One (and only one) of my usb flash drivers, many times re-formatted after having hosted "Puppy on usb" opens in the desktop, beside its own icon, a second icon called "sr1".
See the picture n.1. Mounting "sr1" appears what in picture 2.
How to totally clean that usb-flash? Thanks.
Usb flash drive ex "Puppy on usb"
- Spaccafumo
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- Joined: Thu 15 Jan 2009, 11:06
- Location: Sulmona - Italy
Usb flash drive ex "Puppy on usb"
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- 047-28.png
- Picture n.1
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- 047-27.png
- Picture n.2
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It is a second partition and dd ed with firmware software
or a read-only separate chip.
Such sr[0-9]* device shows up for my USB modem since kernel 2.6.31 ,
maybe a usb_modeswitch or udev rule would be capable to hide this sr1 as it does the windows driver probably that came with that USB drive ,
probably this sr1 shows up in windows C:\ as CD drive first time to load the firmware from that likely iso9660 formatted chip
and after the driver installed to Windows, this driver is hiding automatically that chip on the USB drive, it came from.
or a read-only separate chip.
Such sr[0-9]* device shows up for my USB modem since kernel 2.6.31 ,
maybe a usb_modeswitch or udev rule would be capable to hide this sr1 as it does the windows driver probably that came with that USB drive ,
probably this sr1 shows up in windows C:\ as CD drive first time to load the firmware from that likely iso9660 formatted chip
and after the driver installed to Windows, this driver is hiding automatically that chip on the USB drive, it came from.
I have used several external hard disk drives that had the same "feature." The "virtual CD" contains crapware, usually software for creating backups, for the clueless to install in Windows. The idea is that, since 'Autorun' is turned on by default in Windows, the virtual CD will initiate crapware installation as soon as you connect the external drive to a Windows machine. There's no way to get rid of the virtual drive, but since it doesn't appear to do any harm, at least in Linux, I ignore it.
Here are two links to things that may work for you.
http://jimcooncat.wordpress.com/2009/05 ... rom-linux/
http://u3-tool.sourceforge.net/
I've lost my Windblows-exclusive copy of the uninstaller, but Softpedia still has it, here --> http://www.softpedia.com/get/Tweak/Unin ... Tool.shtml
Another Windblows-only removal tool is here (click the link with the line through it, at the bottom of the article) --> http://www.geekyjock.com/pages/blog/200 ... flash.html
No guarantees that either one works in Wine. Probably they don't.
http://jimcooncat.wordpress.com/2009/05 ... rom-linux/
http://u3-tool.sourceforge.net/
I've lost my Windblows-exclusive copy of the uninstaller, but Softpedia still has it, here --> http://www.softpedia.com/get/Tweak/Unin ... Tool.shtml
Another Windblows-only removal tool is here (click the link with the line through it, at the bottom of the article) --> http://www.geekyjock.com/pages/blog/200 ... flash.html
No guarantees that either one works in Wine. Probably they don't.
Starhawk, that information may be obsolete. I found this on the U3 Wikipedia page:
Your second link is a post from 2006. I downloaded the lined-out "U3 Uninstaller" at the end of the post. It's a 2.5 MB .exe file, so it will only work in Windows or possibly Wine. 2.5 MB seems a bit large for such a simple job, so I'd be careful about using it in Windows.SanDisk began phasing out support for U3 Technology in late 2009