USB MSC mount name
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2020 8:09 pm
USB MSC mount name
Is there a way to set the USB MSC mount name the device shows up as? My device mounts as "NO NAME" (on macOS) and that's kind of annoying - especially if you have multiple MSC devices you're testing with. I'm already calling 'msc.vendorID()' and 'msc.productID()' but none of it appears to have an impact on the mount name. Also, I haven't found any documentation on this behavior.
-
- Posts: 829
- Joined: Mon Jul 22, 2019 3:20 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
The partition label is a filesystem function. On your Mac, go into the properties for the msc partition and see if you can change the label there, and if that sticks after removal and reinsertion. We can see about changing it on the esp side during format if that works.
On my linux machine, running the USBMSC.ino example, I get the label "ESP32S2 MSC" as expected.
On my linux machine, running the USBMSC.ino example, I get the label "ESP32S2 MSC" as expected.
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2020 8:09 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
Thanks for the feedback. What part of that example should make it appear as "ESP32S2 MSC"? I see there's a "volume_label padded with spaces" option but that one is set to "TinyUSB MSC".
-
- Posts: 829
- Joined: Mon Jul 22, 2019 3:20 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
It is the first "file" entry in the index table.
https://github.com/espressif/arduino-es ... no#L87-L88
I'd recommend you set both the volume and partition label to the same thing. They have them set different in the example to demonstrate, but some (old) OS's may still use the volume label.
https://github.com/espressif/arduino-es ... no#L87-L88
I'd recommend you set both the volume and partition label to the same thing. They have them set different in the example to demonstrate, but some (old) OS's may still use the volume label.
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2020 8:09 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
I see, thanks.
My code was inspired by https://github.com/Munsutari/esp32-s3-i ... h_test.ino using the EspClass class. Hence, it is much simpler (i.e. on a higher abstraction level) than the example you linked to and I use this with PlatformIO.
Given that for FAT12 the volume label is a trait of the root dir, I tried to manipulate the first 12 bytes of the root dir. However, `FFat.open("/", FILE_WRITE)` doesn't give me an FS object for which `availableForWrite()` is true. Hence, I can't manipulate it.
My code was inspired by https://github.com/Munsutari/esp32-s3-i ... h_test.ino using the EspClass class. Hence, it is much simpler (i.e. on a higher abstraction level) than the example you linked to and I use this with PlatformIO.
Given that for FAT12 the volume label is a trait of the root dir, I tried to manipulate the first 12 bytes of the root dir. However, `FFat.open("/", FILE_WRITE)` doesn't give me an FS object for which `availableForWrite()` is true. Hence, I can't manipulate it.
-
- Posts: 829
- Joined: Mon Jul 22, 2019 3:20 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
Oh, it is absolutely not a normal file (hence my quotes in the earlier post). It is normally set with the f_setlabel command, but this is not compiled into the arduino library. Let me fiddle around if it can be implemented stand-alone.
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2020 8:09 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
yes, I'm aware of that. I'm just surprised that I didn't find any information so far that would explain permissions or restrictions. It would be great if F_Fat::format also accepted a volume label in addition to the partition label.
-
- Posts: 829
- Joined: Mon Jul 22, 2019 3:20 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
Note this has very few guardrails
Code: Select all
uint32_t u8to32(const uint8_t d1, const uint8_t d2, const uint8_t d3, const uint8_t d4) {
return (d4<<24) + (d3<<16) + (d2<<8) + d1;
}
bool setVolName(const char* volname) {
if (strlen(volname) > 11) {
Serial.println("Volume name can only be 11 characters");
return false;
}
const esp_partition_t* Part = esp_partition_find_first(ESP_PARTITION_TYPE_DATA, ESP_PARTITION_SUBTYPE_DATA_FAT, NULL);
uint32_t diskbuf[1024];
if (esp_partition_read(Part, 0, diskbuf, 4096) != ESP_OK) {
Serial.println("Unable to read ffat partition");
return false;
}
char set_name[13];
snprintf(set_name, 13, "%-11s%c", volname, 8);
// First grouping is old school partition name
diskbuf[10] = (diskbuf[10] & 0x00FFFFFF) | (set_name[0]<<24);
diskbuf[11] = u8to32(set_name[1],set_name[2],set_name[3],set_name[4]);
diskbuf[12] = u8to32(set_name[5],set_name[6],set_name[7],set_name[8]);
diskbuf[13] = (diskbuf[13] & 0xFFFF0000) | set_name[9] | (set_name[10]<<8);
if (esp_partition_erase_range(Part, 0, 4096)) return false;
if (esp_partition_write(Part, 0, diskbuf, 4096)) return false;
// Second grouping is the volume name that will likely be used
esp_partition_read(Part, 0x2000, diskbuf, 4096);
diskbuf[8] = u8to32(set_name[0],set_name[1],set_name[2],set_name[3]);
diskbuf[9] = u8to32(set_name[4],set_name[5],set_name[6],set_name[7]);
diskbuf[10] = u8to32(set_name[8],set_name[9],set_name[10],set_name[11]);
esp_partition_erase_range(Part, 0x2000, 4096);
if (esp_partition_write(Part, 0x2000, diskbuf, 4096)) return false;
return true;
}
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2020 8:09 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
Thanks Larry, works like a charm!
This is too good to be hidden away in some forum thread? I could integrate it into an example at https://github.com/espressif/arduino-es ... les/USBMSC or https://github.com/espressif/arduino-es ... t/examples. WDYT?
This is too good to be hidden away in some forum thread? I could integrate it into an example at https://github.com/espressif/arduino-es ... les/USBMSC or https://github.com/espressif/arduino-es ... t/examples. WDYT?
-
- Posts: 829
- Joined: Mon Jul 22, 2019 3:20 pm
Re: USB MSC mount name
It's a bit too dangerous to be in an example. Anyhow, there is a CONFIG_ setting that would put the legit f_setlabel() function into the libraries (which works on FAT32 & ExFAT). I'll see about getting that into the lib-builder; then it would just be adding a one liner function to the FFat and SD libraries. I'm working on an example based on yours that will expose an SD card.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 123 guests