I solved it. No kernel or other driver installations necessary beyond those I already had (xhci).
1. Hook up disk to USB 2 Port. -> System detects drive and creates device nodes: ugen3.2: <Jmicron Corp.> at usbus3 umass1: <MSC Bulk-Only Transfer> on usbus3 da1 at umass-sim1 bus 1 scbus9 target 0 lun 0 da1: <ST1000LM 024 HN-M101MBB 0000> Fixed Direct Access SCSI-2 device da1: 40.000MB/s transfers da1: 953869MB (244190646 4096 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 15200C) 2. Replace the vendor installed NTFS with a UFS file system. $ newfs -U /dev/da1s1 (No, I didn't bother to create BSD partitions) 3. Hook up disk to USB 3 Port. -> Now system detects drive and creates device nodes: ugen4.2: <Jmicron Corp.> at usbus4 umass0: <Jmicron Corp. Usb production, class 0/0, rev 3.00/1.00, addr 1> on usbus4 da1 at umass-sim0 bus 0 scbus8 target 0 lun 0 da1: <ST1000LM 024 HN-M101MBB 0000> Fixed Direct Access SCSI-2 device da1: 400.000MB/s transfers da1: 953869MB (244190646 4096 byte sectors: 255H 63S/T 15200C) 4. Mount $ mount /dev/da1s1 /mnt $ df /mnt Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on /dev/da0s1 968G 8.2k 891G 0% /mnt Wohooo! Regards, Jens -- Jens Schweikhardt http://www.schweikhardt.net/ SIGSIG -- signature too long (core dumped) _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"