recently got this stick free with a printer cartridge and didn't want it so I haven't actually used it yet.)
Another which "works":
scsi 12:0:0:0: Direct-Access Generic Flash Disk 8.07 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2
sd 12:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 03 00 00 00Last edited by cfr (2013-08-13 23:22:40)
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I think I solved the problem. I fired up gparted and it immediately reported that the arch install usb stick had an invalid partition table. Gparted didn't detect the content of the usb stick either, but it reported -- unallocated space.
I've created a new partition table and reformatted the entire usb stick. In the mean time, I downloaded a fresh arch iso and installed on the usb stick by using the dd method. Now, nautilus recognizes the usb stick right away and automounts it.
The whole thing was my misunderstanding. When I burned the arch iso and the sabayon iso on the usb stick, I've overwritten the previous install media that was on it thinking that the dd method will erase all data from the usb stick anyway, as it is stated in the wiki. It seems that this is not the case; this creates a valid install disk, but messes up the partition table, which prevents nautilus from recognizing the usb stick.
So the conclusion is that the usb stick has to be formatted each time before a new install media written into it, otherwise, the dd method messes up the partition table.
Cfr! Thanks for helping me. You spotted right away that the sabayon usb stick had a twisted partition. And, indeed that was the problem as the entire formatting was messed up preventing nautilus from recognizing it.
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No problem. Wish I knew why KDE is treating my install media differently (and they do not have invalid partition tables - I checked). The only one with an invalid partition table was the new memory stick and it was perfectly happy offering to mount that one. One benefit of this thread is that it now has a valid partition table although I may redo it when I decide how to use it. (Not quite sure what to do with a 30G memory stick as I've never had one bigger than 1G before!)
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Arch Linux | x86_64 | GPT | EFI boot | refind | stub loader | systemd | LVM2 on LUKS
Lenovo x270 | Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-7200U CPU @ 2.50GHz | Intel Wireless 8265/8275 | US keyboard w/ Euro | 512G NVMe INTEL SSDPEKKF512G7L
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