and hardware in the lab on last week.
I reformatted the USB drive with extFAT and standard block size on
Windows 7. The USB drive is now seen again on FreeBSD and recognized as
this points that the pendrive's controller is not just flaky but horrid.
The communiation with OS, and how/whether it is
On Saturday 23 June 2012 11:52:53 Adrian Chadd wrote:
> On 21 June 2012 23:22, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
> > usbconfig -d 7.6 add_quirk UQ_MSC_NO_INQUIRY
> >
> > Then re-plug it.
> >
> > I'm sorry to say a lot of USB flash sticks out there are broken and only
> > tested with the timing of MS Wi
On 06/23/12 10:39, Eduardo Morras wrote:
> At 09:21 23/06/2012, you wrote:
>> I tried the USB drive this morning with the recommended quirk shown
>> above on FreeBSD 10.0-CURRENT #1 r237462: Sat Jun 23 01:00:35 CEST 2012
>> without success. I get the same error message as shown above. With or
>> wi
On 21 June 2012 23:22, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
> usbconfig -d 7.6 add_quirk UQ_MSC_NO_INQUIRY
>
> Then re-plug it.
>
> I'm sorry to say a lot of USB flash sticks out there are broken and only
> tested with the timing of MS Windows. Part of the problem is that it is
> difficult to autodetect th
At 09:21 23/06/2012, you wrote:
I tried the USB drive this morning with the recommended quirk shown
above on FreeBSD 10.0-CURRENT #1 r237462: Sat Jun 23 01:00:35 CEST 2012
without success. I get the same error message as shown above. With or
without quirk.
I then started Windows 7 on the same bo
On 06/22/12 08:22, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
> On Friday 22 June 2012 08:01:38 O. Hartmann wrote:
>> I have a USB drive/stick, Lexar USB Flash drive as reported by FreeBSD
>> shown below.
>> When first used, I was able to put approx. 30 GB of data on it - it was
>> visible to FreeBSD 9 and 10 as e
On Fri, Jun 22, 2012 at 1:01 AM, O. Hartmann
wrote:
> I have a USB drive/stick, Lexar USB Flash drive as reported by FreeBSD
> shown below.
> When first used, I was able to put approx. 30 GB of data on it - it was
> visible to FreeBSD 9 and 10 as expected.
> A Linux system at the lab was also capa
On 22.06.12 09:22, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
I'm sorry to say a lot of USB flash sticks out there are broken and
only tested with the timing of MS Windows. Part of the problem is that
it is difficult to autodetect these issues, because once you trigger
the non- supported SCSI command, then t
On Fri, 22 Jun 2012 08:22:19 +0200
Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
(snip)
> I would be more than glad to open up an office to certify USB devices for use
> with FreeBSD :-)
My elder colleague often told me that it is the easiest and well-working way
to check whether the one is certified to work for
incapable of handling the 64GB drive. I do not have issues with USB
it's not about capacity. But seems some quirks for that pendrive (which
have buggy firmware) has to be added, as it doesn't respond for inquiry
command.
sorry i am not USB expert.
umass1: on usbus7
(probe0:umass-sim1:1:0:
On Friday 22 June 2012 08:01:38 O. Hartmann wrote:
> I have a USB drive/stick, Lexar USB Flash drive as reported by FreeBSD
> shown below.
> When first used, I was able to put approx. 30 GB of data on it - it was
> visible to FreeBSD 9 and 10 as expected.
> A Linux system at the lab was also capabl
On Thu, Jun 21, 2012 at 11:01 PM, O. Hartmann
wrote:
> I have a USB drive/stick, Lexar USB Flash drive as reported by FreeBSD
> shown below.
> When first used, I was able to put approx. 30 GB of data on it - it was
> visible to FreeBSD 9 and 10 as expected.
> A Linux system at the lab was also cap
I have a USB drive/stick, Lexar USB Flash drive as reported by FreeBSD
shown below.
When first used, I was able to put approx. 30 GB of data on it - it was
visible to FreeBSD 9 and 10 as expected.
A Linux system at the lab was also capable of recognizing it. After
that, I tried to operate on the st
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