On Thu, Aug 11, 2005 at 10:57:14AM +0530, Mukund JB. wrote: > I am Linux driver programmer. > > I have a FAT12 issue on my SD cards. I have got these addresses from the > fs-lists as the maintainer support mail IDs for FAT-FS. > > I am using the 2.6.10 kernel, X86 like systems. > > I am NOT able to mount the Camera formatted FAT12 filesystem on my linux > BOX. SD card is of size 16MB. At the same time I am able to mount the SD > cards formatted in windows & linux. > > I have identified fat_fill_super() in fs/fat/inode.c file as the > function that reads the super block of as MS-DOS FS. > > To debug, I have rebuilt my kernel 2.6.10 inserting some debug messages > in the FS sub-system to know what data is coming into "struct > fat_boot_sector *b" structure in fs/fat/inode.c file after sb_bread() > call. > > I believe that this data in the "struct fat_boot_sector *b" should be > FAT12 information. > > On the camera formatted SD that is NOT mounting I have found this > structure to be all '0' till total_sectors variable (relevant till here > on - FAT12). > > Will you please verify if there & tell me if the problem is in the FAT > sub-system.
A few things I would try: Stick the SD card in a generic cheap USB media reader, and see what the kernel thinks of the cards then. Do both work? If the answer is still no, then it really seems the card is formated incorrectly, or linux has a bug in the fat driver. If both work fine that way, then there is a problem in the driver for the sd reader you are using that needs to be resolved. Using a known to work for people in general driver (usb-storage) with a standard usb card reader sure does seem like a good start until you know if the card is formated properly or not. You could also use that do dd the first few blocks from the card to see what the partition table and fat tables look like, in case your SD driver is somehow messing that part up. By having a copy you can compare more easily. Len Sorensen - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/