SD Clean/Linux

From Hacks Guide Wiki
< SD Clean
Revision as of 20:40, 26 March 2023 by StarlitSkies (talk | contribs) (the Linux instructions for SD Clean)

(diff) ← Older revision | Approved revision (diff) | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

This is an add-on section for completely recreating an SD card's filesystem using fdisk and mkfs. This should only be done if formatting does not fix your issue or is not possible for some reason.

This page is for Linux users only. If you are not on Linux, see the Windowsand/or Mac pages instead.

Instructions

OOjs UI icon information-warning.svg Before beginning these steps, copy all of your SD card's contents to a folder on your computer.
OOjs UI icon information-warning.svg The commands in this guide are case-sensitive. Enter them exactly as written, or there may be unintended consequences.
  1. Make sure your SD card is not inserted
  2. Launch the linux terminal and type wqatch lsblk.
    1. Observe the output. It should match something like this:
      NAME        MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
      mmcblk0     179:0    0   3,8G  0 disk
      └─mmcblk0p1 179:1    0   3,7G  0 part /run/media/user/FFFF-FFFF
      
  3. Take note of the device name. In our example above, it was mmcblk0p1
    • If RO is set to 1, make sure the lock switch is not slid down
  4. Hit CTRL + C to exit the menu
  5. For each partition of the disk, type umount /dev/sdXi.
    • Replace i with the partition number you are unmounting.
  6. Type fdisk <disk label>.
  7. Type o, then type n and press ENTER on all prompts.
    • If it asks whether to remove a VFAT signature, choose to remove it.
  8. Once you are back at fdisk's main menu, type t and then type 0c.
  9. Type a and then p. Observe the output and make sure the device is now formatted correctly.
  10. If there are no issues, type w. This will save changes and exit the fdisk prompt.
  11. Type sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sdX1 -s 64 to reformat the new partition.
    • If the SD card is over 32GB in size, change 64 to 128.
  12. Type sudo eject (device name), then remove and reinsert the SD card.
  13. Copy your data back onto the SD card.