How To Use USB Drives

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Use USB Disks or Sticks on Fedora

I have several USB and eSATA disk I need on my machine. I also need to bring files and take files from the machine by USB stick. I use Putty and Webmin for these things

Install autofs

bash code
​yum install autofs​


Need VFAT for the big USB Disk or the large files on it:

bash code
​​yum install fuse fuse-ntfs-3g​


Setup the autofs by edit master settings

Change 2 lines to (if not needed)

Add one (or more) line for the USB disk /var/hda/vol /etc/auto.vol --timeout=3

bash code
​nano /etc/auto.master​
# Sample auto.master file
# This is an automounter map and it has the following format
# key [ -mount-options-separated-by-comma ] location
# For details of the format look at autofs(5).
#
/var/hda/vol    /etc/auto.vol  --timeout=3
#
#/misc  /etc/auto.misc
#
# NOTE: mounts done from a hosts map will be mounted with the
#      "nosuid" and "nodev" options unless the "suid" and "dev"
#      options are explicitly given.
#
#/net  -hosts
#
# Include central master map if it can be found using
# nsswitch sources.
#
# Note that if there are entries for /net or /misc (as
# above) in the included master map any keys that are the
# same will not be seen as the first read key seen takes
# precedence.
#
+auto.master

Add the directory by

bash code
​​mkdir /var/hda/vol ; chmod 775 /var/hd​


Then add the auto.vol file:

bash code
​​nano /etc/auto.vol​
#
# This is an automounter map and it has the following format
# key [ -mount-options-separated-by-comma ] location
# mountpoint_key options location_device # man 5 autofs
#
cdrom  -fstype=auto,ro,nosuid,nodev,user                      :/dev/cdrom
#floppy -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/fd0
K      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdk1
K.2    -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000  :dev/sdk2 #2nd partition
K.3    -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000  :dev/sdk3 #3d partition
L      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdl1
M      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdm1
N      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdn1
O      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdo1
G      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdg
H      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdh
I      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdi
J      -fstype=auto,nosuid,nodev,noexec,user,gid=100,umask=000 :/dev/sdj

Now restart autofs and then all is GO

bash code
​​service autofs restart​


Create the symlinks

bash code
​​ln -s /var/hda/vol /var/hda/files/Disks​


Make browse active by edit the file autofs

bash code
​​nano /etc/sysconfig/autofs​


Change line BROWSE_MODE="no" to BROWSE_MODE="yes"


That is all, but for more see: http://www.autofs.org/autofs-man.html

Nalleju

Use USB Disks or Sticks on Ubuntu Server

Ubuntu Server edition doesn't have the same automount function as the desktop version, so if you want to add the functionality here's how:

Install the usbmount package

bash code
​sudo apt-get install usbmount​


This will install the daemon and create some empty mount points at /media/usb0-7

If you now plug in a USB drive, it will be automounted in the first empty folder i.e. /media/usb0

If you need to mount an NTFS drive, then you need to edit the config file:

bash code
​sudo nano /etc/usbmount/usbmount.conf​
# Filesystem types: removable storage devices are only mounted if they
# contain a filesystem type which is in this list.
FILESYSTEMS="vfat ext2 ext3 ext4 hfsplus ntfs"

Find the 'FILESYSTEMS' entry and add 'ntfs' at the end

If you use USB drives regularly you might want to add a symlink under /var/hda/files for one or more of the mountpoints, for example:

bash code
​ln -s /media/usb0 /var/hda/files/drives/usb​