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I am writing a PowerShell script that will back up several folders from my Vista drive to an external USB drive, using robocopy.
Windows does not guarantee that it will always assign the same drive letter to the external drive.
What is the best way to get around this problem?
How do I code the destination paths?

Thanks.

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3 Answers 3

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Windows could change that drive letter assigned to your USB drive.
The correct way to do this backup is mounting the USB drive in an empty directory. Not only does it add some consistency to swapped storage, it also allows for a persistent shortcut on a Windows desktop.

That's how to:

  1. Run "diskmgmt.msc" from Windows' Run/Start Search box,
  2. Right-click on your plugged-in drive and choose "Change Drive Letter and Paths."
  3. Remove the current drive letter assigned to your drive.
  4. Click on the Add button
  5. Select Mount into the following empty NTFS folder and click on browse.
  6. Now navigate to the subfolder that you want to assign the USB drive to and confirm the assignment.

The USB drive will from now on be accessible from that folder (if it is connected to the computer of course).
Now you can change your script to select, as destination folder, the folder with the mounted drive and forget the drive letter persistence.

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  • Thanks, Steve. What sort of persistence would this have? Would all USB drives be automatically mounted in this folder, or only the one that was initially used? If the latter, how does Windows detect it?
    – mcu
    Apr 1, 2012 at 21:58
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    Only the one mapped there will reappear there. I think that Windows will map the drive serial# or some GUID to the folder and keep everything in the registry. A thing that could not be done with the limited number of letters or perhaps for some compatibility reasons-
    – Steve
    Apr 1, 2012 at 22:03
  • Would it be better to have a drive letter AND a mount point at the same time? This way we can access it with a letter to run Check Disk and whatnot, and access it by mount folder if we need a static path for scripting and such. Please see vistax64.com/vista-hardware-devices/… Also, does the mounted volume have to be NTFS?
    – mcu
    Apr 1, 2012 at 23:48
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    Yes & No. The drive letter could coexist with the mapping, The NTFS is required on your fixed drive where you create the empty folder, not on the removable drive mapped to the empty folder
    – Steve
    Apr 2, 2012 at 7:16
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Use can use "Drive Letter View" available free at http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/drive_letter_view.html to assign desired drive letter to external drive. From this moment on, the selected removable media will always be mounted with same letter. (Test with windows 8.1)

Towards commercial side "Zentimo storage" at http://www.zentimo.com is the best solution.

or

Use Diskpart diskpart> list volume

select volume n assign letter=T i.e the new letter.

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Are you sure it's impossible? (I don't have an external hard drive to test now). I think that if you right-click on "computer", then select manage, you can select a letter for an hard drive that will allways be the same for this disk.

However, can't you use the serial number of the disk?

(sorry if my explanations weren't well explained, I'm not a native english speaker)

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