This howto is about FreeBSD 4.10 and a USB iPod shuffle, because that's what I have. Other kinds of iPods will also work without change in the procedure. If you have an older FreeBSD, it may or may not work this way, if you have a newer FreeBSD, it will work better.
Linux should be far simpler, and there are already instructions on the net, so I won't cover that.
So, to start with, you've got to make sure your kernel supports a few things.
- usb (if you have a USB iPod, but put it in anyway)
- ohci/uhci/ehci (the first two for USB 1.x, depending on the type you have, the latter for USB 2.x, put all three in, it won't cause problems)
- firewire (if you have a firewire iPod)
- sbp (serial bus protocol)
- scbus, da, cd, pass
- umass (mass usb storage)
- msdos file system support
To do this, edit your kernel config file, which should be in /usr/src/sys/i386/conf/KERNELNAME or something like that. uname -a will tell you for sure.
Add the following to the end of the file:
# For the iPod
options MSDOSFS
device sbp
device firewire
device scbus
device da
device cd
device pass
device uhci
device ohci
device ehci
device usb
device umass
Of course, check in advance that these aren't already in the file.
Once that's done, reconfigure and rebuild your kernel:
config KERNELNAME
cd ../../compile/KERNELNAME
make depend
make
make install
Also tell your system to load msdos file system at boot up. In /boot/loader.conf, add this:
msdos_load="YES"
Next, install gtkpod. You can portinstall it. Get version 0.88 at least if you need support for the iPod shuffle.
Now, plug in your iPod. The USB iPod should throw some messages into dmesg saying that the Apple iPod is loaded on bus:0, target:0 and lun:0 (or something else). Take note of these numbers.
Now, you can mount the drive as msdos. It should be attached to /dev/da0s1 or something like that. You'll know for sure from the dmesg messages. Run dmesg, and note whether the iPod is on da0 or da1 or something else. That's the drive your iPod is attached to. It will always be s1, ie, the first BIOS partition, known in FreeBSD as slice 1. On linux it could be as simple as /dev/sda1
Create a mount point for the drive:
mkdir /mnt/ipod
Mount the drive with the msdos filesystem - assuming this is a windows formatted iPod. If you have a mac formatted iPod, you'll have to do one of the following:
- Add HFS support to your kernel (4.10 may not have this support), or
- Reformat it as a windows iPod using windows, mac or pc-fdisk on FreeBSD/Linux. I wasn't very successful running pc-fdisk on the drive in FreeBSD, but that's prolly because of a bad USB implementation in 4.10
You'll find instructions about formatting at the gtkpod site.
To mount use this:
mount -t msdos /dev/da0s1 /mnt/ipod
Now run gtkpod, and follow its interface.
Once you're done with gtkpod, quit, and unmount the drive. The orange light might still blink, indicating that the drive is not ready to be removed. Use camcontrol to eject it:
camcontrol eject 0:0:0
The numbers at the end are your bus:target:lun numbers, so use the ones you noted down at the start.
Once you've done that you should be able to unplug the iPod and use it.
That's it. Have fun.
3 comments :
Thanks man. Worked beautifully for my digital camera too!
Cool
I need to build binaries that run on servers running 4.10 or 4.11. We use these versions because they've been tested and are known to be stable. 5.x and 6.x don't have enough testing behind them.
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