Ubuntu 16.04 doesn't recognize my SD Card











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I just upgraded to Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, and wanted to backup my files (i know, i did it wayyy after i was supposed to, judge me if you want) but when i put my SD Card in, it wasn't recognized (i mean that it doesn't appear in the file explorer). The SD Card slot on my computer doesn't let the SD card go all the way in; that's the design, but i think this is what's causing this. Idk.



I'm using Ubuntu 16.04, and Dell Inspiron 20 Model 3048.



P.S. I'm using an SD Card adapter from PNY.










share|improve this question
























  • Is the SD card recognized in any other computer?
    – ubfan1
    Sep 18 '16 at 21:38










  • Your Dell has USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Why not use a USB thumb drive instead? As far as what type of SD card you have and why it won't insert into the Dell 4-in-1 card reader, I have no idea.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:58










  • I'm using an sd card adapter. it works on my laptop but does not on my desktop.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 19 '16 at 0:20










  • If it's formated in exFat, you may have to install exfat-utils
    – NeoTheThird
    Mar 18 '17 at 13:22










  • When you run gnome-disks is your sd card listed?
    – lamino
    Apr 9 '17 at 0:12















up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1












I just upgraded to Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, and wanted to backup my files (i know, i did it wayyy after i was supposed to, judge me if you want) but when i put my SD Card in, it wasn't recognized (i mean that it doesn't appear in the file explorer). The SD Card slot on my computer doesn't let the SD card go all the way in; that's the design, but i think this is what's causing this. Idk.



I'm using Ubuntu 16.04, and Dell Inspiron 20 Model 3048.



P.S. I'm using an SD Card adapter from PNY.










share|improve this question
























  • Is the SD card recognized in any other computer?
    – ubfan1
    Sep 18 '16 at 21:38










  • Your Dell has USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Why not use a USB thumb drive instead? As far as what type of SD card you have and why it won't insert into the Dell 4-in-1 card reader, I have no idea.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:58










  • I'm using an sd card adapter. it works on my laptop but does not on my desktop.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 19 '16 at 0:20










  • If it's formated in exFat, you may have to install exfat-utils
    – NeoTheThird
    Mar 18 '17 at 13:22










  • When you run gnome-disks is your sd card listed?
    – lamino
    Apr 9 '17 at 0:12













up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1






1





I just upgraded to Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, and wanted to backup my files (i know, i did it wayyy after i was supposed to, judge me if you want) but when i put my SD Card in, it wasn't recognized (i mean that it doesn't appear in the file explorer). The SD Card slot on my computer doesn't let the SD card go all the way in; that's the design, but i think this is what's causing this. Idk.



I'm using Ubuntu 16.04, and Dell Inspiron 20 Model 3048.



P.S. I'm using an SD Card adapter from PNY.










share|improve this question















I just upgraded to Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, and wanted to backup my files (i know, i did it wayyy after i was supposed to, judge me if you want) but when i put my SD Card in, it wasn't recognized (i mean that it doesn't appear in the file explorer). The SD Card slot on my computer doesn't let the SD card go all the way in; that's the design, but i think this is what's causing this. Idk.



I'm using Ubuntu 16.04, and Dell Inspiron 20 Model 3048.



P.S. I'm using an SD Card adapter from PNY.







16.04 sd-card inspiron






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 18 '16 at 22:09

























asked Sep 18 '16 at 20:51









Skybbles

5472518




5472518












  • Is the SD card recognized in any other computer?
    – ubfan1
    Sep 18 '16 at 21:38










  • Your Dell has USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Why not use a USB thumb drive instead? As far as what type of SD card you have and why it won't insert into the Dell 4-in-1 card reader, I have no idea.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:58










  • I'm using an sd card adapter. it works on my laptop but does not on my desktop.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 19 '16 at 0:20










  • If it's formated in exFat, you may have to install exfat-utils
    – NeoTheThird
    Mar 18 '17 at 13:22










  • When you run gnome-disks is your sd card listed?
    – lamino
    Apr 9 '17 at 0:12


















  • Is the SD card recognized in any other computer?
    – ubfan1
    Sep 18 '16 at 21:38










  • Your Dell has USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Why not use a USB thumb drive instead? As far as what type of SD card you have and why it won't insert into the Dell 4-in-1 card reader, I have no idea.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:58










  • I'm using an sd card adapter. it works on my laptop but does not on my desktop.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 19 '16 at 0:20










  • If it's formated in exFat, you may have to install exfat-utils
    – NeoTheThird
    Mar 18 '17 at 13:22










  • When you run gnome-disks is your sd card listed?
    – lamino
    Apr 9 '17 at 0:12
















Is the SD card recognized in any other computer?
– ubfan1
Sep 18 '16 at 21:38




Is the SD card recognized in any other computer?
– ubfan1
Sep 18 '16 at 21:38












Your Dell has USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Why not use a USB thumb drive instead? As far as what type of SD card you have and why it won't insert into the Dell 4-in-1 card reader, I have no idea.
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
Sep 18 '16 at 22:58




Your Dell has USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Why not use a USB thumb drive instead? As far as what type of SD card you have and why it won't insert into the Dell 4-in-1 card reader, I have no idea.
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
Sep 18 '16 at 22:58












I'm using an sd card adapter. it works on my laptop but does not on my desktop.
– Skybbles
Sep 19 '16 at 0:20




I'm using an sd card adapter. it works on my laptop but does not on my desktop.
– Skybbles
Sep 19 '16 at 0:20












If it's formated in exFat, you may have to install exfat-utils
– NeoTheThird
Mar 18 '17 at 13:22




If it's formated in exFat, you may have to install exfat-utils
– NeoTheThird
Mar 18 '17 at 13:22












When you run gnome-disks is your sd card listed?
– lamino
Apr 9 '17 at 0:12




When you run gnome-disks is your sd card listed?
– lamino
Apr 9 '17 at 0:12










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote













You can check if ubuntu detects your sd card.
Open your terminal and type this with your sd disconnected:



ls /dev/ | grep sd


Then, plug in your sd card and try to run the same command and you should see the difference on the output.



If that doesn't help somehow, you can try installing Gparted. It's a tool for partitions and other related things connected to your pc.



sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install gparted





share|improve this answer





















  • This did not help at all, sorry.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:07










  • Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
    – ramseyy
    Sep 20 '16 at 19:09


















up vote
0
down vote













Try following :



Type:



dmesg | tail -20 


command to check the last few lines. Now insert the drive. Again type



dmesg | tail -20 


if system is able to get the drives serial number and assigns device name like /dev/sdx means the device is detected.



Then try to mount it with various mount types if not sure of the partition type.



mount -t <partition-type> /dev/sdx /path/to/any/empty/folder


You can also skip the -t <partition-type> part, the mount will try to guess it.



This is better than lsblk way...:



Execute lsblk before connecting the SD card, then once connected execute lsblk again. If there is new entry, then you can see the device name with the mount point (if mounted), like /media/user1/BX5GB in following snippet.



└─sdb1   8:5    0     4G  0 part [/media/user1/BX5GB]


If there isn't any mount point there you have to mount the drive to any local folder with mount command mentioned earlier.



If the partition details are corrupted e.g. Corrupted MBR.. You can try recovery with some softwares like testdisk or something.



For testdisk -



execute the testdisk with superuser privileges (this is necessary as we're going to write the partitioning info)



sudo testdisk



  • Now, choose choose logging (create is default). Next screen will show you the disks attached to your system and their total size


  • Here select the correct disk that needs to be fixed (your memory card say /dev/sdx).


  • On next screen there are options for partition type like [Intel/PC | EFI GPT | Humax | Apple |....]. You can choose one that s suitable for your card. for MBR partitioning it's Intel/PC.


  • Now select Analyse. This will take you to analyze screen


    • You will first have an option of [Quick Search] select it and let the application search the partitions

    • If you are satisfied with the current search press Enter to continue (though you may choose to change the partition type detected).

    • Now you have two options: [write] or [Deeper Search]. So at this point, if you are satisfied with the current partition info select [Write] which writes the partition info to disk and you can now remove and attach it again to see content. OR

    • You can click [Deeper Search] for more analyzing more damaged partitions and write the detected partition scheme on the disk and you are able to see the content now.




This was again in case of reading the SD card. If you just want to recover the content... you have an option of using the photo-recovery, which comes with the testdisk package. and recover the media to some other partition as target. You'll get most of your files, but there won't be any directory structure that you were using earlier.






share|improve this answer























  • Steps please so we can follow...
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 15:50










  • Please add into your answer, :)
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 16:02










  • hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
    – v_sukt
    Aug 30 at 12:09










protected by Community Nov 24 at 14:06



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
1
down vote













You can check if ubuntu detects your sd card.
Open your terminal and type this with your sd disconnected:



ls /dev/ | grep sd


Then, plug in your sd card and try to run the same command and you should see the difference on the output.



If that doesn't help somehow, you can try installing Gparted. It's a tool for partitions and other related things connected to your pc.



sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install gparted





share|improve this answer





















  • This did not help at all, sorry.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:07










  • Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
    – ramseyy
    Sep 20 '16 at 19:09















up vote
1
down vote













You can check if ubuntu detects your sd card.
Open your terminal and type this with your sd disconnected:



ls /dev/ | grep sd


Then, plug in your sd card and try to run the same command and you should see the difference on the output.



If that doesn't help somehow, you can try installing Gparted. It's a tool for partitions and other related things connected to your pc.



sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install gparted





share|improve this answer





















  • This did not help at all, sorry.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:07










  • Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
    – ramseyy
    Sep 20 '16 at 19:09













up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









You can check if ubuntu detects your sd card.
Open your terminal and type this with your sd disconnected:



ls /dev/ | grep sd


Then, plug in your sd card and try to run the same command and you should see the difference on the output.



If that doesn't help somehow, you can try installing Gparted. It's a tool for partitions and other related things connected to your pc.



sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install gparted





share|improve this answer












You can check if ubuntu detects your sd card.
Open your terminal and type this with your sd disconnected:



ls /dev/ | grep sd


Then, plug in your sd card and try to run the same command and you should see the difference on the output.



If that doesn't help somehow, you can try installing Gparted. It's a tool for partitions and other related things connected to your pc.



sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install gparted






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 18 '16 at 21:49









ramseyy

136117




136117












  • This did not help at all, sorry.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:07










  • Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
    – ramseyy
    Sep 20 '16 at 19:09


















  • This did not help at all, sorry.
    – Skybbles
    Sep 18 '16 at 22:07










  • Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
    – ramseyy
    Sep 20 '16 at 19:09
















This did not help at all, sorry.
– Skybbles
Sep 18 '16 at 22:07




This did not help at all, sorry.
– Skybbles
Sep 18 '16 at 22:07












Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
– ramseyy
Sep 20 '16 at 19:09




Did ubuntu detect your sd storage at least?
– ramseyy
Sep 20 '16 at 19:09












up vote
0
down vote













Try following :



Type:



dmesg | tail -20 


command to check the last few lines. Now insert the drive. Again type



dmesg | tail -20 


if system is able to get the drives serial number and assigns device name like /dev/sdx means the device is detected.



Then try to mount it with various mount types if not sure of the partition type.



mount -t <partition-type> /dev/sdx /path/to/any/empty/folder


You can also skip the -t <partition-type> part, the mount will try to guess it.



This is better than lsblk way...:



Execute lsblk before connecting the SD card, then once connected execute lsblk again. If there is new entry, then you can see the device name with the mount point (if mounted), like /media/user1/BX5GB in following snippet.



└─sdb1   8:5    0     4G  0 part [/media/user1/BX5GB]


If there isn't any mount point there you have to mount the drive to any local folder with mount command mentioned earlier.



If the partition details are corrupted e.g. Corrupted MBR.. You can try recovery with some softwares like testdisk or something.



For testdisk -



execute the testdisk with superuser privileges (this is necessary as we're going to write the partitioning info)



sudo testdisk



  • Now, choose choose logging (create is default). Next screen will show you the disks attached to your system and their total size


  • Here select the correct disk that needs to be fixed (your memory card say /dev/sdx).


  • On next screen there are options for partition type like [Intel/PC | EFI GPT | Humax | Apple |....]. You can choose one that s suitable for your card. for MBR partitioning it's Intel/PC.


  • Now select Analyse. This will take you to analyze screen


    • You will first have an option of [Quick Search] select it and let the application search the partitions

    • If you are satisfied with the current search press Enter to continue (though you may choose to change the partition type detected).

    • Now you have two options: [write] or [Deeper Search]. So at this point, if you are satisfied with the current partition info select [Write] which writes the partition info to disk and you can now remove and attach it again to see content. OR

    • You can click [Deeper Search] for more analyzing more damaged partitions and write the detected partition scheme on the disk and you are able to see the content now.




This was again in case of reading the SD card. If you just want to recover the content... you have an option of using the photo-recovery, which comes with the testdisk package. and recover the media to some other partition as target. You'll get most of your files, but there won't be any directory structure that you were using earlier.






share|improve this answer























  • Steps please so we can follow...
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 15:50










  • Please add into your answer, :)
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 16:02










  • hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
    – v_sukt
    Aug 30 at 12:09















up vote
0
down vote













Try following :



Type:



dmesg | tail -20 


command to check the last few lines. Now insert the drive. Again type



dmesg | tail -20 


if system is able to get the drives serial number and assigns device name like /dev/sdx means the device is detected.



Then try to mount it with various mount types if not sure of the partition type.



mount -t <partition-type> /dev/sdx /path/to/any/empty/folder


You can also skip the -t <partition-type> part, the mount will try to guess it.



This is better than lsblk way...:



Execute lsblk before connecting the SD card, then once connected execute lsblk again. If there is new entry, then you can see the device name with the mount point (if mounted), like /media/user1/BX5GB in following snippet.



└─sdb1   8:5    0     4G  0 part [/media/user1/BX5GB]


If there isn't any mount point there you have to mount the drive to any local folder with mount command mentioned earlier.



If the partition details are corrupted e.g. Corrupted MBR.. You can try recovery with some softwares like testdisk or something.



For testdisk -



execute the testdisk with superuser privileges (this is necessary as we're going to write the partitioning info)



sudo testdisk



  • Now, choose choose logging (create is default). Next screen will show you the disks attached to your system and their total size


  • Here select the correct disk that needs to be fixed (your memory card say /dev/sdx).


  • On next screen there are options for partition type like [Intel/PC | EFI GPT | Humax | Apple |....]. You can choose one that s suitable for your card. for MBR partitioning it's Intel/PC.


  • Now select Analyse. This will take you to analyze screen


    • You will first have an option of [Quick Search] select it and let the application search the partitions

    • If you are satisfied with the current search press Enter to continue (though you may choose to change the partition type detected).

    • Now you have two options: [write] or [Deeper Search]. So at this point, if you are satisfied with the current partition info select [Write] which writes the partition info to disk and you can now remove and attach it again to see content. OR

    • You can click [Deeper Search] for more analyzing more damaged partitions and write the detected partition scheme on the disk and you are able to see the content now.




This was again in case of reading the SD card. If you just want to recover the content... you have an option of using the photo-recovery, which comes with the testdisk package. and recover the media to some other partition as target. You'll get most of your files, but there won't be any directory structure that you were using earlier.






share|improve this answer























  • Steps please so we can follow...
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 15:50










  • Please add into your answer, :)
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 16:02










  • hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
    – v_sukt
    Aug 30 at 12:09













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









Try following :



Type:



dmesg | tail -20 


command to check the last few lines. Now insert the drive. Again type



dmesg | tail -20 


if system is able to get the drives serial number and assigns device name like /dev/sdx means the device is detected.



Then try to mount it with various mount types if not sure of the partition type.



mount -t <partition-type> /dev/sdx /path/to/any/empty/folder


You can also skip the -t <partition-type> part, the mount will try to guess it.



This is better than lsblk way...:



Execute lsblk before connecting the SD card, then once connected execute lsblk again. If there is new entry, then you can see the device name with the mount point (if mounted), like /media/user1/BX5GB in following snippet.



└─sdb1   8:5    0     4G  0 part [/media/user1/BX5GB]


If there isn't any mount point there you have to mount the drive to any local folder with mount command mentioned earlier.



If the partition details are corrupted e.g. Corrupted MBR.. You can try recovery with some softwares like testdisk or something.



For testdisk -



execute the testdisk with superuser privileges (this is necessary as we're going to write the partitioning info)



sudo testdisk



  • Now, choose choose logging (create is default). Next screen will show you the disks attached to your system and their total size


  • Here select the correct disk that needs to be fixed (your memory card say /dev/sdx).


  • On next screen there are options for partition type like [Intel/PC | EFI GPT | Humax | Apple |....]. You can choose one that s suitable for your card. for MBR partitioning it's Intel/PC.


  • Now select Analyse. This will take you to analyze screen


    • You will first have an option of [Quick Search] select it and let the application search the partitions

    • If you are satisfied with the current search press Enter to continue (though you may choose to change the partition type detected).

    • Now you have two options: [write] or [Deeper Search]. So at this point, if you are satisfied with the current partition info select [Write] which writes the partition info to disk and you can now remove and attach it again to see content. OR

    • You can click [Deeper Search] for more analyzing more damaged partitions and write the detected partition scheme on the disk and you are able to see the content now.




This was again in case of reading the SD card. If you just want to recover the content... you have an option of using the photo-recovery, which comes with the testdisk package. and recover the media to some other partition as target. You'll get most of your files, but there won't be any directory structure that you were using earlier.






share|improve this answer














Try following :



Type:



dmesg | tail -20 


command to check the last few lines. Now insert the drive. Again type



dmesg | tail -20 


if system is able to get the drives serial number and assigns device name like /dev/sdx means the device is detected.



Then try to mount it with various mount types if not sure of the partition type.



mount -t <partition-type> /dev/sdx /path/to/any/empty/folder


You can also skip the -t <partition-type> part, the mount will try to guess it.



This is better than lsblk way...:



Execute lsblk before connecting the SD card, then once connected execute lsblk again. If there is new entry, then you can see the device name with the mount point (if mounted), like /media/user1/BX5GB in following snippet.



└─sdb1   8:5    0     4G  0 part [/media/user1/BX5GB]


If there isn't any mount point there you have to mount the drive to any local folder with mount command mentioned earlier.



If the partition details are corrupted e.g. Corrupted MBR.. You can try recovery with some softwares like testdisk or something.



For testdisk -



execute the testdisk with superuser privileges (this is necessary as we're going to write the partitioning info)



sudo testdisk



  • Now, choose choose logging (create is default). Next screen will show you the disks attached to your system and their total size


  • Here select the correct disk that needs to be fixed (your memory card say /dev/sdx).


  • On next screen there are options for partition type like [Intel/PC | EFI GPT | Humax | Apple |....]. You can choose one that s suitable for your card. for MBR partitioning it's Intel/PC.


  • Now select Analyse. This will take you to analyze screen


    • You will first have an option of [Quick Search] select it and let the application search the partitions

    • If you are satisfied with the current search press Enter to continue (though you may choose to change the partition type detected).

    • Now you have two options: [write] or [Deeper Search]. So at this point, if you are satisfied with the current partition info select [Write] which writes the partition info to disk and you can now remove and attach it again to see content. OR

    • You can click [Deeper Search] for more analyzing more damaged partitions and write the detected partition scheme on the disk and you are able to see the content now.




This was again in case of reading the SD card. If you just want to recover the content... you have an option of using the photo-recovery, which comes with the testdisk package. and recover the media to some other partition as target. You'll get most of your files, but there won't be any directory structure that you were using earlier.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 30 at 12:08

























answered Mar 18 '17 at 13:09









v_sukt

25417




25417












  • Steps please so we can follow...
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 15:50










  • Please add into your answer, :)
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 16:02










  • hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
    – v_sukt
    Aug 30 at 12:09


















  • Steps please so we can follow...
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 15:50










  • Please add into your answer, :)
    – George Udosen
    Mar 19 '17 at 16:02










  • hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
    – v_sukt
    Aug 30 at 12:09
















Steps please so we can follow...
– George Udosen
Mar 19 '17 at 15:50




Steps please so we can follow...
– George Udosen
Mar 19 '17 at 15:50












Please add into your answer, :)
– George Udosen
Mar 19 '17 at 16:02




Please add into your answer, :)
– George Udosen
Mar 19 '17 at 16:02












hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
– v_sukt
Aug 30 at 12:09




hi @GeorgeUdosen, Have added the steps, please go through.
– v_sukt
Aug 30 at 12:09





protected by Community Nov 24 at 14:06



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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