diff --git a/_pages/en_US/formatting-sd-(linux).txt b/_pages/en_US/formatting-sd-(linux).txt index f328c864b2..9b9aae283b 100644 --- a/_pages/en_US/formatting-sd-(linux).txt +++ b/_pages/en_US/formatting-sd-(linux).txt @@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT mmcblk0 179:0 0 3,8G 0 disk └─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 3,7G 0 part /run/media/user/FFFF-FFFF ``` -1. Take note of the device mount point. In our example above, it was `mmcblk0` +1. Take note of the device mount point. In our example above, it was `mmcblk0p1` + If `RO` is set to 1, make sure the lock switch is not slid down 1. Hit CTRL + C to exit the menu 1. Type in the following for your SD card: @@ -33,4 +33,4 @@ mmcblk0 179:0 0 3,8G 0 disk - 4GB - 128GB: `sudo mkfs.fat /dev/(device mount point from above) -s 64 -F 32` - This creates a single FAT32 partition with 32 KB cluster size on the SD card - 128GB or higher: `sudo mkfs.fat /dev/(device mount point from above) -s 128 -F 32` - - This creates a single FAT32 partition with 64 KB cluster size on the SD card \ No newline at end of file + - This creates a single FAT32 partition with 64 KB cluster size on the SD card