Ipod Nano i limbo
My thirteen year old daughter left her beloved Nano plugged into my experimental LInux box for charging. I was playing about unifying the physical devices inside the box into an LVM and Kelly's ipod became part of the new system....at least until she unplugged the play to discover all the songs were gone.
Now begins the saga. Itunes will normally restore an ipod but Itunes7 did not recover the device and gave an error, I tried reformatting under using the Winodows format and Itunes still failed with 1429. Googling the problem reveals many persons around the world accusing Apple (Itunes 7) of not doing reformats on older ipods to encourage new purchases. Throw away ht eold and buy new Ipods. Restore is the name of software you could down load to re-initialise an Ipod. I could not get the old ipod Restore software that used to do this job instead you are directed to use Itunes. I managed to find a copy in an archive, but whadayaknow, intead of running, a window opened to say this software is depricated and you should use Itunes 7 Linux to the rescue. Using fdisk I can create the two partitions, normal for an Ipod Nano. A 5 sector untyped partion and the rest FAT32. The firmware has however been blown away however I can either extract a copy from the apple firmware installer or copy it from another 1st generation Nano, then use dd to install the Ipod firmware. Aplle don't supply it any more....their download site now directs you to Itunes. Surely someone knows where dd might get some firmware source. If I can get such an animal I will put write a script to recover Nanos and make it available to one and all. |
To restore an ipod using linux
This assumes that all the usual restores have failed you have lost your songs and nothing works. Itunes has failed you. First get the right firmware. \Be sure to identify the correct model with judicious use of Google. You can download the firmware from http://www.felixbruns.de/iPod/firmware/ it will down load a file with a name that end with ipsw The downloaded file is a zip file. Create a working directory put the zip file in there and unzip the file. do an ls and you should see something like Firmware-14.5.3.1 iPod_14.1.3.1.ipsw manifest.plist The first file is the one you want. Use df to see what file systems are in place, plug in the ipod, run df again to identify which device is your ipod. Many instructions refer to /dev/sda which may not be you ipod. In my case it was /dev/sdc If the ipod is mounted, umount it. If it has mounted you may wish to only copy new firmware and maybe your songs can be recovered. Try skipping to the text below labelled COPYFIRMWARE. If that doesn't work go through the whole procedure again. Erase the partition table and everything on the ipod. From her on your committed dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdc bs=1M count=10 Create some new partitions fdisk /dev/sdc Device contains neither a valid DOS partition table, nor Sun, SGI or OSF disklabel Building a new DOS disklabel with disk identifier 0xbbda16dc. Changes will remain in memory only, until you decide to write them. After that, of course, the previous content won't be recoverable. Warning: invalid flag 0x0000 of partition table 4 will be corrected by w(rite) Command (m for help): p #Create the firmware partition and the data partitionCommand (m for help): p Disk /dev/sdc: 4095 MB, 4095737344 bytes 126 heads, 62 sectors/track, 1023 cylinders Units = cylinders of 7812 * 512 = 3999744 bytes Disk identifier: 0xbbda16dc Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System Command (m for help): n Command action e extended p primary partition (1-4) p Partition number (1-4): 1 First cylinder (1-1023, default 1): Using default value 1 Last cylinder, +cylinders or +size{K,M,G} (1-1023, default 1023):10S Command (m for help): p Disk /dev/sdc: 4095 MB, 4095737344 bytes 126 heads, 62 sectors/track, 1023 cylinders Units = cylinders of 7812 * 512 = 3999744 bytes Disk identifier: 0x9d80036a Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System /dev/sdc1 1 10 39029 83 Linux Command (m for help): n Command action e extended p primary partition (1-4) p Partition number (1-4): 2 First cylinder (11-1023, default 11): Using default value 11 Last cylinder, +cylinders or +size{K,M,G} (11-1023, default 1023): Using default value 1023 # Now type the partitions the first partition is type zero, don't worry about that however make the firmware partition bootable using the a command Command (m for help): t Partition number (1-4): 1 Hex code (type L to list codes): 0 Type 0 means free space to many systems (but not to Linux). Having partitions of type 0 is probably unwise. You can delete a partition using the `d' command. Changed system type of partition 1 to 0 (Empty) Command (m for help): t Partition number (1-4): 2 Hex code (type L to list codes): b Changed system type of partition 2 to b (W95 FAT32) Command (m for help): a Partition number (1-4): 1 Warning: partition 1 has empty type Command (m for help): p Disk /dev/sdc: 4095 MB, 4095737344 bytes 126 heads, 62 sectors/track, 1023 cylinders Units = cylinders of 7812 * 512 = 3999744 bytes Disk identifier: 0x9d80036a Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System /dev/sdc1 * 1 10 39029 0 Empty /dev/sdc2 11 1023 3956778 b W95 FAT32 Command (m for help): w The partition table has been altered! Calling ioctl() to re-read partition table. WARNING: Re-reading the partition table failed with error 16: Device or resource busy. The kernel still uses the old table. The new table will be used at the next reboot. WARNING: If you have created or modified any DOS 6.x partitions, please see the fdisk manual page for additional information. Syncing disks. quit out of fdisk Create a FAT32 file system in the second partition mkfs.vfat -n "IpodName" -F 32 /dev/sdc2 COPYFIRMWARE: Back at the Linux prompt copy the firmware into the first partition dd if=Firmware-14.5.3.1 of=/dev/sdc1 removed ipod from computer and charge |
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