Need more info on a USB thumb drive... shell command?

I need to see about extracting a partnumber from a failing usb thumbdrive.  I plugged it in and checked out /var/log/dmesg and got the following:
input: Kensington USB Input Device as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1a.1/usb4/4-1/4-1:1.0/input/input6
generic-usb 0003:047D:1013.0003: input,hidraw2: USB HID v1.00 Mouse [Kensington USB Input Device] on usb-0000:00:1a.1-1/input0
ieee1394: Host added: ID:BUS[0-00:1023] GUID[000129200006b6b2]
Is there some where else I can look to get some device-specific info?

Found it: in the disk utility menu select start volume.
Thanks.

Similar Messages

  • I need a way to get usb thumb-drive securely recognized as a apple keyboard

    I posted this question over at Developer Discussions also, just to get more eyes on it, not to be disruptive.
    So, I would like to utilize a maximum-length Admin. password (255 characters?) without having to manually type it in each time I login, install/update software, or for any other reason. The perfect situation would be some type of script or software installation onto a USB pen drive (2 gig sony)which is inserted into the macbook (via usb) when the Leopard Login screen appears. It logs me in, then, afterwards, it creates a clickable icon on the desktop that achieves the same goal (entering a long admin password securely). And all of the above is achieved using the built-in security of Keychain access, without having to continuously mount and unmount the drive.
    Searching google produces many expensive products that do not fit: Securikey, omnikey, smart cards, tokends, and on and on. They seem to have figured this out at microsoft - not that it matters much, except that it appears to be possible.
    One problem is that a USB thumb drive is not mounted until after login, it seems, but, I plugged in a friend's usb apple keyboard from the year 2000 and was able to type in my password at login. And, an email reply elsewhere suggested writing a daemon (that constantly runs in the background of the operating system) that could recognize the drive and accept a script from it that inputs the password and executes the 'enter' command.
    I don't know how to write daemons yet, but I can stumble around a bit with bash and applescripts, and I can copy any Xcode project out of a book and make it run properly. I'm a beginner.
    This project might create security issues for my operating system, but I'm really not concerned about that because this is a computer I don't rely on and can safely perform experiments on. And I would like to use this as an opportunity to learn - so I'm going to give it a whirl anyway - unless someone has already accomplished something similar. In that case, why reinvent the wheel and plug it into the wall, eh?
    Basically I am asking for help. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

    You don't need to get deep into programming to do much of this.
    launchd, the background process that's responsible for launching most of the background processes on your machine, has the ability to launch a script based on disk mount events.
    StartOnMount <boolean>
    This optional key causes the job to be started every time a filesystem is
    mounted.
    So you could create a LaunchDaemon script that watches for a disk mount. When a disk is inserted your script is fired off. You'd need to perform some verification to ensure the disk is, indeed, your USB stick and not some other device, then it can trigger the rest of the login process. Off hand I'd look to osascript to run an AppleScript-based keystroke, but there may be other ways, too.
    One big question relates to securing your password. Clearly you can't store it in the script, so you'd have to read it from somewhere. You also can't store it on the USB stick unless you somehow encrypt it (otherwise someone can just look at the files on the USB stick and get your password), but AppleScript can use the keychain, too, although I'm not sure what keys would be available prior to login, so it requires some experimentation.

  • Antivirus for USB thumb drive

    Hi, I have a macbook at home and I need to constantly use a usb thumb drive between work and home. Work has new policy that I must have an up-to-date usb antivirus scanner in order to use the usb at work (windows). What would be the best free software to install that will run an automatic antivirus scan? Thx

    Any viruses you get are going to come from your work PC, not your Mac.  Honestly, I wouldn't bother - if the anti-virus software is up to scratch at work, then it should protect your work PC from a USB stick.  If it isn't good enough to do that, then it isn't good enough to protect itself from the internet either. 
    http://youtu.be/IglUmgYGxLM?t=1m33s
    Are they going to check?  If you absolutely must, ClamXav gets the best reviews. 
    http://www.clamxav.com/

  • Using the OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive, could I install it on more one than machine??

    I want to buy the OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive. But I need to install it on more one than machine, could I do this??

    This is what the Licence says on the store page of the OS X Lion Thumb Drive:
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD256
    OS X Lion Software License Agreement
    The OS X Lion Software License Agreement allows you to install and use the software for your personal, non-commercial use on all the Macs you own or control that are running Mac OS X Snow Leopard or Snow Leopard Server (a Mac Computer). Commercial enterprises or educational institutions can install and use one copy of the software for use either a) by a single individual on each Mac Computer that the enterprise or educational institution owns or controls, or b) by multiple individuals on a single shared Mac Computer that the enterprise or educational institution owns or controls (for example, in a resource center or library). You can also use the software in accordance with the terms of a volume or maintenance license (purchased separately). Full license terms can be found at http://www.apple.com/legal/sla/.

  • A USB thumb drive with data created in Windows is not showing up on my desktop. Do I need a different driver or something?

    A USB thumb drive with data created in Windows is not showing up on my desktop. Do I need a different driver or something?

    OK in order to read those files you will need MS Office for Mac or install MS Windows on your Mac. You can get MS Office for Mac from anyone that sells Apple products. I would suggest the Apple Store, Best Buy, Amazon etc...For help getting the data from the memory stick I'd recommend visiting your local Apple Store or AASP and they can help you move it. It should be as simple as plugging the USB drive into your USB port and then open a Finder Window where you will see the drive on the left  pane. If you don't know what Finder is or how to open a new Finder window you need the sites I've noted below!!!
    Because you are new to OS X I would strongly recommend you bookmark and frequently visit the following web sites:
    Switch 101
    Mac 101
    Find Out How Video tutorials

  • When I plug in my USB Thumb drive (PNY 8Gb) the MacBook Pro does not see it, nothing happens.  Is there something else I need to do?

    When I plug a PNY 8Gb USB thumb drive, nothing happens and the MacBook Pro can't see it. Is there something I need to do?

    If you are looking for it in Desktop, it's normal that you feel like your Mac doesn't detect it. By default, OS X doesn't show external drives in Desktop, so you have to access to them from Finder. To do it, open a Finder window and choose your external drive in the Finder sidebar, under "Devices".
    If you want to show the external disk in Desktop, open a Finder window, go to the Finder menu (on the menu bar) > Preferences > General, and mark "External drives"

  • OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive - do I need it?

    Hi,
    I bought OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive and feel doubtful about the necessity of such an expensive purchase
    Can someone tell me in which cases (with Lion installation) I can't definitely do without this OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive?
    Thanks!

    Relative to $29.00 for the download, if you want expensive then price a boxed Full Windows 7 install.  (http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/msstore/en_US/pd/productID.235488300?Icid=Wi nCat_CModLink_Win7HP_PID_235488300)
    Here is some info I gleaned from the net to educate myself on the usefulness of the Lion Thumb Drive.
    The Thumb Drive is OS X Lion sans Internet.  Apple's USB Thumb Drive does exactly what it's supposed to do: unleash OS X Lion. If and when something breaks, you won't have to rely on Apple's Internet-based Recovery HD to restore your Mac. The OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive is an easy, elegant, and efficient way to install Apple OS X Lion without relying on your Internet connection.
    The USB drive doubles as a Lion recovery disk, meaning you can use the thumb drive to revive (or try to revive, at least) a sick Mac.
    When you boot from this drive or DVD, you’ll see the same Mac OS X Utilities screen you get when you boot into restore mode.
    I have used mine to upgrade three intel Macs which is much easier than downloading even once. I also upgraded a my 10.6.8 Bootable rescue thumb drive I made to run disk utilities for trouble shooting.
    Best of all I dont have to depend on a Internet connection or an external DVD drive. Independence is priceless.

  • Prepare an usb thumb drive, to boot windows 7 or 8 in UEFI mode

    Purpose of this post:
    Prepare an usb thumb drive, to boot windows 7 in UEFI mode and install the system in pure UEFI mode.
    Why am I writing this:
    I had a hard time finding out how to make a custom installation of windows 7 in pure UEFI mode, and avoid using the factory restore disks. After hours of research, experiments etc I finally got the point and found a solution. And I'm happy to share my research with you. I hope this will be of help. If something is not clear, or more information is needed, I will be glad to explain things further.
    History:
    As most of you already know, BIOS was developed for PC in early eighties and has remained unchanged in recent years. But, since 2000, Intel started working on a new firmware interface, called Extensible Firmware Interface, abbreviated EFI. And since 2005 United EFI Forum has been handling the responsibility for development, management and promotion of UEFI specifications. Bigger companies like Intel, AMD, Microsoft and Dell have already started to bring out their products in accordance to UEFI standards which has more stable, secure and easier to use interface.
    How does UEFI works (in a nutshell):
    Once you power on the UEFI based PC, the Pre-EFI is executed which initializes only the CPU, memory and the chipset. This followed by Driver Execution Environment (DEX) where other hardware is initialized.
    Advantages of UEFI:
        It can integrate various drivers this will not require to load during booting so saves time.
        PC can connect to network without OS.
        Also integrated drivers allow rendering GUI based control panel which out dates the old school bluish BIOS screen.
        Not all the installed hard drives are scanned as boot drive is set during the installation of OS in UFFI.
        Applications like anti-virus and diagnostic tools can be stored on virtually any non-volatile storage devices attached to a PC.
    For a system to boot and install in UEFI the partition table of the HDD should be GPT (GUID Partition Table), not the old school MBR (master boot record). GPT has many advantages, can have virtually an unlimited number of partitions (windows will allow only 128) and impressively big partitions.
    Since UEFI has a lot of advantages why not having a system install and boot in UEFI mode? AFAIK new Lenovo notebooks/netbooks are UEFI capable and OS’s are already installed in pure UEFI mode.
    So, let’s go now to the point. Do you want to have more control over your HDD? Let say, you have a 320GB HDD and you have divided it in two partitions, one of 50GB, for your Windows 7, and the remaining for your data. If something goes wrong and you need to restore your system to factory default, with the recovery disks, it will wipe your partition scheme, set the system to default and this way your data will be lost.
    You may want to make a “vanilla” installation of windows from a USB thumb drive and avoid using factory recovery disks. Now here things get complicated. A standard preparation of the USB with Microsoft’s software (Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool), or other tools, will give you a bios installation, not a UEFI one. So for the system to boot, you will need to change some settings in bios, and changing it from UEFI to legacy bios. The installation will prepare the HDD in MBR partition table, and you will lose all the advantages of UEFI, described above.
    Now this can be avoided, by properly preparing an USB to boot and install in UEFI mode. Here are the steps:
    Step by step tutorial:
    1.    In a windows computer, download a legal copy (although trial) of the windows 7 os. You can do this from here: http://www.mydigitallife.info/official-windows-7-sp1-iso-from-digital-river/
    Be sure to download the same version that came preinstalled in your computer. For example, if you have a Lenovo x120e, with a Windows 7 professional, 64bit, download an iso image of the Windows 7 professional 64bit.
    2.    Once downloaded burn the iso to a USB thumb (at least 4GB) using Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool.
    3.    After preparing this, create a folder on your computer, name it whatever (i.e. W7pro64bit). Go to the root of your USB
    and select all the files and folders there (9 in total) copy, and paste to your folder you created, W7pro64bit.
    4.    Using windows format the usb again in FAT32. Windows 7 USB/DVD Download tool, formats it in NTFS. We need a FAT32 formatted disk to achieve our goal. Formating again the USB in FAT32 will not touch the MBR of the USB thumbdrive. And after copying back the files (see step 6) the USB will still be bootable. (nice, and simple, isn't it?)
    5.    Now go to the folder W7pro64bit and do the following:
    a.    Browse to W7pro64bit\sources\ and open install.wim file. It’s a big file, and can be opened as an archive with 7zip (free software). Do not extract it, do not modify it, just browse the file with 7zip. Just to be sure you do not mess with that file, you can copy it somewhere else in your computer, and than procede.
    b.    Browse this file (install.wim) to \1\Windows\Boot\EFI\ and locate the file bootmgfw.efi. Do not move, delete it, but just drag that file to the desktop. (if you have copied the file install.wim to another place in your computer, than you are safely do whatever you want with that file ) Close the 7zip program to release the install.wim file.
    c.    Rename the file you just copied to the desktop from bootmgfw.efi to bootx64.efi.
    d.    Now go back to w7pro64bit folder and browse \efi\Microsoft. Form there copy the folder boot and paste it one level up, on the folder: \efi. It will look like this: \efi\boot.
    e.    Now copy the file you saved on your desktop and renamed (bootx64.efi) to \efi\boot (inside the boot folder you copied on step 5d
    6.    Now go to the root of the folder W7pro64bit and select all folders and files (9 in total) copy, and paste all those files back to your USB thumb drive. (see step 4 for more info)
    7.    Go to the computer that you are going to reinstall, and before restarting it, use the program ABR (activation backup and restore) to backup the license of your windows os. (use google to find ABR). Advanced Tokens Manager (ATM ) is great too. This link may be of help: Backup and restore W7 activation. After the program finishes its magic, it will create a few files inside the folder where the program itself reside. Copy these files to a new folder in your usb.  Rename it to ABR so you will quickly find it later. (if you decide to use ATM, the procedure may be a little different. But you are smart enough to figure out how to use it)
    8.    Backup to an external storage all your data before continuing.(reminder: are you sure you saved the license as explained in step 7, to a safe place? To a external drive, to another computer? If you are sure, than go on with step 9)
    9.    Now restart your laptop, and enter your bios settings. Go to the boot settings, and set the computer to boot in UEFI only. Not both, not UEFI first, or legacy, BUT UEFI only. Save and restart.
    10.    Press f12 (or the corresponding key for your machine) to choose the boot device and chose to start from the USB thumb drive with your windows 7 pro 64 bit.
    11.    If everything is done correctly, your computer will boot from the USB.
    12.    Follow the wizard and choose a custom install, not upgrade. At the disk partition window delete all the partition you see there until you have only one unallocated space.
    13.    Select it, and click next to install windows, without making partition in this point. The installer will create a GPT partition table not a MBR since the USB booted in UEFI mode.
    14.    Immediately after the first restart remove your USB thumb, and the installation will continue from the HDD. Wait until installation finishes.
    15.    When you will be finally on your desktop, on the installed OS plug your USB go to the ABR folder and click on restore.exe. It will restore your license and your copy of windows will be activated.
    16.    Now you can go in computer management/disk management and shrink the HDD to create your partitioning scheme. Make sure to leave enough space to your windows os. (30gb or more for extra programs you will install at your choice)
    17.      Download from lenovo.com thinkvantage system update and update your system. Windows update too can install all the necessary drivers, if you need only  basic drivers support.
    Note: if tvsu will fail to work, see this:
    http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/ThinkVantage-Technologies/ThinkVantage-System-Update-Servers-down-the-wh...
    It may look a looong tutorial, but once you do this for the first time, it will look a piece of cake.
    Final words:
    From now on, you can install windows 7 in UEFI mode with your special USB without changing your partition scheme anymore. If you have a data partition beside your os partition (see the example above), when you reinstall the system using your USB thumb drive, at the disk partition window chose the partition where windows is installed, delete it, and reinstall windows to the unformatted area. Your partition with your data will be intact and the installation will automatically mount your data partition to the system. And, all the scope of this procedure, you will always have a pure UEFI installation of the system, with all its benefits.
    Have fun!
    abvasili
    Moderator note: changed subject to match new content.  Was: Prepare an usb thumb drive, to boot windows 7 in UEFI mode
    I'm just a volunteer. I like to help others where I can. Do my ideas work? I hope so. o_O
    Who helped you today? Do not forget to thank him.
    My hardware: TP x120e 0596-2ru. Windows 7, sp1, 64Bit, English, installed in UEFI mode.

    seanare wrote:
    Thank you, as I noted here, your post was the key to my getting a Windows 8 SecureBooting setup on a W530.
    In the case of Windows 8, I needed to copy the files away, reformat my USB key as FAT32 and copy the files back, and viola I was able to boot from my USB install media with the BIOS set to only boot UEFI.  From there, there rest was easy (for Windows 8, the copying and renaming is not necessary, the key is having a FAT32 partition on the USB media, rather than an NTFS one; the EFI files are already in the right location).
    Thank you again good sir.
    You are welcome... and I'm happy that the change of the file system helps with windows 8 too. Thanks for confirming that.
    abvasili
    I'm just a volunteer. I like to help others where I can. Do my ideas work? I hope so. o_O
    Who helped you today? Do not forget to thank him.
    My hardware: TP x120e 0596-2ru. Windows 7, sp1, 64Bit, English, installed in UEFI mode.

  • OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive

    If I buy an OS X Lion USB Thumb Drive can I use it to erase the OSX Lion hidden partition on the internal hard drive and install Snow Leopard?  I have more problems with Lion than with any other OSX that I've used since 1986 and want to return to the last of the non-BigBrother OSXs.

    Downgrade Lion to Snow Leopard
    1.  Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Quit DU and return to the installer. Install Snow Leopard.
    This will erase the whole drive so be sure to backup your files if you don't have a backup already. If you have performed a TM backup using Lion be aware that you cannot restore from that backup in Snow Leopard (see below.) I suggest you make a separate backup using Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.1.
    If you have Snow Leopard Time Machine backups, do a full system restore per #14 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.  If you have subsequent backups from Lion, you can restore newer items selectively, via the "Star Wars" display, per #15 there, but be careful; some Snow Leopard apps may not work with the Lion files.

  • Using USB thumb drive with Parallels and Microsoft Windows XP

    I installed Parallels 3.0 because I need to use a few windows applications for work. I am currently unable to find the USB thumb drive when I plug it into the USB port. It is connected and is selected, but I can't figure out how to access it. I check in "My Computer" just like I would on a PC, but the thumb drive is not listed. Any suggestions.
    Macbook with Leopard
    Thanks.
    Jon

    You're right, it should show up under My Computer. You may want to post your question over on the Parallels forums: http://forums.parallels.com as they're more geared toward the issue since Parallels is not an Apple product.

  • Grant/reject access to USB thumb drive

    I am building an information security simulation model using LabVIEW
    and would like to grant/reject read/write accesses to the removable
    media such as USB thumb drives. I would appreciate if someone can
    tell me how this can be achieved under LabVIEW environment.
    Thanks in advance.

    Hello Belur,
    LabVIEW is capable of modifying access rights to files using the VI on
    the controls palette found at File I/O >> Advanced File Functions >>
    Access Rights. The "http://sine.ni.com/apps/we/niepd_web_display.DISPLAY_EPD4?p_guid=B123AE0CBACD111EE034080020E74861&p...
    example shows how to use this VI
    to modify file access rights.
    If you need more complex security functions, you will probably need to
    access third-party DLLs suited for your specific application.
    If this does not help, please post more information about the access
    controls that you are trying to implement, and which version of
    LabVIEW you are using.
    Have a good day,
    Kyle
    B.
    National Instruments

  • Using a usb thumb drive with a mac

    So, I'm a recent windows user and when using a USB thumb drive, if you erased something, it would automatically update the thumb drive and show the right amount of free space.
    I've noticed with the mac, if you delete an item, it doesn't update, and you need to go into disk utility and format in order to show the appropriate amount of free space.
    Is there an easier way to do this?
    I searched for a few minutes on this topic, but couldn't seem to find anything. All apologies if I missed it.

    Choose Empty Trash from the Finder menu, or from the menu which appears when you control-click or click and hold on the Trash icon in the Dock.
    (38516)

  • How can I create a Lion USB Thumb Drive with the 11E2068 build?

    It seems that the Lion build from the Mac App Store is not compatible with my Macbook Pro Retina 15''. It's seems I would need the the build 11E2068 for my USB thumb drive to work properly.
    I don't want to go through the internet recovery and loose 8 hours.
    Is there anyway for my to get that build(11E2068) on my USB thumb drive?
    Thanks,

    keg55's given you article that allows you to capture the installer. These are the critical portions:
    Once that data has been downloaded, Lion Recovery restarts your Mac, immediately installs the OS, and then deletes the installer data. The trick is to interrupt that process—safely—so you can grab the installer data and keep it. Here are the steps to take:
    IMO, Apple needs to rethink this process. Unless users with machines that had Lion preinstalled, like yourself, let Apple know this process is terrible, they'll not change their minds.
    7.  IMPORTANT: Monitor the download’s progress. As the progress bar gets near the end, get ready, because once the status reads About 0 seconds remaining, the progress bar will disappear, the installer will spend a minute or two cleaning up, and then your Mac will restart. As soon as the screen goes dark, unplug your external drive. If you wait too long, your Mac will boot into the Mac OS X installer on that drive, starting the installation process. Interrupting that process can leave your Mac unable to install OS X unless you restart it and—I’m not joking—zap PRAM.

  • USB thumb drive crashes MBP and PowerBook G4

    Hi!
    I have a USB thumb drive. It mounts on the Desktop (as two drives, which is not strange because it has both an internal 6 MB of memory and a 2GB SD card) and I can open them. But if I attempt to copy a file either to or from the drive, the Finder hangs forever.
    This problem exists both on a shiny new MacBook Pro with 10.4.7, and a PowerBook G4 with 10.3---in either case, I must hard-reboot the machine.
    DiskUtility says that the drive checks out OK.
    Any thoughts? I tried reformatting the thumb drive, which worked temporarily; but when I added a file to the drive on another machine and tried to transfer it to the Mac, the thing hangs Finder again.
    I don't have any problems with the drive on PCs, and I don't have the problem with other USB drives on the Mac.
    Xcott

    It sounds like the file system is corrupt. I am assuming it's FAT32. I would reformat the drive partitions on a Windows machine and see if that helps.
    Also, because it's a dual, you might want to make certain that you do not plug it into a hub or a keyboard but directly into your Mac's USB host port. It may need additional power...
    Good Luck!

  • How do I install Lion onto a USB thumb drive or SD card

    Hi, folks..
    I'm not asking about how to create a Lion installation thumb drive or SD card, or copy the recovery partition to a USB drive or SD card. I already have a backup Lion install thumb drive. What I am hoping to do is create a bootable Lion thumb drive or SD card on which I can also have Drive Genius and other utilities -- so I can boot from the thumb drive or SD card and work on my unmouted nternal hard drive.
    Is it as simple as installing Lion onto the thumb drive or SD card, or is there more to it than that?
    I've tried searching for this, but everything I've found has been about creating an install SD or thumb drive.
    Thanks in advance!

    Okay, so I ran the Lion Install app and directed it to install onto my USB thumb drive. Everything looked like it was doing what I wanted, and since the screen showed that it would take about 17 minutes I stepped away for about a half-hour. When I came back my screen was off, and when I pressed a key the progress bar said it would take another 11 minutes. Huh? I went away again for another half-hour, and when I returned the progress bar hadn't moved -- still 11 minutes.
    Okay, I was working on a USB drive, no big thing. No keypresses did anything, so I hit the power button on my Mcbook Pro, shut the sytem down, then started it back up. It booted to a screen to setup Lion. Hmmm.... I shut the system down (this time from the Apple menu), pulled the USB thumb drive, powered back up, and ended up at the same place.
    I rebooted, this time holding the Alt key, and saw that my Macintosh HD had been renamed to something about install. Booting from that partition gave me no option but to complete a Lion installation.
    Thankfully I have a Time Machine backup, and the recovery partition worked, so my system is back up (although some of my preferences seem to have changed, even though my backup was current -- another "huh?").
    So, what did I do wrong?

Maybe you are looking for