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    Format Read Only exfat Micro SD Card To ext4?

    Hi,

    How would I format a read only exfat 128GB Micro SD card to ext4?
    I've tried everything on Kubuntu 18.04 but nothing works?
    Thanks!

    Jesse

    #2
    I did do below:
    Code:
    sudo apt-get install exfat-fuse exfat-utils
    (but it only allows reading exfat not writing exfat)

    Any ideas?

    Comment


      #3
      While you are logged in and on your Desktop, plugin/insert the SD card, then launch KDE Partition Manager. Select the SD card and format it as you wish.
      Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007
      "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Snowhog View Post
        While you are logged in and on your Desktop, plugin/insert the SD card, then launch KDE Partition Manager. Select the SD card and format it as you wish.
        I already tried to format the card via KDE Partition Manager - it fails with unspecified error?

        I ultimately used a Win 10 test desktop to format card to Linux readable/writable NTFS.
        Just wondering if the above is even possible with Kubuntu?

        Comment


          #5
          "exfat" is some Microsoft proprietary crap.
          Any SD card formatted with exfat is unusable under Linux unless you format the card to NTFS under a Windows computer.
          Kinda sucks...

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by JeZ-l-Lee View Post
            "exfat" is some Microsoft proprietary crap.
            True...


            Originally posted by JeZ-l-Lee View Post
            Any SD card formatted with exfat is unusable under Linux unless you format the card to NTFS under a Windows computer.
            Kinda sucks...
            ...This one not so much. Try installing exfat-fuse and exfat-utils.

            Code:
            [FONT=monospace][COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@Precision7730[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#5454FF][B]~/Desktop[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ apt-cache search exfat[/COLOR]
            exfat-fuse - read and write exFAT driver for FUSE
            exfat-utils - utilities to create, check, label and dump exFAT filesystem
            [/FONT]

            Please Read Me

            Comment


              #7
              I did that already - see post #2

              Comment


                #8
                If you don't have files greater than 4 GiB, I'd suggest FAT32 for convenience, but I have no experience with large SD cards.

                If you can't format it, have you tried zeroing it first with sudo dd if=/dev/zero? Be absolutely sure you have the right device, or you could wipe out your data or your system altogether.
                Regards, John Little

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by JeZ-l-Lee View Post
                  I did that already - see post #2
                  Then your problem is elsewhere. I just took an old 2GB sdcard out of the drawer, formatted it exfat, mounted it, and copied a file to it;

                  Code:
                  [FONT=monospace][COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ sudo umount /dev/sdg1[/COLOR]
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ sudo mkfs.exfat /dev/sdg1[/COLOR]
                  mkexfatfs 1.2.8
                  Creating... done.
                  Flushing... done.
                  File system created successfully.
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ sudo mount /dev/sdg1 /mnt/test[/COLOR]
                  FUSE exfat 1.2.8
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ ll /mnt/test/                  [/COLOR]
                  total 32
                  drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 32768 Dec 31  1969 [COLOR=#1818b2].[/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root   162 Jan 30 16:15 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]..[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ ll /mnt[/COLOR]
                  total 64
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root   162 Jan 30 16:15 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B].[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root   288 Jan 29 12:47 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]..[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Aug 20 08:50 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]840pro[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxrwxr-x 1 root root   332 Jan 13 09:25 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]backup1[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root   220 Jun 11  2018 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]backup2[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Dec 31 11:08 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]backup3[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Dec 31 11:12 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]backup4[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Aug 20 08:49 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]grub[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root    48 May 28  2018 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]private[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Sep  4 17:55 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]router[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 32768 Dec 31  1969 [COLOR=#1818b2]test[/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Aug 20 08:48 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]vm_drive[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Sep  4 18:03 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]vm_drive1[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  drwxr-xr-x 1 root root     0 Aug 20 08:48 [COLOR=#54FFFF][B]vm_drive2[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]/[/COLOR]
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ ls /mnt/test[/COLOR]
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]210_Sky_Sail.pdf[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000][/COLOR]
                  [COLOR=#54FF54][B]stuart@office[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]:[/COLOR][COLOR=#54FFFF][B]~[/B][/COLOR][COLOR=#000000]$ [/COLOR]
                  
                  [/FONT]

                  Please Read Me

                  Comment


                    #10
                    It's possible some camera or other device "formatted" it and left it read-only. Maybe Windows ignores that. Using Linux, the usual fix is to do:

                    sudo hdparm -r0 /dev/sdg

                    disables read-only status. It's there so devices (or you) can "lock" a USB device.

                    Please Read Me

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I don't know...

                      The computer was freshly installed with Kubuntu 18.04 a day ago.
                      Also the 128GB Micro SD card was purchased brand new from NewEgg.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        It does seem odd, but still, exfat works - at least here. Not that I use it :0

                        Please Read Me

                        Comment

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