Sorry, but things like this happen with USB pendrives and memory cards. It is hard to see, from what you have written, what is not working. However you need to not write to the file-system. You need to write to the partition-table that is not in the file-system. Show 2 more comments. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. Add a comment. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown.
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Linked Now I want to format it fat32 clean, but I get the errors. However, it does not have a valid fake msdos partition table, as it should. Perhaps it was corrupted -- possibly by a program that doesn't understand GPT partition tables. Or perhaps you deleted the GPT table, and are now using an msdos partition table. Is this a GPT partition table? If I click yes - it shows partitions, but creating new partition table fails, as it is read-only. If I click no - it does not show up in the device list.
Grant Grant Yes so true and that this freeze looks to be the issue which you are pointing in. But is there a way where i can point kernel to avoid re-initializing the controller on SDB failures so that i can make sure that my system is up and running.
Physically remove the hard drive. Unmounting all partitions on the drive might stop it, but no guarantees. Linux isn't "detecting" that it's failing - it is just failing. The drive doesn't respond and locks up the system. Stopping all use of the failing drive might stop it from locking up. Show 2 more comments.
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