How to fix read only USB pen drive in Ubuntu

While copying some large file I mistakenly taken out USB pen drive before the copy get completed. Later I again attached the USB pen drive in Ubuntu system but found that the USB pen drive showing read only filesystem message. I was not able to copy, create and delete any file. To solve this issue I followed some steps which I am sharing in this article.

Table of Contents

Method Of Fixing Read Only USB Pen Drive In Ubuntu

In this section, we will follow the steps to fix the read only USB Pen Drive.

Disclaimer

  1. Some of you might be carrying the important data in USB / Pen Drive. In this method, we will format the USB drive. So due to this , the data will be erased and non recoverable.
  2. This solution works most of the time but in case there is Hardware issue in your USB/Pen drive then this solution won’t work. You should buy new USB/ Pen drive instead.

Find Out The Mounted Path Of USB Pen Drive

Step 1: Attach USB pen drive in system’s USB port. Automatically the Ubuntu will mount the USB pen drive and show icon on Desktop or Menu bar.

Open the terminal and become super user by running below given command

sudo su -

Step 2: First we have to find out in which directory the USB pen drive has been automatically mounted.For this run the df -Th command.
In given below output you can see,in my system the USB pen drive is mounted in /media/linux/C38C-099C ,partition is /dev/sdd1 and filesystem is vfat.

Note: When you run df -Th command in your system,the USB pen drive may mount in different directory and the partition might also be different.Hence the output value which you will get, use the same values in further steps.

root@tuxworld:~# df -Th
Filesystem     Type      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda5      ext4       28G   25G  1.3G  96% /
udev           devtmpfs  2.0G  4.0K  2.0G   1% /dev
tmpfs          tmpfs     796M  1.1M  795M   1% /run
none           tmpfs     5.0M  8.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
none           tmpfs     2.0G  528K  2.0G   1% /run/shm
none           tmpfs     100M  104K  100M   1% /run/user
cgroup         tmpfs     2.0G     0  2.0G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/sda7      ext4      9.2G  8.2G  539M  94% /partition7
/dev/sda8      ext3       46G   38G  6.2G  86% /partition8
/dev/sda9      ext3       74G   67G  3.1G  96% /partition9
/dev/sda21     ext4       14G  4.9G  8.3G  37% /partition10
/dev/sdd1      vfat       15G   12G  3.6G  77% /media/linux/C38C-099C 

Unmount USB Pen Drive

Step 2: Now unmount the directory in which the USB pen drive is automatically mounted . (As you can see mounted directory path in above ‘Step 1’)

Note: Replace the/media/linux/C38C-099C with the mounted USB pen drive directory path which is showing output in your system after running df -Th command.

umount /media/linux/C38C-099C

Check And Repair

Step 3: As we know the USB pen drive got /dev/sdd1 partition
and filesystem is vfat(see in Step 1). Now we will run dosfsck command to check and repair the filesystem

Note: The dosfsck command check and repair MS-DOS filesystems.Because the filesystem of USB pen drive is vfat hence we are using this command

dosfsck -a /dev/sdd1

Re-Attach USB Pen Drive

Step 4: After the dosfsck command get completed.Remove the USB pen drive from system and then re-attach back to system.Now your USB pen drive should working and it should not have read only filesystem.

Note** After mounting the USB pen drive you may see a new file with extension .REC which was created because of dosfsck command.

Reboot The System

Step 5 Reboot the system after completing all the steps. (This step we have added after receiving lots of suggestion in comments section from our readers around the world. Thank you for providing feedback and sure it will help many people.)

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207 Comments

  1. Hi Sharad – not successful – i get the following in mint 17
    arun@arun-GA-78LMT-USB3 ~ $ sudo su –
    arun-GA-78LMT-USB3 ~ # df -Th
    Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
    udev devtmpfs 3.9G 4.0K 3.9G 1% /dev
    tmpfs tmpfs 797M 1.5M 796M 1% /run
    /dev/sda5 ext4 453G 27G 404G 7% /
    none tmpfs 4.0K 0 4.0K 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
    none tmpfs 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
    none tmpfs 3.9G 672K 3.9G 1% /run/shm
    none tmpfs 100M 20K 100M 1% /run/user
    /dev/sdc1 vfat 3.3G 1.5G 1.9G 45% /media/arun/USB Stick

    arun-GA-78LMT-USB3 ~ # umount /media/arun/USB Stick
    umount: /media/arun/USB: not found
    umount: Stick: not found

      1. same error as before-

        arun-GA-78LMT-USB3 ~ # umount /media/arun/USB Stick
        umount: /media/arun/USB: not found
        umount: Stick: not found

        1. Hello Arun,

          Check two things

          1. USB should be properly mounted.
          2. I can see you are typing ‘USB Stick’ not like this ‘USB Stick’ as suggested in my comment.

          Can you send me the screenshot instead of pasting the output.

          Regards
          Sharad

  2. I’m clearly not too bright, 147 IQ points and nothing to show for it. I repeatedly cause myself this problem, panic, and forget what to do.. I actually bookmarked this article a while back because it has saved the day every time! I usually subject my thumb drives to it, but today I tried it with my MP3 player and now I don’t have to buy a new one I can’t afford! 😀 Thanks!

  3. Hello, I tried both, using dosfsck and even testdisk, but it keeps saying read-only… stupid pendrive. 🙂

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