36

I'm new to Ubuntu, and I don't know how to mount my iPhone.

I would like to download iTunes, but I saw that USB doesn't work, but I just need to access to all my files and APP because would like to transfer APP from pc to iPhone.

8
  • Is the phone jailbroken? Aug 14, 2016 at 1:19
  • No it is not, fresh as new
    – Rizio A.
    Aug 14, 2016 at 15:24
  • As far as I know, there is no way to mount the iPhone's filesystem normally via USB on any OS. Moreover, I don't know of any applications for Ubuntu (or any Linux distro for that matter) that allow the syncing of apps to an iOS device. Aug 14, 2016 at 20:09
  • You can try to run Windows in a virtual machine using VirtualBox, and manage apps via iTunes in the VM. Aug 14, 2016 at 20:11
  • I read somewhere that it could work installing GKSU NAUTILUS...(honestly, dunno wtf it is), but it gave some error...and cannot download VirtualBox...do you have any link?
    – Rizio A.
    Aug 15, 2016 at 1:10

4 Answers 4

38

Evidently I was wrong about being able to mount an iPhone on Ubuntu. You can perform this using the following steps on yakkety. Note, you would need the device to be jailbroken in order to load apps onto the device this way, but this method will suffice for getting media from the device.

Option 1: Using a script

If you want to save yourself some time, you can download a script here to do most of the work of the process for you.

Once downloaded, you will need to change the permisions so you can execute the script. Assuming you downloaded it with the default name, iphone_setup.sh, cd to the directory in which you downloaded the file and do

chmod u+x iphone_setup.sh

Convert the Windows line endings by doing

ex -bsc '%!awk "{sub(/\r/,\"\")}1"' -cx iphone_setup.sh

Then run the script with root privileges using

sudo ./iphone_setup.sh

This will complete all of Step 1 of the manual setup for you, as well as Step 3 and Step 4. You will then need to do Step 2 and Step 5 of the manual setup after the script finishes running.

Option 2: Doing it manually

Step 1: Installing the tools

Before plugging in the iPhone, you will need to install the several programs to make it possible to mount the iPhone.

Step 1.1: Installing several important tools with apt-get

Do the following in the terminal to install a few packages that will be needed for any version of iOS.

sudo apt-get install ideviceinstaller python-imobiledevice libimobiledevice-utils python-plist usbmuxd

If you are connecting an iPhone with an iOS version before iOS 9, you can skip the remaining substeps of step 1 and instead just do the following:

sudo apt-get install libimobiledevice6 libplist3 ifuse

Step 1.2: Installing tools for building

Use apt-get to install a few programs needed to build the programs in the following steps

sudo apt-get install libtool autoconf automake

Step 1.3: Installing libplist

First, install the required dependencies for building libplist. In order to do this, do the following:

sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev python-dev

Then download the latest version of libplist from GitHub, and extract the contents of the zip file to some directory. For instance, if you are in the directory where you downloaded the libplist zip file, do unzip libplist-master.zip.

You should now have a directory called "libplist-master" in the directory to which you extracted the libplist zip file. cd into this directory from the terminal, and the run

./autogen.sh

When the ./autogen.sh script is done running, run

make

And, finally, run

sudo make install

Step 1.4: Installing libusbmuxd

This step is similar to the previous step, except we are installing libusbmuxd instead of libplist.

First, download the latest version of libusbmuxd from GitHub. Again, extract the contents to a directory, and cd to the directory libusbmuxd-master. Then run the following:

./autogen.sh

When this is finished, run

make

followed by

sudo make install

Step 1.5: Installing libimobiledevice

First, install the build dependencies by doing the following:

sudo apt-get install libssl-dev

Then download the latest version of libimobiledevice from GitHub. Extract as in the previous two steps; you should get a directory inside the directory to which you extracted called libimobiledevice-master. cd into this directory, and, again, run

./autogen.sh

When this is finished, run

make

followed by

sudo make install

Step 1.6: Installing a better version of usbmuxd

First, uninstall the old version of usbmuxd by doing

sudo apt-get remove usbmuxd

Then, install the build dependencies by doing

sudo apt-get install libimobiledevice-dev libplist-dev libusb-dev libusb-1.0.0-dev libtool-bin libtool

Then, download the latest version of usbmuxd from GitHub. Extract and cd to the usbmuxd-master directory. Again, run

./autogen.sh

When this is finished, run

make

followed by

sudo make install

Step 1.7: Installing ifuse

This is the last thing you will need to install!

First install, the build dependencies by doing

sudo apt-get install libfuse-dev

Download the latest version of ifuse from GitHub. Extract it to some directory, and cd into the directory ifuse-master, and cd into that directory.

This time there is an extra step in building the program. Do

./autogen.sh

as usual, but then do

./configure

as well. Then, continue on to the normal

make

and

sudo make install

Step 2: Running usbmuxd and attaching iPhone

This step is simple. Run usbmuxd in the terminal, and then plug in the iPhone.

Now check to see if the device was recognized correctly by doing

dmesg | grep ipheth

If nothing shows up, try disconnecting the iPhone, running usbmuxd again, and then plugging back in. Then check again.

Step 3: Creating a mount point for the iPhone

You can manually create a mount point for the iPhone by doing

sudo mkdir /media/iPhone

You will then likely want to change the permissions for the mount point. Do

sudo chmod 777 /media/iPhone

Step 4: Editing the ifuse configuration file

The ifuse configuration file /etc/fuse.conf requires editing if you want to access the iPhone without being root.

Edit the configuration file using your favorite editor, for example gedit

sudo gedit /etc/fuse.conf

In the file ensure that the following two lines are under the line that says # Allow non-root users to specify the allow_other or allow_root mount options:

op$
user_allow_other

Save the file and quit the editor.

Step 5: Pairing the iPhone

Run the following line in order to pair your iPhone using idevicepair:

idevicepair pair

Step 6: Mounting with ifuse

Run the following line to mount the device at the mount point specified earlier:

ifuse /media/iPhone

NOTE: At this point you may mount the root filesystem if you have your phone jailbroken by doing the following line instead

ifuse /media/iPhone/ --root

The iPhone should now be accessible at /media/iPhone through your file browser.

When you want to unmount, do the following two lines

fusermount -u /media/iPhone/
idevicepair unpair

These steps were adapted for xenial from this tutorial at dedoimedo, then further modified to suit devices with iOS 9+.

23
  • 1
    [ 1461.760447] ipheth 1-2:4.2 enp0s20u2c4i2: renamed from eth0 stream13@stream13-HP-Stream-Notebook-PC-13:~$ mkdir /media/iPhone mkdir: cannot create directory ‘/media/iPhone’: Permission denied I don't know what to do mate...
    – Rizio A.
    Aug 15, 2016 at 3:55
  • 1
    @RizioA.Sorry, that should have been sudo mkdir /media/iPhone Aug 15, 2016 at 3:57
  • 1
    @RizioA.Same with sudo chmod 777 /media/iPhone Aug 15, 2016 at 3:58
  • 5
    This does not work for iOS 10: "GnuTLS error: Error in the pull function. Failed to connect to lockdownd service on the device. Try again. If it still fails try rebooting your device."
    – zgoda
    Oct 12, 2016 at 9:08
  • 2
    Step#6 is not working for me, but file explorer worked, thanks a lot Nov 25, 2016 at 1:56
8

Tested on iPhone 4S on 16.04 and now SE on 18.04; no reason to believe it will be different on 6 or later versions

[EDIT: see below it works all the way to iPhone 7].

Fairly simple route:

➊ INSTALL:

sudo apt install ideviceinstaller python-imobiledevice libimobiledevice-utils  usbmuxd libimobiledevice6 libplist3 ifuse python3-plist

if on a 64-bit install

sudo apt install ideviceinstaller python-imobiledevice libimobiledevice-utils  usbmuxd libimobiledevice6 libplist3 ifuse python3-plist:i386

if on a 32-bit install

you may need to do this too: sudo mkdir /var/lib/lockdown sudo chmod 777 /var/lib/lockdown

➋ in Terminal to see your iphone address:

 lsusb -v 2> /dev/null | grep -e "Apple Inc" -A 2

You will see something thus:

iManufacturer 1 Apple Inc.
iProduct 2 iPhone
iSerial 3 ca00d62380d42746b8ff8280....d1fd7b7119ca

➌ Open Nautilus

enter the iSerial from above:

afc://ca00d62380d4274....f8280a91ed1fd7b7119ca/

NOW you see your files.Photos are in DCIM folder

➍ As an embellishment you could install VLC Mobile from App Store FREE of course which will let you play formats itunes cannot handle Flac Wavpack etc

you will see/place the music files in Documents on iPhone next to iPhone on left of page [This is on LXDE; must look similar in other Desktop Environments]

=== TIP ===

If iphone VLC files are not visible on your PC; I found this brings them back:unplug phone run command below then replug

sudo usbmuxd --verbose -f    
    
3
  • 1
    This worked great for accessing my iPhone 7 Plus's photos on 18.04 and is way simpler than the other answers. Thanks! Nov 5, 2018 at 16:12
  • 1
    Thanx Abe for saying it works on 7 since all I have is a 4S .... good to know for other folks or if I ever fork out for a more recent toy :] no need as yet as 4S still marvelous although from 2011 !
    – shantiq
    Dec 4, 2018 at 12:56
  • 1
    Now tested it on iPhone SE and fine there too
    – shantiq
    Oct 5, 2019 at 13:02
3

It seems that with iOS 10.2 Apple has broken it again. To fix:

  1. Download from GitHub latest versions of: libplist, libusbmuxd, libimobiledevice, ifuse and usbmuxd

  2. Extract ZIP files in a folder that you like, enter in each directory and launch compilation of the corresponding library (if you don't know how to do, just follow instructions inside the readme file inside each lib and remember that the development version of openssl is called libssl-dev when required). Please note that last command 'sudo make install' should put compiled libraries in /usr/local/lib.

  3. Make sure that environment vars point to this new versions rather than the old ones included in official packages:

    sudo LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib usbmuxd    
    export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib
    
  4. Connected your iOS 10.2 device to your computer:

    idevicepair pair
    
  5. Select "Trust" to the warning "Trust This Computer?" on your device:

    idevicepair pair
    
  6. Mount the iOS filesystem

    ifuse Mountpoint_Directory/
    

Tested on Ubuntu 16.04 and iPhone 7 with iOS 10.2

4
  • On my stock Ubuntu 16.04 system, the phone doesn't even show up in lsusb. Would this library set fix that so that I can get iTunes working within VirtualBox?
    – Greg Bell
    Jul 25, 2017 at 0:06
  • Several months have passed and I honestly don't remember perfectly, but I think that my iPhone was detected in lsusb even before applying the new libraries, so I don't know if they can fix the issue you're talking about.
    – bytepan
    Jul 26, 2017 at 8:17
  • Thanks, this solved my issue on Ubuntu 16.04 and I can finally access my photos. One small note: it would be more appropriate to use this command: LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/lib in the two substeps of n. 3. This way your current LD_LIBRARY_PATH, if any, gets preserved. Thanks again for sharing! Feb 17, 2018 at 9:48
  • 1
    I continually will get a message when I try to mount with :~$ ifuse /media/iPhone saying: There was an error accessing the mount point: Input/output error Does anyone else have this problem and is there a solution?
    – Zangar
    Mar 27, 2018 at 16:37
2

After having built new versions of libplist, libusbmuxd, libimobiledevice, ifuse and usbmuxd under /usr/local/lib, those versions have to be taken into use when calling the commands to connect the iPhone (instead of using the old library versions, which is done by default). So I did the following in a bash-shell (make sure to unlock (enter your code or use your fingerprint) your iPhone before each action):

sudo LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib usbmuxd
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib
idevicepair pair
ifuse /media/iPhone

(comment originated from user639768 and was posted as a question, but has since been deleted.)

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .