Package: hal Version: 0.5.8.1-4 Severity: normal
Hi, Some USB devices tell when they can be "safely" unplugged because they detect they have been "ejected" by the PC. When unmounting devices in Nautilus, that does not happen. One has to manually "sudo eject /dev/..." to have the device properly tell it can be unplugged. HTH, Xav -- System Information: Debian Release: 4.0 APT prefers unstable APT policy: (500, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental') Architecture: i386 (i686) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash Kernel: Linux 2.6.18-1-k7 Locale: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] (charmap=UTF-8) Versions of packages hal depends on: ii adduser 3.99 Add and remove users and groups ii dbus 1.0.0-1 simple interprocess messaging syst ii libc6 2.3.6.ds1-8 GNU C Library: Shared libraries ii libdbus-1-3 1.0.0-1 simple interprocess messaging syst ii libdbus-glib-1-2 0.71-3 simple interprocess messaging syst ii libexpat1 1.95.8-3.3 XML parsing C library - runtime li ii libglib2.0-0 2.12.4-1 The GLib library of C routines ii libhal-storage1 0.5.8.1-4 Hardware Abstraction Layer - share ii libhal1 0.5.8.1-4 Hardware Abstraction Layer - share ii libusb-0.1-4 2:0.1.12-2 userspace USB programming library ii libvolume-id0 0.100-2.2 libvolume_id shared library ii lsb-base 3.1-19 Linux Standard Base 3.1 init scrip ii pciutils 1:2.2.4-1 Linux PCI Utilities ii udev 0.100-2.2 /dev/ and hotplug management daemo ii usbutils 0.72-7 USB console utilities Versions of packages hal recommends: ii eject 2.1.4-2.1 ejects CDs and operates CD-Changer -- no debconf information -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]