External USB Drives in Linux

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Revision as of 13:51, 30 August 2007 by Red (talk | contribs)
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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 and write garbage all over each block using

badblocks -c 10240 -s -w -t random -v /dev/sdb

(nb. it's better to use dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/sdb but takes much much longer...)

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 (TripTerra) device:

cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb1 YOURNAME

mkfs.ext3 -m 1 -O dir_index,filetype,sparse_super /dev/mapper/YOURNAME


To mount

mount /dev/mapper/TripTerra /mnt/


Now it's transparently encrypted


To unmount

umount /mnt/TripTerra

cryptsetup luksClose /dev/mapper/TripTerra