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Date:      Mon, 9 Jun 2003 08:09:58 +0400
From:      Vladik Kozin <epbox@yandex.ru>
To:        Scott Mitchell <scott+freebsd@fishballoon.org>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: USB Flash Memory Drives support under FreeBSD
Message-ID:  <200306090809.58515.epbox@yandex.ru>
In-Reply-To: <20030608162837.GB26871@tuatara.fishballoon.org>
References:  <200306081948.36329.epbox@yandex.ru> <20030608162837.GB26871@tuatara.fishballoon.org>

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On Sunday 08 June 2003 20:28, you wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 08, 2003 at 07:48:36PM +0400, Vladik Kozin wrote:
> > 	Are such devices as for instance, IBM MagicKey, PQI Intelligent Stick,
> > USBdrive, ThumbDrive and other USB Flash Memory Drives, supported by
> > FreeBSD.  I know most of them are supported by Linux, so one doesn't have
> > to install any drivers before use.
> > 	I've checked Hardware Notes for both 4.8 and 5.0 Releases - nothing
> > approprate :(
>
> Hi Vladik,
>
> funnily enough, this has just been discussed over on the -stable list.  The
> consensus seems to be that most USB mass storage devices will just work --
> especially those that don't need any special drivers on Windows or (better
> yet) Linux.  This has certainly been my experience with various memory card
> readers and 'pen drives'.
>
> Some devices might need a 'quirk' entry adding to the kernel to cope with
> their particular weirdness.  These are pretty easy to add if you don't mind
> rebuilding your kernel.

	I surely never mind doing this :) Once you've got a working source for your 
kernel, you'll never get into big problems, cause each time you need to add 
only a few strings. So, you always can say which strings happened to become a 
problem.

>
> I fully agree that the existing documentation isn't as helpful as it could
> be.  I was going to put together some changes to make it clearer what is
> actually supported, which you have now reminded me about :-)
>
> Cheers,
>
> 	Scott

	Thanks for you answer. I was going to buy one of those 'pen drives' for 
myself. Nothing seems to prevent me from doing this now :) I believe its 
always a good idea to check the compatibility of the hardware one's going to 
buy with the OS used.
	Best regards. Vladik


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