Hi Friends,
I have a lot of Sd card and usually nowadays find it difficult to either formate or manage SD cards to write a new image for RaspberryPi. Anyone else also struggle to do that? Do you have any recommendations for tools?
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Hi Friends,
I have a lot of Sd card and usually nowadays find it difficult to either formate or manage SD cards to write a new image for RaspberryPi. Anyone else also struggle to do that? Do you have any recommendations for tools?
Hi people,
Thank you for your wonderful feedbacks.
I think there could be an issue with my SD card itself.
I tried several things and followed some of the existing bug solutions.
https://askubuntu.com/questions/377253/unable-to-format-usb-drive-with-disks-udisks-error-quark-0
https://bugs.launchpad.net/debian/+source/util-linux/+bug/1059872
https://askubuntu.com/questions/574328/unable-to-format-pen-drive
One of the first was to try Gparted and unmount the partition and formate to specific type of partition. Which was success but soon after the last /boot and /sdcardcontent come back.
Then I tried Linux's inbuilt Disk tool to formate following one of the above recomendation where I deleted and created the new partions but ssoon again both of my existing partitions came back.
Latter tried fdisk thing as lsst post mentions which also did not work.
I had also tried DD utility to formate and burn the image to the SD card. Still I will try my best to repair the card, but it seems that there could be a damage in it. @sean conway FYI, I have tried that.
Thank you all.
Low-quality cards and those which have been used too much can sometimes go into a quasi "read-only" mode. Some will throw write errors while others will pretend to write, but the data and changes are lost. Some readers may even report the card as "write protected". I've encountered this quite frequently on even genuine Sandisk Ultra cards after a year of use - they just don't last. I've had better luck with most other brands. Try using a different / higher quality card.
- Gough
Low-quality cards and those which have been used too much can sometimes go into a quasi "read-only" mode. Some will throw write errors while others will pretend to write, but the data and changes are lost. Some readers may even report the card as "write protected". I've encountered this quite frequently on even genuine Sandisk Ultra cards after a year of use - they just don't last. I've had better luck with most other brands. Try using a different / higher quality card.
- Gough