Summary: | Detect fake devices when formatting | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | udisks | Reporter: | Bastien Nocera <bugzilla> |
Component: | general | Assignee: | Martin Pitt <martin.pitt> |
Status: | NEW --- | QA Contact: | |
Severity: | enhancement | ||
Priority: | medium | CC: | hughsient, jjardon |
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | Other | ||
OS: | All | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
i915 platform: | i915 features: |
Description
Bastien Nocera
2015-02-26 10:31:57 UTC
The main complication being that you have to reset the device after doing the first set of probing. Some sneaky devices keep a runtime list of changed sectors which isn't saved to flash. For USB device it's easy as you can just reset the port and let the device re-enumerate, but for sata disks and SD cards I don't know if the same thing is possible. The code I'm using is here: https://git.gnome.org/browse/gnome-multi-writer/tree/src/gmw-probe.c -- I'm happy to relicence to basically whatever if required. Can you please elaborate what "fake" devices are? Something like the scsi_debug kernel module with a few extra udev properties to make it look like an SD card? Formatting that should work just fine, though. So I'm afraid I don't know what this is all about? Also, udisks doesn't do anything special on SD cards for formatting, mounting etc, other than advertising an SD card icon for these drives/volumes. Do you have some more details on what you are trying to do and what fails? Thanks! Lots of details here: http://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/ tl;dr: Fake flash is where the drive is much smaller than the size it reports, so for instance a 16GB drive is actually a 2GB drive, and writing to anything past 2BG either goes to /dev/null or wraps around to the first sector. :/ Gahh, URL was meant to be: http://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2015/01/28/detecting-fake-flash/ (In reply to Martin Pitt from comment #2) > Can you please elaborate what "fake" devices are? Something like the > scsi_debug kernel module with a few extra udev properties to make it look > like an SD card? Formatting that should work just fine, though. So I'm > afraid I don't know what this is all about? http://www.hadess.net/2015/02/another-fake-flash-story.html http://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2015/01/28/detecting-fake-flash/ http://fake-electronics.blogspot.fr/2013/12/fake-samsung-64gb-microsd-card.html etc. |
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