The Finder is About to Quit Click Continue to Eject the Disc Without Buning to It

How to eject a USB flash drive from a computer

Updated: 12/31/2020 by Computer Hope

Illustration: In Windows File Explorer, right-click your USB flash drive, select Eject, then remove the flash drive.

When finished using a USB flash drive or pen drive connected to your computer, don't pull it out of the USB port. Instead, eject it using the eject option provided by your OS (operating system).

Note

The steps on this page can also be used to safely eject other devices connected to a computer via USB, including a mobile phone, tablet, or external hard drive.

When you eject a flash drive, you're telling the operating system that the drive is about to be disconnected. The operating system completes any read or write operations on the drive and unmounts it from the computer.

If you don't eject a USB flash drive before disconnecting it, data on the drive could become corrupt, because the operating system was using the drive when disconnected. For this reason, it's best to always eject your USB drive before physically disconnecting it from your USB port.

The Windows, macOS X, Linux, and Chrome OS operating systems each provide a safe method to eject a flash drive.

Eject a USB drive in Windows

Using the notification area

  1. In the Notification Area of the taskbar, click the up arrow to view the items in the systray. Then, right-click the Eject Media Eject Media icon in Windows Notification Area icon.

In the Notification Area, click the up arrow to view the systray. Click the Eject media button, which looks like a USB flash drive.

  1. A menu lists the removable media you can eject. Click the name of your USB flash drive. In this example, the option to eject the USB flash drive is named "Eject Cruzer Glide."

Eject USB thumb drive

After clicking the eject option, wait for a message stating it is safe to remove the hardware before pulling the flash drive out of your computer.

Using File Explorer

  1. Open File Explorer by pressing Windows key+E.
  2. On the left, click This PC.
  3. On the right, right-click your USB flash drive.
  4. Select Eject.

Eject a USB drive in macOS

With Command+E keyboard shortcut

  1. Locate the USB flash drive on your desktop. Click it once to select it.
  2. On your keyboard, press Command+E to eject the flash drive.

Select the USB flash drive icon on your macOS desktop, and press Command+E.

In Finder

  1. Open the Finder utility. On the left, locate your USB flash drive under Devices.
  2. Click the eject icon (⏏) to the right of the flash drive.

In the macOS finder, locate your USB flash drive on the left under Devices, and click the eject icon next to its name.

Using Trash

  1. Locate the USB flash drive on your desktop.
  2. Drag-and-drop the USB flash drive into the trash bin icon. When you start dragging a removable disk, such as your USB flash drive, the Trash turns to an eject (⏏) icon. When you drop the disk on the eject icon, the disk is ejected. No data is deleted using the Trash icon this way.

Locate the icon for your USB flash drive on your macOS desktop, and drag-and-drop it into the Trash.

You can now safely remove the USB flash drive from your computer.

Eject a USB drive in Linux

In a Linux operating system, you can eject a USB flash drive in your file manager, or in the command line shell.

File manager example: Nautilus

In this example, we eject a USB flash drive using Nautilus, the default file manager in Ubuntu. Nautilus is a lot like the Windows File Explorer. (Your file manager may be different if you're using another Linux OS.)

Open a new Nautilus window by clicking the shortcut on your dock. It looks like a file cabinet, labeled Files.

Launching Nautilus from the Ubuntu dock.

Or, click Activities (on the left side of your taskbar). In the search box, type Files or Nautilus. In the search results, click the Files icon.

Launching Nautilus from the Ubuntu Activities search bar.

Or, open a terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T), type nautilus, and press Enter.

Launching Nautilus file manager from the Ubuntu terminal.

In the Nautilus file manager window, you see your USB flash drive listed on the left. Click the eject icon () next to the disk name.

In a Nautilus window, locate your USB flash drive on the left, and click the Eject icon.

Your disk is removed from the list, and a notification informs you that it's safe to remove the USB flash drive.

Ejecting from the Linux shell

In every Linux operating system, the administrator can eject a mounted USB flash drive with the eject command, specifying the device name of the USB flash drive.

For example, if your USB flash drive is mounted as the device name /dev/sdc, and you're a sudoer (administrator rights), you can eject it with the following command.

          sudo eject /dev/sdc

Here, the sudo command means "run the following command as administrator." When you press Enter, you are prompted for your password.

When the command runs, all pending I/O operations for the specified device are forced to complete immediately, as if you'd run the sync command. Then, the device is unmounted, as if you'd run umount.

If the eject is successful, the command displays no output. You can safely disconnect your USB flash drive.

Determining your flash drive's device name

If you're not sure of the device name for your USB flash drive, you can list it with parted.

The device name of your USB flash drive is /dev/sd x, where x is a lowercase letter az.

List your mounted devices by running parted -l as root, or with sudo:

          sudo parted -l

Listing Linux block devices with gparted.

In this example, disk /dev/sdb is our USB flash drive, so the eject command would be:

          sudo eject /dev/sdb

Eject a USB drive in Chrome OS

  1. Open the Files app on the Chrome OS device.
  2. In the left navigation pane, find the USB drive.
  3. Click the eject icon to the right of the USB drive. When the USB drive disappears from the Files app, it is safe to remove the USB drive from the Chrome OS device.

Eject USB drive in Files app on Chromebook

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Source: https://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch001943.htm

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