linux ubuntu not recognizing my new ssd











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I just installed a new Samsung ssd onto my linux ubuntu computer, but when I go to settings and to about, it only shows my 1Tb hard drive, not my 480 gb ssd










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  • How is your SSD connected to your computer (which interface)?
    – zx485
    Nov 24 at 21:56










  • Disconnect hard drive and Reconnect that again and immediately run "dmesg" command to see if device recognized or not. Is your hard drive cable correct ? Also try the following command : ls -l /dev/sd* | grep sd
    – fedora
    Nov 24 at 22:36

















up vote
1
down vote

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I just installed a new Samsung ssd onto my linux ubuntu computer, but when I go to settings and to about, it only shows my 1Tb hard drive, not my 480 gb ssd










share|improve this question







New contributor




user966819 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • How is your SSD connected to your computer (which interface)?
    – zx485
    Nov 24 at 21:56










  • Disconnect hard drive and Reconnect that again and immediately run "dmesg" command to see if device recognized or not. Is your hard drive cable correct ? Also try the following command : ls -l /dev/sd* | grep sd
    – fedora
    Nov 24 at 22:36















up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I just installed a new Samsung ssd onto my linux ubuntu computer, but when I go to settings and to about, it only shows my 1Tb hard drive, not my 480 gb ssd










share|improve this question







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user966819 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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I just installed a new Samsung ssd onto my linux ubuntu computer, but when I go to settings and to about, it only shows my 1Tb hard drive, not my 480 gb ssd







linux ubuntu ssd






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asked Nov 24 at 21:36









user966819

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user966819 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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user966819 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • How is your SSD connected to your computer (which interface)?
    – zx485
    Nov 24 at 21:56










  • Disconnect hard drive and Reconnect that again and immediately run "dmesg" command to see if device recognized or not. Is your hard drive cable correct ? Also try the following command : ls -l /dev/sd* | grep sd
    – fedora
    Nov 24 at 22:36




















  • How is your SSD connected to your computer (which interface)?
    – zx485
    Nov 24 at 21:56










  • Disconnect hard drive and Reconnect that again and immediately run "dmesg" command to see if device recognized or not. Is your hard drive cable correct ? Also try the following command : ls -l /dev/sd* | grep sd
    – fedora
    Nov 24 at 22:36


















How is your SSD connected to your computer (which interface)?
– zx485
Nov 24 at 21:56




How is your SSD connected to your computer (which interface)?
– zx485
Nov 24 at 21:56












Disconnect hard drive and Reconnect that again and immediately run "dmesg" command to see if device recognized or not. Is your hard drive cable correct ? Also try the following command : ls -l /dev/sd* | grep sd
– fedora
Nov 24 at 22:36






Disconnect hard drive and Reconnect that again and immediately run "dmesg" command to see if device recognized or not. Is your hard drive cable correct ? Also try the following command : ls -l /dev/sd* | grep sd
– fedora
Nov 24 at 22:36












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You most likely need to partition it first, using a partitioning tool such as gparted. If your partitioning tool of choice does not automatically format the new partition(s), you will then need to format then, using e.g. mkfs. Be careful not to repartition/reformat the wrong device!






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    You most likely need to partition it first, using a partitioning tool such as gparted. If your partitioning tool of choice does not automatically format the new partition(s), you will then need to format then, using e.g. mkfs. Be careful not to repartition/reformat the wrong device!






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      up vote
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      down vote













      You most likely need to partition it first, using a partitioning tool such as gparted. If your partitioning tool of choice does not automatically format the new partition(s), you will then need to format then, using e.g. mkfs. Be careful not to repartition/reformat the wrong device!






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
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        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        You most likely need to partition it first, using a partitioning tool such as gparted. If your partitioning tool of choice does not automatically format the new partition(s), you will then need to format then, using e.g. mkfs. Be careful not to repartition/reformat the wrong device!






        share|improve this answer












        You most likely need to partition it first, using a partitioning tool such as gparted. If your partitioning tool of choice does not automatically format the new partition(s), you will then need to format then, using e.g. mkfs. Be careful not to repartition/reformat the wrong device!







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        answered Nov 24 at 23:28









        Robin Green

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