raspberry pi change directory (cd) command not working with USB drive
When navigating the file system of my USB drive in the terminal, some weird things happen that didn't use to happen on my Raspberry Pi B+. I'm not quite sure how to articulate this, so I'll just show what is
I open the command line and navigate to my USB drive with
cd /media/pi/MYUSB/
I use cd to enter a folder of the USB drive with
cd /myFolder/myOtherFolder
I navigate backwards to
myFolder
withcd ..
I try to navigate again to
myOtherFolder
withcd /myOtherFolder
. However, this raises the bash errorbash: cd: /myOtherFolder: no such file or directory
I have no idea what or why this is happening, but I used to be able to do this without the error message. Sometimes I have power outages that cause the Pi to shut off with the USB drive in it, so I have "ghost USB drives" like the ones described at the following link: Ghost USB drives left behind when power is cycled off and on
Thanks!
usb
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When navigating the file system of my USB drive in the terminal, some weird things happen that didn't use to happen on my Raspberry Pi B+. I'm not quite sure how to articulate this, so I'll just show what is
I open the command line and navigate to my USB drive with
cd /media/pi/MYUSB/
I use cd to enter a folder of the USB drive with
cd /myFolder/myOtherFolder
I navigate backwards to
myFolder
withcd ..
I try to navigate again to
myOtherFolder
withcd /myOtherFolder
. However, this raises the bash errorbash: cd: /myOtherFolder: no such file or directory
I have no idea what or why this is happening, but I used to be able to do this without the error message. Sometimes I have power outages that cause the Pi to shut off with the USB drive in it, so I have "ghost USB drives" like the ones described at the following link: Ghost USB drives left behind when power is cycled off and on
Thanks!
usb
New contributor
add a comment |
When navigating the file system of my USB drive in the terminal, some weird things happen that didn't use to happen on my Raspberry Pi B+. I'm not quite sure how to articulate this, so I'll just show what is
I open the command line and navigate to my USB drive with
cd /media/pi/MYUSB/
I use cd to enter a folder of the USB drive with
cd /myFolder/myOtherFolder
I navigate backwards to
myFolder
withcd ..
I try to navigate again to
myOtherFolder
withcd /myOtherFolder
. However, this raises the bash errorbash: cd: /myOtherFolder: no such file or directory
I have no idea what or why this is happening, but I used to be able to do this without the error message. Sometimes I have power outages that cause the Pi to shut off with the USB drive in it, so I have "ghost USB drives" like the ones described at the following link: Ghost USB drives left behind when power is cycled off and on
Thanks!
usb
New contributor
When navigating the file system of my USB drive in the terminal, some weird things happen that didn't use to happen on my Raspberry Pi B+. I'm not quite sure how to articulate this, so I'll just show what is
I open the command line and navigate to my USB drive with
cd /media/pi/MYUSB/
I use cd to enter a folder of the USB drive with
cd /myFolder/myOtherFolder
I navigate backwards to
myFolder
withcd ..
I try to navigate again to
myOtherFolder
withcd /myOtherFolder
. However, this raises the bash errorbash: cd: /myOtherFolder: no such file or directory
I have no idea what or why this is happening, but I used to be able to do this without the error message. Sometimes I have power outages that cause the Pi to shut off with the USB drive in it, so I have "ghost USB drives" like the ones described at the following link: Ghost USB drives left behind when power is cycled off and on
Thanks!
usb
usb
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asked 10 hours ago
Henry WestfallHenry Westfall
283
283
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You put a leading / to your path names! That's the root directory, meaning what you write next is an absolute path.
Your /myFolder/myOtherFolder is not on your USB if it's mounted inside /media/pi/MYUSB/ anyway.
But you can use cd myOtherFolder
in the case you're asking. I suggest reading some basic tutorial about Linux's (or Unix) file handling, filesystems, and such.
New contributor
add a comment |
To go into a bit more detail —
Whether you come from a Windows or Mac OSX background, you will be used to external drives being independent places from your hard disk (more or less).
Part of UNIX tradition is "avoid special cases wherever possible". For instance in UNIX (and GNU/Linux), a keyboard is represented as a file that can be opened and read from just like a text file. So is a serial port (which can be written to as well). On a Raspberry PI even the GPIO pins can be controlled like this. There is a file called /dev/zero
that produces a sequence of 0-bytes when you read it. etc.
This was a brilliant idea as it allowed programs to be constructed without having all sorts of special cases.
Anyway, in a similar tradition, there is one directory structure for the entire system, starting at /
(the root directory). No special cases, no "drive letters". Just /
.
Drives can be "attached" somewhere in this structure using the mount
command (an RPi is configured to do this automatically but you can also do it manually).
Every file's path descends from /
in some way (for example /home/pi/test.txt
). Because of this, a path starting with /
is assumed to be an "absolute" path, starting from the root directory of the entire system. Without the /
at the start, it is considered a "relative" path, i.e. it starts from the current directory.
Two other tricks—you probably know that a path starting with ..
refers to the parent directory. A path starting with ~
starts from your home directory, e.g. ~/test.txt
works the same no matter what your current directory is.
New contributor
add a comment |
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You put a leading / to your path names! That's the root directory, meaning what you write next is an absolute path.
Your /myFolder/myOtherFolder is not on your USB if it's mounted inside /media/pi/MYUSB/ anyway.
But you can use cd myOtherFolder
in the case you're asking. I suggest reading some basic tutorial about Linux's (or Unix) file handling, filesystems, and such.
New contributor
add a comment |
You put a leading / to your path names! That's the root directory, meaning what you write next is an absolute path.
Your /myFolder/myOtherFolder is not on your USB if it's mounted inside /media/pi/MYUSB/ anyway.
But you can use cd myOtherFolder
in the case you're asking. I suggest reading some basic tutorial about Linux's (or Unix) file handling, filesystems, and such.
New contributor
add a comment |
You put a leading / to your path names! That's the root directory, meaning what you write next is an absolute path.
Your /myFolder/myOtherFolder is not on your USB if it's mounted inside /media/pi/MYUSB/ anyway.
But you can use cd myOtherFolder
in the case you're asking. I suggest reading some basic tutorial about Linux's (or Unix) file handling, filesystems, and such.
New contributor
You put a leading / to your path names! That's the root directory, meaning what you write next is an absolute path.
Your /myFolder/myOtherFolder is not on your USB if it's mounted inside /media/pi/MYUSB/ anyway.
But you can use cd myOtherFolder
in the case you're asking. I suggest reading some basic tutorial about Linux's (or Unix) file handling, filesystems, and such.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 10 hours ago
NyosNyos
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To go into a bit more detail —
Whether you come from a Windows or Mac OSX background, you will be used to external drives being independent places from your hard disk (more or less).
Part of UNIX tradition is "avoid special cases wherever possible". For instance in UNIX (and GNU/Linux), a keyboard is represented as a file that can be opened and read from just like a text file. So is a serial port (which can be written to as well). On a Raspberry PI even the GPIO pins can be controlled like this. There is a file called /dev/zero
that produces a sequence of 0-bytes when you read it. etc.
This was a brilliant idea as it allowed programs to be constructed without having all sorts of special cases.
Anyway, in a similar tradition, there is one directory structure for the entire system, starting at /
(the root directory). No special cases, no "drive letters". Just /
.
Drives can be "attached" somewhere in this structure using the mount
command (an RPi is configured to do this automatically but you can also do it manually).
Every file's path descends from /
in some way (for example /home/pi/test.txt
). Because of this, a path starting with /
is assumed to be an "absolute" path, starting from the root directory of the entire system. Without the /
at the start, it is considered a "relative" path, i.e. it starts from the current directory.
Two other tricks—you probably know that a path starting with ..
refers to the parent directory. A path starting with ~
starts from your home directory, e.g. ~/test.txt
works the same no matter what your current directory is.
New contributor
add a comment |
To go into a bit more detail —
Whether you come from a Windows or Mac OSX background, you will be used to external drives being independent places from your hard disk (more or less).
Part of UNIX tradition is "avoid special cases wherever possible". For instance in UNIX (and GNU/Linux), a keyboard is represented as a file that can be opened and read from just like a text file. So is a serial port (which can be written to as well). On a Raspberry PI even the GPIO pins can be controlled like this. There is a file called /dev/zero
that produces a sequence of 0-bytes when you read it. etc.
This was a brilliant idea as it allowed programs to be constructed without having all sorts of special cases.
Anyway, in a similar tradition, there is one directory structure for the entire system, starting at /
(the root directory). No special cases, no "drive letters". Just /
.
Drives can be "attached" somewhere in this structure using the mount
command (an RPi is configured to do this automatically but you can also do it manually).
Every file's path descends from /
in some way (for example /home/pi/test.txt
). Because of this, a path starting with /
is assumed to be an "absolute" path, starting from the root directory of the entire system. Without the /
at the start, it is considered a "relative" path, i.e. it starts from the current directory.
Two other tricks—you probably know that a path starting with ..
refers to the parent directory. A path starting with ~
starts from your home directory, e.g. ~/test.txt
works the same no matter what your current directory is.
New contributor
add a comment |
To go into a bit more detail —
Whether you come from a Windows or Mac OSX background, you will be used to external drives being independent places from your hard disk (more or less).
Part of UNIX tradition is "avoid special cases wherever possible". For instance in UNIX (and GNU/Linux), a keyboard is represented as a file that can be opened and read from just like a text file. So is a serial port (which can be written to as well). On a Raspberry PI even the GPIO pins can be controlled like this. There is a file called /dev/zero
that produces a sequence of 0-bytes when you read it. etc.
This was a brilliant idea as it allowed programs to be constructed without having all sorts of special cases.
Anyway, in a similar tradition, there is one directory structure for the entire system, starting at /
(the root directory). No special cases, no "drive letters". Just /
.
Drives can be "attached" somewhere in this structure using the mount
command (an RPi is configured to do this automatically but you can also do it manually).
Every file's path descends from /
in some way (for example /home/pi/test.txt
). Because of this, a path starting with /
is assumed to be an "absolute" path, starting from the root directory of the entire system. Without the /
at the start, it is considered a "relative" path, i.e. it starts from the current directory.
Two other tricks—you probably know that a path starting with ..
refers to the parent directory. A path starting with ~
starts from your home directory, e.g. ~/test.txt
works the same no matter what your current directory is.
New contributor
To go into a bit more detail —
Whether you come from a Windows or Mac OSX background, you will be used to external drives being independent places from your hard disk (more or less).
Part of UNIX tradition is "avoid special cases wherever possible". For instance in UNIX (and GNU/Linux), a keyboard is represented as a file that can be opened and read from just like a text file. So is a serial port (which can be written to as well). On a Raspberry PI even the GPIO pins can be controlled like this. There is a file called /dev/zero
that produces a sequence of 0-bytes when you read it. etc.
This was a brilliant idea as it allowed programs to be constructed without having all sorts of special cases.
Anyway, in a similar tradition, there is one directory structure for the entire system, starting at /
(the root directory). No special cases, no "drive letters". Just /
.
Drives can be "attached" somewhere in this structure using the mount
command (an RPi is configured to do this automatically but you can also do it manually).
Every file's path descends from /
in some way (for example /home/pi/test.txt
). Because of this, a path starting with /
is assumed to be an "absolute" path, starting from the root directory of the entire system. Without the /
at the start, it is considered a "relative" path, i.e. it starts from the current directory.
Two other tricks—you probably know that a path starting with ..
refers to the parent directory. A path starting with ~
starts from your home directory, e.g. ~/test.txt
works the same no matter what your current directory is.
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answered 4 hours ago
ArteliusArtelius
1111
1111
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Henry Westfall is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Henry Westfall is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Henry Westfall is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Henry Westfall is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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