Get Volume Path from Drive Name using Powershell script
November 11, 2014 by Morgan
I have been working with file access events in Clustered File Server. In event log, for every file access, we are getting 4663 and 4656 events with file path like: DeviceHarddiskVolume4MySharetest.txt instead of my local path F:MySharetest.txt. After I have analyzed , found the prefix path DeviceHarddiskVolume4 is mapped with the device F:. Finally, I found this link (http://poshcode.org/4768), it contains powershell script to list Device Name (Drive letter) and mapped Device Path (Volume Path).
List Device Name and Volume Path
Get Volume Path from Device Name (Drive Letter)
List Device Name and Volume Path using Powershell script
We can get the Volume Path from Device Name using the Kernel32 module function QueryDosDevice and we can list the available device names (drive letter) using WMI class Win32_Volume. Use the the below Powershell script to list device path and device name.
1. Copy the below Powershell script and paste in Notepad file.
2. Save As the Notepad file with the extension .ps1 like List-Device-Name-and-Path.ps1
Powershell Script: Download List-Device-Name-and-Path.ps1
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# Biuild System Assembly in order to call Kernel32:QueryDosDevice.
$DynAssembly = New-Object System.Reflection.AssemblyName('SysUtils')
$AssemblyBuilder = [AppDomain]::CurrentDomain.DefineDynamicAssembly($DynAssembly, [Reflection.Emit.AssemblyBuilderAccess]::Run)
$ModuleBuilder = $AssemblyBuilder.DefineDynamicModule('SysUtils', $False)
# Define [Kernel32]::QueryDosDevice method
$TypeBuilder = $ModuleBuilder.DefineType('Kernel32', 'Public, Class')
$PInvokeMethod = $TypeBuilder.DefinePInvokeMethod('QueryDosDevice', 'kernel32.dll', ([Reflection.MethodAttributes]::Public -bor [Reflection.MethodAttributes]::Static), [Reflection.CallingConventions]::Standard, [UInt32], [Type[]]@([String], [Text.StringBuilder], [UInt32]), [Runtime.InteropServices.CallingConvention]::Winapi, [Runtime.InteropServices.CharSet]::Auto)
$DllImportConstructor = [Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute].GetConstructor(@([String]))
$SetLastError = [Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute].GetField('SetLastError')
$SetLastErrorCustomAttribute = New-Object Reflection.Emit.CustomAttributeBuilder($DllImportConstructor, @('kernel32.dll'), [Reflection.FieldInfo[]]@($SetLastError), @($true))
$PInvokeMethod.SetCustomAttribute($SetLastErrorCustomAttribute)
$Kernel32 = $TypeBuilder.CreateType()
$Max = 65536
$StringBuilder = New-Object System.Text.StringBuilder($Max)
Get-WmiObject Win32_Volume | ? { $_.DriveLetter } | % {
$ReturnLength = $Kernel32::QueryDosDevice($_.DriveLetter, $StringBuilder, $Max)
if ($ReturnLength)
{
$DriveMapping = @{
DriveLetter = $_.DriveLetter
DevicePath = $StringBuilder.ToString()
}
New-Object PSObject -Property $DriveMapping
}
}
3. Now run the script file List-Device-Name-and-Path.ps1 from Powershell to list all the Device Name and Volume Path in local machine.
Get Device Path from Device Name using Powershell script
Get Device Path from Device Name (Drive Letter) using Powershell script
The below script displays Device Path for the given Device Name(Derive letter). The device name(drive letter) cannot have a trailing backslash; for example, use “C:“, not “C:“. Follow the below steps to get volume path from drive letter.
1. Copy the below Powershell script and paste in Notepad file.
2. Save As the Notepad file with the extension .ps1 like Get-DevicePath-from-DeviceName.ps1
Powershell Script: Download Get-DevicePath-from-DeviceName.ps1
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$driveLetter = Read-Host "Enter Drive Letter:"
Write-Host " "
$DynAssembly = New-Object System.Reflection.AssemblyName('SysUtils')
$AssemblyBuilder = [AppDomain]::CurrentDomain.DefineDynamicAssembly($DynAssembly, [Reflection.Emit.AssemblyBuilderAccess]::Run)
$ModuleBuilder = $AssemblyBuilder.DefineDynamicModule('SysUtils', $False)
# Define [Kernel32]::QueryDosDevice method
$TypeBuilder = $ModuleBuilder.DefineType('Kernel32', 'Public, Class')
$PInvokeMethod = $TypeBuilder.DefinePInvokeMethod('QueryDosDevice', 'kernel32.dll', ([Reflection.MethodAttributes]::Public -bor [Reflection.MethodAttributes]::Static), [Reflection.CallingConventions]::Standard, [UInt32], [Type[]]@([String], [Text.StringBuilder], [UInt32]), [Runtime.InteropServices.CallingConvention]::Winapi, [Runtime.InteropServices.CharSet]::Auto)
$DllImportConstructor = [Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute].GetConstructor(@([String]))
$SetLastError = [Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute].GetField('SetLastError')
$SetLastErrorCustomAttribute = New-Object Reflection.Emit.CustomAttributeBuilder($DllImportConstructor, @('kernel32.dll'), [Reflection.FieldInfo[]]@($SetLastError), @($true))
$PInvokeMethod.SetCustomAttribute($SetLastErrorCustomAttribute)
$Kernel32 = $TypeBuilder.CreateType()
$Max = 65536
$StringBuilder = New-Object System.Text.StringBuilder($Max)
$ReturnLength = $Kernel32::QueryDosDevice($driveLetter, $StringBuilder, $Max)
if ($ReturnLength)
{
Write-Host "Device Path: "$StringBuilder.ToString()
}
else
{
Write-Host "Device Path: not found"
}
Write-Host " "
3. Now run the script file Get-DevicePath-from-DeviceName.ps1 from Powershell, and give the Drive letter as argument which you want to get device path.
Best Answer
Please notice at the git repository that you linked:
Your son is evidently using the latest (5 or less days ago) version and you are not.
Since dkms status returned nothing, we conclude that you installed with sudo make install. Let's remove the inoperative driver, update it and reinstall:
After each kernel update, you must recompile:
EDIT: As we have seen, the git pull step was ineffective as you downloaded the zip file rather than obtaining the driver by git clone.
Please do:
Or whatever the name of the previously downloaded and extracted driver file is. Next:
Now. we'll download a fresh copy with updates that drive your device. With a temporary working internet connection, please do: