In my case, I want to mount /dev/sda1 to /mnt/usb. The mount command allows us to mount a device on a specific folder. In this part, we’ll see how to mount a USB drive quickly on the Raspberry Pi. – automatically: need more configuration to start, but this will be automatic next times Manually mount the USB drive – manually: for fast access on temporary devices Now, we can mount the USB drive with two methods: Generally, we create it in /mnt or /media. On Linux systems you need to create a new folder to mount the drive in it later. Note the UUID just before the drive name (it could be longer depending on your disk). This allows us to know this a known drive and do something specific when you plug it on your Raspberry Pi.įind the line corresponding to your drive name (sda1 for example). When you format a disk, the system assign an ID to the disk. The device name: here it’s /dev/sda1, we’ll need this later UUIDĪnother information that could help us later is the UUID.
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