Formatting an SD card/Linux
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This is an add-on section for formatting an SD card to FAT32.
This page is for Linux users only. If you are not on Linux, check out the Windows or Mac pages.
Instructions
| Before beginning these steps, copy all of your SD card's contents to a folder on your computer. |
| The commands in this guide are case-sensitive. Enter them exactly as written, or there may be unintended consequences. |
- Make sure your SD card is not inserted
- Open a terminal window and type
watch lsblk - Insert the SD card and watch for a new device appearing in lsblk
- Observe the output for the new device. It should match something like this:
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT mmcblk0 179:0 0 29.7G 0 disk └─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 29.5G 0 part /run/media/user/FFFF-FFFF
- Take note of the name of the device that now appears. In our example above, it was
mmcblk0, but it could show up assdaorsdb, if you use a USB adapter- If
ROis set to 1, make sure the lock switch is not slid down
- If
- Hit CTRL + C to exit the menu
- Type
sudo umount /dev/<device name>*(do not replace the*) - Install the
fdiskanddosfstoolspackages using your package manager of choice - Type
sudo fdisk /dev/<device name> - Enter
o, this will create a new MBR partition scheme - Enter
n, then press enter until you're returned to the prompt- The default values will work fine for all consoles
- Enter
t, then enter0c - Enter
aand thenp- observe the output, and make sure the device is now formatted correctly:Disk /dev/mmcblk0: 29.72 GiB, 31914983424 bytes, 62333952 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Disklabel type: dos Disk identifier: 0x######## Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type /dev/<partition name> 8192 62333951 62325760 29.7G c W95 FAT32 (LBA)
- If there are no issues, enter
w- this will save changes and exit the fdisk prompt - Type
sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/<partition name> -s 64to reformat the new partition- If the SD card is over 64GB in size, change
64to128
- If the SD card is over 64GB in size, change
- Type
sudo eject /dev/<device name>, then remove and reinsert the SD card - If the SD card had any files and folders on it before the format, copy everything back from your computer, unless you were linked to this by another guide that needs the SD to be formatted and blank
- Make sure your SD card is not inserted
- Open a terminal window and type
watch lsblk - Insert the SD card and watch for a new device appearing in lsblk
- Observe the output for the new device. It should match something like this:
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT mmcblk0 179:0 0 29.7G 0 disk └─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 29.5G 0 part /run/media/user/FFFF-FFFF
- Take note of the name of the device that now appears. In our example above, it was
mmcblk0, but it could show up assdaorsdb, if you use a USB adapter<- If
ROis set to 1, make sure the lock switch is not slid down
- If
- Hit CTRL + C to exit the menu
- Install the
partedanddosfstoolspackages using your package manager of choice - Type
sudo parted /dev/<device name> mklabel msdos - Type
sudo parted -a opt /dev/<device name> mkpart primary fat32 0% 100% - Type
sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/<partition name> -s 64to reformat the new partition- If the SD card is over 64GB in size, change
64to128
- If the SD card is over 64GB in size, change
- Type
sudo eject /dev/<device name>, then remove and reinsert the SD card - If the SD card had any files and folders on it before the format, copy everything back from your computer, unless you were linked to this by another guide that needs the SD to be formatted and blank
- Make sure your SD card is not inserted
- Open KDE Partition Manager, inputting your password as needed
- Insert your SD card and click
Refresh Devices. The new device that shows up in the left pane is your SD card - Click your SD card, then click the
New Partition Tablebutton at the top of the window - When asked, choose
Ms-Dos. Do NOT useGPT
- Right click the
unallocatedspace in the right pane and selectNew - When selecting your filesystem, choose
FAT32from the drop-down menu. The window should look like this:
- Click
OK, then clickApply, thenApply Pending Operations - Eject and reinsert your SD card
- If the SD card had any files and folders on it before the format, copy everything back from your computer, unless you were linked to this by another guide that needs the SD to be formatted and blank
- Make sure your SD card is not inserted
- Open Disks
- Insert your SD card
- In the application sidebar, select your SD card
- Select the "Drive Options" hamburger menu (closest to the Power and Eject icons)
- Select "Format Disk..."
- In the window that appears, set the "Partitioning" drop-down menu to "Compatible with all systems and devices (MBR / DOS)"
- Select "Format..."
- Carefully read the warning given, then select "Format"
- At the bottom of the "Volumes" bar, select "Create partition in unallocated space" (the button with a plus sign)
- Drag the slider all the way to the maximum capacity
- Make sure "Extended Partition" is not checked, then select "Next"
- Under "Type", select "For use with all systems and devices (FAT)", then click "Create"