If the USB drive uses a FAT based filesystem, you may need to mount with cifs as well.
Nope, CIFS is the modern replacement for SMB; both are used only to connect to Windows and Samba shares. It is a network file system like NFS and others, and it has no relation with FAT file systems except that a Windows or Samba server can share drives or folders on a drive formatted with a FAT filesystem.
Most USB sticks come preformatted with VFAT-32. Using a mount command without an explicit filesystem option (-t) auto-detects that on any recent Linux distribution. Note that you may need root privileges to mount filesystems not listed in /etc/fstab.
Alexander
In reply to Re^2: Opening a USB drive for storing info.
by afoken
in thread Opening a USB drive for storing info.
by Steve_BZ
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