Thank You for Your time and answer, Timo:
> > How do You convert the addresses into physical ports - if I have
> > understood You correctly?
>
> The -t option shows usb topology
That's true, but it helps me a little, as the devices have the same IDs
only diver bus/dev topology differs. I can s
Thank You for Your time and answer, Ron:
> In "lsusb -v -s 004:002" there should be an iSerial field. Maybe
> that has a non-zero value in it?
I do have the field, - for both devices it is the same. :(
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsub
Sthu Deus writes:
> How do You convert the addresses into physical ports - if I have
> understood You correctly?
The -t option shows usb topology:
$ lsusb -t
Bus# 8
`-Dev# 1 Vendor 0x1d6b Product 0x0001
Bus# 7
`-Dev# 1 Vendor 0x1d6b Product 0x0001
Bus# 6
`-Dev# 1 Vendor 0x1d6b Product 0
On 10/06/2010 10:51 AM, Sthu Deus wrote:
Thank You for Your time and answer, Ron:
Have you tried lsusb?
Yes, but still have no idea how I can recognize the ports to which a
device is connected. The records of the both differ only here:
Bus 004 Device 002:
Bus 005 Device 006:
How do You conv
Thank You for Your time and answer, Ron:
> Have you tried lsusb?
Yes, but still have no idea how I can recognize the ports to which a
device is connected. The records of the both differ only here:
Bus 004 Device 002:
Bus 005 Device 006:
How do You convert the addresses into physical ports - if
5 matches
Mail list logo