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Date:      Thu, 31 May 2012 17:57:04 +0200
From:      Jens Schweikhardt <schweikh@schweikhardt.net>
To:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   How to use an external USB3.0 drive with 4k sectors?
Message-ID:  <20120531155704.GA2828@schweikhardt.net>

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hello, world\n

so I decided to try two HW technology advancements in one go.
I have a brand new shiny 1TB USB3.0 external disk, that when plugged
to an USB2(two!) reports

    da5 at umass-sim2 bus 2 scbus6 target 0 lun 0
    da5: <ST1000LM 024 HN-M101MBB 0000> Fixed Direct Access SCSI-2 device
    da5: 40.000MB/s transfers
    da5: 953869MB (244190646 4096 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 15200C)

and
# diskinfo -v da5
da5
        4096            # sectorsize
        1000204886016   # mediasize in bytes (931G)
        244190646       # mediasize in sectors
        0               # stripesize
        0               # stripeoffset
        15200           # Cylinders according to firmware.
        255             # Heads according to firmware.
        63              # Sectors according to firmware.
        00A123456789    # Disk ident.


(The vendor, Jmicron, has put an NTFS on it, with a disk manual as a pdf file.
Strangely, I cannot mount it with
# ll /dev/da5*
crw-r-----  1 root  operator    0, 236 May 31 15:05 /dev/da5
crw-r-----  1 root  operator    0, 237 May 31 15:05 /dev/da5s1
# mount -t ntfs -o ro /dev/da5s1  /mnt
mount_ntfs: /dev/da5s1: Invalid argument
)

When I plug it to one of the two USB3.0 ports (using the xhci driver), I
don't get device nodes in /dev created for it, but instead an ever
growing list of

    ugen4.2: <Jmicron Corp.> at usbus4
    umass2: <Jmicron Corp. Usb production, class 0/0, rev 2.10/1.00, addr 1> on usbus4
    ugen4.2: <Jmicron Corp.> at usbus4 (disconnected)
    umass2: at uhub4, port 4, addr 1 (disconnected)

The USB3.0 ports otherwise work fine with a 16BG USB3.0 Stick. Windows 7
can use the disk as well on the USB3.0 port, which makes me look for
things I have missed. For example, my kernel config is stripped down
quite a bit, so it might be that my custom kernel does not have all the
necessary drivers built in or kldloaded. Do I need "device ada"? What is
the magic needed to hook up 4k secotr drives via USB3.0?

Regards,

	Jens
-- 
Jens Schweikhardt http://www.schweikhardt.net/
SIGSIG -- signature too long (core dumped)



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