External USB Drives in Linux
Adding external USB drives in Linux is easy. Etch uses hotplug to detect it. Using dmesg you can find out what mountpoint it is (Linux creates a SCSI device to mount to /dev/sdb and the drive will probably be /dev/sdb1). /proc/bus/usb/devices shows you information about the connected USB device. Most USB devices are formatted FAT32 which has a file size limit of 4GB. Because I'm using mine for Netvault backups and the virtual library media is created at sizes much larger than that, there are 2 choices: ntfs-3G (which Etch doesn't support) and ext3 (which etch does). Format to ext3 using mke2fs -T ext3 /dev/sdb1 Then create an /etc/fstab entry and mount
Test the (unmounted) disk for bad blocks using badblocks -c 10240 -s -w -t random -v /dev/sdb
In order to encrypt the whole disk I used this tutorial [1] apt-get install cryptsetup hashalot cfdisk /dev/sdb (if you still need to partition the disk, unlikely though) cryptsetup --verbose --verify-passphrase luksFormat /dev/sdb1 Open the encrypted device and assign it to a virtual /dev/mapper/YOURNAME device: cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb1 YOURNAME mkfs.ext3 -m 1 -O dir_index,filetype,sparse_super /dev/mapper/YOURNAME
To mount mount /dev/mapper/YOURNAME /mnt/
Now it's transparently encrypted
To unmount umount /mnt/YOURNAME cryptsetup luksClose /dev/mapper/YOURNAME