More effective searching (was: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?)

2025-06-30 Thread Jan Claeys
On Tue, 2025-06-24 at 07:27 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote: > Side Issue -- Google and DuckDuckGo seem more interested in quantity > rather than quality. Any pointers to search engine with friendly > Boolean search? TIA "You" "can" "try" "putting" "double" "quotes" "around" "every" "word" AND "word

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-25 Thread Dan Purgert
On Jun 25, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > On 6/24/25 7:27 AM, Richard Owlett wrote: > > On 6/23/25 9:00 AM, Hans wrote: > > > Am Montag, 23. Juni 2025, 13:53:35 CEST schrieb Richard Owlett: > > > > I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties.

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-25 Thread Richard Owlett
On 6/23/25 7:53 PM, Van Snyder wrote: On Mon, 2025-06-23 at 06:53 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote: I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so I can listen to a local station while working. I'd al

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-25 Thread Richard Owlett
On 6/24/25 7:27 AM, Richard Owlett wrote: On 6/23/25 9:00 AM, Hans wrote: Am Montag, 23. Juni 2025, 13:53:35 CEST schrieb Richard Owlett: I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so I can listen

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-25 Thread Timothy M Butterworth
On Mon, Jun 23, 2025 at 11:44 AM Dan Purgert wrote: > On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > > I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. > > I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so > > I can listen to a local stati

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-24 Thread Richard Owlett
On 6/23/25 9:00 AM, Hans wrote: Am Montag, 23. Juni 2025, 13:53:35 CEST schrieb Richard Owlett: I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so I can listen to a local station while working. I'd al

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-24 Thread Richard Owlett
On 6/23/25 9:28 AM, Dan Purgert wrote: On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: On 6/23/25 7:10 AM, Dan Purgert wrote: On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-24 Thread Dan Purgert
On Jun 24, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > On 6/23/25 9:28 AM, Dan Purgert wrote: > > On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > > > [https://www.adafruit.com/product/1497 approaches my goal] > > > > That adafruit one is OK. I'm not a big fan of the MCX connector, since > > you're a bit tied to that

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread 🦓
Op di 24 jun 2025 om 04:05 schreef 🦓 : > arent sum chip antennae good enough to decode fm radio? didya ask > r...@gnu.org? (i was talking software radio hacking your libre foss bluetooth driver without any usb dongles (since wifi antennae have been observing colleagues thru tel aviv university

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread Van Snyder
On Mon, 2025-06-23 at 06:53 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote: > I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. > I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 > so I > can listen to a local station while working. I'd also want to record >

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread Dan Purgert
On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > On 6/23/25 7:10 AM, Dan Purgert wrote: > > On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > > > I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. > > > I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debi

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread Hans
Am Montag, 23. Juni 2025, 13:53:35 CEST schrieb Richard Owlett: > I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. > I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so I > can listen to a local station while working. I'd also want to

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread Richard Owlett
On 6/23/25 7:10 AM, Dan Purgert wrote: On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so I can listen to a local station while working. I'd also want to record

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread John Dow
> On 23 Jun 2025, at 13:10, Dan Purgert wrote: > > On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: >> I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. >> I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so >> I can listen to a local stat

Re: Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread Dan Purgert
On Jun 23, 2025, Richard Owlett wrote: > I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. > I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so > I can listen to a local station while working. I'd also want to record > as MP3 for listenin

Linux friendly FM tuner on USB device - available?

2025-06-23 Thread Richard Owlett
I'm old enough to remember pocket radios of the fifties/sixties. I looking for a USB device to plug into my laptop running Debian 12 so I can listen to a local station while working. I'd also want to record as MP3 for listening at a more convenient time. My web search turned

(SOLVED) Re: USB device not mounting

2024-11-04 Thread D. R. Evans
D. R. Evans wrote on 11/3/24 15:13: I have a USB device that has always worked fine in the past, but now I can no longer access it when it is plugged in to my bookworm systems. (I last used the device a couple of weeks ago.) I am an idiot (although somewhat in my defence, there is no mention

Re: USB device not mounting

2024-11-03 Thread Eike Lantzsch ZP5CGE / KY4PZ
On Sunday, 3 November 2024 19:13:52 -03 D. R. Evans wrote: > I have a USB device that has always worked fine in the past, but now I > can no longer access it when it is plugged in to my bookworm systems. > (I last used the device a couple of weeks ago.) > > Once plugged in, lsusb

USB device not mounting

2024-11-03 Thread D. R. Evans
I have a USB device that has always worked fine in the past, but now I can no longer access it when it is plugged in to my bookworm systems. (I last used the device a couple of weeks ago.) Once plugged in, lsusb shows it: [ZB:~] lsusb ... Bus 001 Device 011: ID 0483:a1de

Re: USB device failing to automount (Kobo reader)

2024-10-31 Thread tomas
On Thu, Oct 31, 2024 at 12:57:53PM +, Chris Green wrote: > Dan Ritter wrote: > > Chris Green wrote: > > > Dan Ritter wrote: > > > Typical! I'm sure I tried that yesterday, but anyway it mounts > > > manually perfectly OK now. So all I'm missing is the automatic > > > mounting. > > > > > >

Re: USB device failing to automount (Kobo reader)

2024-10-31 Thread Chris Green
Dan Ritter wrote: > Chris Green wrote: > > Dan Ritter wrote: > > Typical! I'm sure I tried that yesterday, but anyway it mounts > > manually perfectly OK now. So all I'm missing is the automatic > > mounting. > > > > ... and that's just in settings. While I'm here what's the difference > > b

Re: USB device failing to automount (Kobo reader)

2024-10-31 Thread Dan Ritter
Chris Green wrote: > Dan Ritter wrote: > Typical! I'm sure I tried that yesterday, but anyway it mounts > manually perfectly OK now. So all I'm missing is the automatic > mounting. > > ... and that's just in settings. While I'm here what's the difference > between:- > > Mount removable d

Re: USB device failing to automount (Kobo reader)

2024-10-31 Thread Chris Green
447.028493] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdc] Synchronizing SCSI cache > > [210447.028615] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdc] Synchronize Cache(10) failed: Result: > hostbyte=DID_NO_CONNECT driverbyte=DRIVER_OK > > [210459.880506] usb 1-1: new high-speed USB device number 6 using > > xhci_hcd &

Re: USB device failing to automount (Kobo reader)

2024-10-30 Thread Dan Ritter
28615] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdc] Synchronize Cache(10) failed: Result: > hostbyte=DID_NO_CONNECT driverbyte=DRIVER_OK > [210459.880506] usb 1-1: new high-speed USB device number 6 using xhci_hcd > [210460.031177] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=2237, > idProduct=4229, bcdDevice=

USB device failing to automount (Kobo reader)

2024-10-30 Thread Chris Green
tbyte=DID_NO_CONNECT driverbyte=DRIVER_OK [210459.880506] usb 1-1: new high-speed USB device number 6 using xhci_hcd [210460.031177] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=2237, idProduct=4229, bcdDevice= 4.01 [210460.031200] usb 1-1: New USB device strings: Mfr=3, Product=4, SerialNumber=5

Re: usb device

2023-02-13 Thread Keith Bainbridge
On February 11, 2023 10:24:47 PM UTC, "Andrew M.A. Cater" wrote: >On Sat, Feb 11, 2023 at 10:16:48PM +, fxkl4...@protonmail.com >wrote: >> i'm looking at a perixx perimice-513l usb mouse >> i can't find or have overlooked info about it working with linux >> is anyone familiar with this devi

Re: usb device

2023-02-11 Thread Andrew M.A. Cater
On Sat, Feb 11, 2023 at 10:16:48PM +, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote: > i'm looking at a perixx perimice-513l usb mouse > i can't find or have overlooked info about it working with linux > is anyone familiar with this device > USB mice generally *just work*, thought I'm not sure how well button

usb device

2023-02-11 Thread fxkl47BF
i'm looking at a perixx perimice-513l usb mouse i can't find or have overlooked info about it working with linux is anyone familiar with this device

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread David Wright
On Tue 03 Nov 2020 at 23:33:33 (+), Joe wrote: > On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 14:45:41 -0600 David Wright wrote: > > On Tue 03 Nov 2020 at 17:34:48 (+), Joe wrote: > > > > > Those of us who use NTFS do so deliberately to provide compatibility > > > with Windows. It's not that long ago that Linux NTF

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread Keith Bainbridge
On 4/11/20 4:09 am, Charles Curley wrote: On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 16:12:27 + Mick Ab wrote: Thanks for the suggestion re rsync, but using tar has been successful with a NTFS drive many times. Another possibility is to get rid of NTFS, and replace it with an encrypted ext4 partition. Then you

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread Joe
On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 14:45:41 -0600 David Wright wrote: > On Tue 03 Nov 2020 at 17:34:48 (+), Joe wrote: > > > Those of us who use NTFS do so deliberately to provide compatibility > > with Windows. It's not that long ago that Linux NTFS support was a > > bit flaky, so we don't do it solely by

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread David Wright
On Tue 03 Nov 2020 at 17:34:48 (+), Joe wrote: > Those of us who use NTFS do so deliberately to provide compatibility > with Windows. It's not that long ago that Linux NTFS support was a bit > flaky, so we don't do it solely by our own choice. > > I have a 4GB VeraCrypt file which I open in

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread Joe
On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 10:09:02 -0700 Charles Curley wrote: > On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 16:12:27 + > Mick Ab wrote: > > > Thanks for the suggestion re rsync, but using tar has been > > successful with a NTFS drive many times. > > Another possibility is to get rid of NTFS, and replace it with an > e

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread Charles Curley
On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 16:12:27 + Mick Ab wrote: > Thanks for the suggestion re rsync, but using tar has been successful > with a NTFS drive many times. Another possibility is to get rid of NTFS, and replace it with an encrypted ext4 partition. Then you can use something like rsnapshot to automa

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread Mick Ab
Thanks for the suggestion re rsync, but using tar has been successful with a NTFS drive many times. On 3 Nov 2020 14:11, "The Wanderer" wrote: > On 2020-11-03 at 09:03, ellanios82 wrote: > > > On 11/3/20 2:28 PM, Mick Ab wrote: > > > >> The backup itself is performed using a 'tar -cvpf' type of

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread The Wanderer
On 2020-11-03 at 09:03, ellanios82 wrote: > On 11/3/20 2:28 PM, Mick Ab wrote: > >> The backup itself is performed using a 'tar -cvpf' type of command > > - maybe "rsync" is worth a look All else being equal I'd agree, but this is backing up to a NTFS filesystem, which doesn't support the typ

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread ellanios82
On 11/3/20 2:28 PM, Mick Ab wrote: The backup itself is performed using a 'tar  -cvpf' type of command  - maybe "rsync" is worth a look .  rgds

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-03 Thread Mick Ab
I have a straightforward need to backup the current system to a portable drive before getting an up to date Debian distribution installed on a new machine. As previously mentioned, system backups have been successfully carried out on a regular basis for years to an NTFS portable drive in a USB 3 p

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-02 Thread David
Hi Mick Please make sure to send all your replies to the mailing list so that others can add to the conversation. On Mon, 2 Nov 2020 at 21:25, Mick Ab wrote: > > Thanks very much, David, for your suggestions. I appreciate that very much. > My knowledge of Linux is gleaned from various online ar

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-02 Thread David
On Sun, 1 Nov 2020 at 22:55, Mick Ab wrote: > My plan is to update my distribution very soon, but first I need to do > a backup of the system to a USB portable hard drive (which uses NTFS). Hi Mick, Forgive me if I am wrong, but it seems possible that there could be some "XY Problem" occurring

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-11-01 Thread Mick Ab
ption > > (the devices are already plugged in when a reboot is performed). > > As I thought, this observation contradicts the first thought expressed > in your Tue, 27 Oct 2020 20:43:52 + post (the last paragraph of > quote below). I presume that although mounting is disallowe

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-31 Thread David Wright
his observation contradicts the first thought expressed in your Tue, 27 Oct 2020 20:43:52 + post (the last paragraph of quote below). I presume that although mounting is disallowed for mount -a (by noauto), your automounter is not constrained in this way. > What happens to a USB device th

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-29 Thread Mick Ab
rebooted, even though their entries include the noauto option (the devices are already plugged in when a reboot is performed). What happens to a USB device that is not referenced in /etc/fstab, when it is plugged into a USB port while the system is running :- If the filesystem is FAT32 (e.g. a

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-29 Thread Mick Ab
The following point is observed :- USB devices referenced in /etc/fstab are automatically mounted when the system is rebooted, even though their entries include the noauto option (the devices are already plugged in when a reboot is performed). What happens to a USB device that is not referenced

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-29 Thread David Wright
On Tue 27 Oct 2020 at 20:43:52 (+), Mick Ab wrote: > On 27 Oct 2020 18:20, "Kenneth Parker" wrote: > > On Tue, Oct 27, 2020, 11:51 AM Mick Ab wrote: > > > >> If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem > >> only be mounted manually using the mount command or > >> is

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-29 Thread Dominique Dumont
Hi On Tuesday, 27 October 2020 16:51:06 CET Mick Ab wrote: > If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only > be mounted manually using the mount command or > is there any chance that it will be automatically mounted by > usbmount ? I wrote a blog on that topic a few y

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Mick Ab
Thanks for the replies. It seems to me that the situation is as follows :- Filesystems in /etc/fstab which have the noauto option are not automatically mounted at boot time, so if these filesystems are already plugged into USB ports at boot time, they would subsequently have to be manually mounte

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread tomas
On Tue, Oct 27, 2020 at 02:20:14PM -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote: > On Tue, Oct 27, 2020, 11:51 AM Mick Ab wrote: > > > If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only > > be mounted manually using the mount command or > > is there any chance that it will be automatically

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Nicolas George
ghe2001 (12020-10-27): > > dme is faster. > > What's a dme? It's not on my system, and aptitude claims it doesn't exist. It's not dme, it's dme ssecem ~ $ apt-file search '/bin/dme' herbstluftwm: /usr/bin/dmenu_run_hlwm klibc-utils: /usr/lib/klibc/bin/dmesg suckless-tools: /usr/bin/dmenu s

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Reco
Hi. On Tue, Oct 27, 2020 at 07:06:20PM +, ghe2001 wrote: > ‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐ > On Tuesday, October 27, 2020 12:58 PM, Nicolas George wrote: > > > dme is faster. > > What's a dme? It's not on my system, and aptitude claims it doesn't exist. /bin/dmesg, probably. A pa

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Cindy Sue Causey
On 10/27/20, Mick Ab wrote: > If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only > be mounted manually using the mount command or > is there any chance that it will be automatically mounted by > usbmount ? > > The filesystem is used in a USB port. Is there a "sub" anythin

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Nicolas George
ghe2001 (12020-10-27): > On my system (Buster) USB things are called /dev/sd.  From > the CLI, I type "sudo mount /dev/sd" to see what's already there, > then plug in the USB device, and  hit again to see what's new.  dme is faster. Regards, -- Nicolas Georg

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Brian
On Tue 27 Oct 2020 at 15:51:06 +, Mick Ab wrote: > If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only > be mounted manually using the mount command or > is there any chance that it will be automatically mounted by > usbmount ? > > The filesystem is used in a USB port.

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Kenneth Parker
On Tue, Oct 27, 2020, 11:51 AM Mick Ab wrote: > If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only > be mounted manually using the mount command or > is there any chance that it will be automatically mounted by > usbmount ? > > The filesystem is used in a USB port. > I ha

Re: Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread David Wright
On Tue 27 Oct 2020 at 15:51:06 (+), Mick Ab wrote: > If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only > be mounted manually using the mount command or > is there any chance that it will be automatically mounted by > usbmount ? > > The filesystem is used in a USB port.

Mounting a USB device

2020-10-27 Thread Mick Ab
If a filesystem in /etc/fstab has a noauto entry, can that filesystem only be mounted manually using the mount command or is there any chance that it will be automatically mounted by usbmount ? The filesystem is used in a USB port.

Re: usb device constantly resets

2020-07-17 Thread daggs
Greetings Dan, > Sent: Friday, July 17, 2020 at 4:28 PM > From: "Dan Ritter" > To: "daggs" > Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org, "Andrei POPESCU" > Subject: Re: usb device constantly resets > > daggs wrote: > > Greetings, > > &g

Re: usb device constantly resets

2020-07-17 Thread Dan Ritter
daggs wrote: > Greetings, > > > Sent: Saturday, July 04, 2020 at 8:54 PM > > From: "daggs" > > To: "Andrei POPESCU" > > Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org > > Subject: Re: usb device constantly resets > > > > Greetings A

Re: usb device constantly resets

2020-07-17 Thread daggs
Greetings, > Sent: Saturday, July 04, 2020 at 8:54 PM > From: "daggs" > To: "Andrei POPESCU" > Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org > Subject: Re: usb device constantly resets > > Greetings Andrei, > > > Sent: Saturday, July 04, 2020 at 8:10

Re: usb device constantly resets

2020-07-04 Thread daggs
Greetings Andrei, > Sent: Saturday, July 04, 2020 at 8:10 PM > From: "Andrei POPESCU" > To: debian-user@lists.debian.org > Subject: Re: usb device constantly resets > > On Sb, 04 iul 20, 18:16:20, daggs wrote: > > Greetings, > > > > I'm runnin

Re: usb device constantly resets

2020-07-04 Thread Andrei POPESCU
> access failed, aborting > [77248.850119] ieee80211 phy1: rt2800usb_set_device_state: Error - Device > failed to enter state 4 (-5) > > I assumed this is a vm issue but I saw dmesg is filled with these: > usb 1-2: reset high-speed USB device number 3 using xhci_hcd > > using sy

usb device constantly resets

2020-07-04 Thread daggs
(-5) I assumed this is a vm issue but I saw dmesg is filled with these: usb 1-2: reset high-speed USB device number 3 using xhci_hcd using sysfs and lsusb -D I found out it is the wireless device passed to the vm. the kernel I'm using is 4.19.67-2+deb10u2. any ideas how to solve this issue

Re: Efficient file copy from USB device under Buster.

2019-10-20 Thread Ryan Nowakowski
Should work just fine. If your desktop performance suffers during the file copy, take a look at the bwlimit of rsync. That will allow you tweak how hard rsync hits your disk. Also take a look at the different Linux disk scheduling algorithms available. I mention all this disk related stuff beca

Efficient file copy from USB device under Buster.

2019-10-19 Thread Richard Owlett
Due to low data cap and doing very customized installs I've generally purchased DVD sets {now available on a single flash drive}. The one I purchased has ISO's of both install and live versions on a single partition. I wish to copy only the install DVDs to a single partition of: 1. the laptop

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-25 Thread Mark Copper
On Tue, Oct 23, 2018 at 12:51 PM Curt wrote: > > On 2018-10-23, Mark Copper wrote: > > > > yes, there is a gnome environment variable that can stifle the gvfs > > monitors and I have done that. Nor do I see any trace of the modules > > mentioned in the error message. > > I didn't know that you ha

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-24 Thread Patrick Bartek
On Tue, 23 Oct 2018 11:03:05 -0500 Mark Copper wrote: > Trying to connect to a device, I get this error message: > > *** Error *** > An error occurred in the io-library ('Could not claim the USB > device'): Could not claim interface 0 (Device or resource busy). Mak

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread Curt
On 2018-10-23, Mark Copper wrote: > > yes, there is a gnome environment variable that can stifle the gvfs > monitors and I have done that. Nor do I see any trace of the modules > mentioned in the error message. I didn't know that you had done that. > so I thought I'd try to go back to first prin

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread Cindy-Sue Causey
show up? How does it >> show up (e.g. desktop pop up, some log file...)? >> >> > *** Error *** >> > An error occurred in the io-library ('Could not claim the USB >> > device'): Could not claim interface 0 (Device or resource busy). Make >> > sur

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread Mark Copper
On Tue, Oct 23, 2018 at 11:28 AM Curt wrote: > > On 2018-10-23, Mark Copper wrote: > > Trying to connect to a device, I get this error message: > > > > *** Error *** > > An error occurred in the io-library ('Could not claim the USB > > device'): C

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread Mark Copper
pop up, some log file...)? > > > *** Error *** > > An error occurred in the io-library ('Could not claim the USB > > device'): Could not claim interface 0 (Device or resource busy). Make > > sure no other program (gvfs-gphoto2-volume-monitor) or kernel module > > (such as sd

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread Curt
On 2018-10-23, Mark Copper wrote: > Trying to connect to a device, I get this error message: > > *** Error *** > An error occurred in the io-library ('Could not claim the USB > device'): Could not claim interface 0 (Device or resource busy). Make > sure no other

Re: what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread tomas
y ('Could not claim the USB > device'): Could not claim interface 0 (Device or resource busy). Make > sure no other program (gvfs-gphoto2-volume-monitor) or kernel module > (such as sdc2xx, stv680, spca50x) is using the device and you have > read/write access to the device. >

what is sitting on USB device?

2018-10-23 Thread Mark Copper
Trying to connect to a device, I get this error message: *** Error *** An error occurred in the io-library ('Could not claim the USB device'): Could not claim interface 0 (Device or resource busy). Make sure no other program (gvfs-gphoto2-volume-monitor) or kernel module (such as sdc2

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-16 Thread deloptes
0513.41080.dfsg-2+deb9u1) End-Date: 2018-10-11 23:36:33 In dmesg I see following [131219.842996] usb 1-1.5: new high-speed USB device number 6 using ehci-pci [131219.952674] usb 1-1.5: New USB device found, idVendor=0471, idProduct=2036, bcdDevice= 1.00 [131219.952678] usb 1-1.5: New USB device string

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-16 Thread deloptes
the old ports and when they have a problem I > switch to the new ports, which have not yet encountered a problem > recognizing a device. I have 4-5 USB ports in the back and 4 ports on the front. I tried most of them with same result. IMO it can not be the physical port to connect USB d

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-15 Thread Roberto C . Sánchez
On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 07:28:46PM +0200, deloptes wrote: > > Hi, > might be that indeed the local controller has something, because on office > pc with windows today it was working just fine. > It could be the physical ports themselves. I have my desktop system in a 15+ year old case. As of a

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-15 Thread Reco
Hi. On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 07:28:46PM +0200, deloptes wrote: > Reco wrote: > > > What is says here, basically. > > You USB port is burned out, USB connector lacks contact, USB power is > > insufficient, etc. > > > > About the only thing you can try from the OS side is to disable USB > >

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-15 Thread deloptes
Reco wrote: > What is says here, basically. > You USB port is burned out, USB connector lacks contact, USB power is > insufficient, etc. > > About the only thing you can try from the OS side is to disable USB > powersaving, but that should be disabled by default. Hi, might be that indeed the loc

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-14 Thread deloptes
Reco wrote: > What is says here, basically. > You USB port is burned out, USB connector lacks contact, USB power is > insufficient, etc. > > About the only thing you can try from the OS side is to disable USB > powersaving, but that should be disabled by default. I'll try the webcam tomorrow wit

Re: USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-14 Thread Reco
Hi. On Sun, Oct 14, 2018 at 08:15:11PM +0200, deloptes wrote: > Hi, > can someone help to debug? > > After many years I again started having USB issues. Now this is the web cam > (web cam works in windows), but it was working fine just few days ago, but > since today I get following: > >

USB device not accepting address , error -71

2018-10-14 Thread deloptes
? [4.688011] usb 1-1.5: new high-speed USB device number 9 using ehci-pci [5.104010] usb 1-1.5: device not accepting address 9, error -71 [5.104158] usb 1-1-port5: unable to enumerate USB device [5.276010] usb 1-1.5: new high-speed USB device number 10 using ehci-pci [6.128273] usb 1-1-port5

Automount usb device with systemd (Re: on-demand mounting of filesystems via Systemd (e.g. /backup))

2016-04-25 Thread Dominique Dumont
On Wednesday 20 April 2016 15:49:00 Jonathan Dowland wrote: > Anyway, in the past I've read some useful tips for using Systemd on this > list, so here's the blog post should it be of any interest: > > https://jmtd.net/log/mount_on_demand_backups/ Thanks. Here's my small contribution for a similar

After first USB release unable to communicate with USB device

2016-01-13 Thread venkat
Am Using Libusb 0.1 to test my printer code. The code runs as expected with 2.6.32 kernel in debian 6. However, After debian 8 upgrade we notice that printer responds for very first read operation after reboot, For rest of command executions READ fails with*ENODEV*. By doing this, I lost commu

Re: Access Gembird USB device as non-priviledged user

2015-11-06 Thread Rainer Dorsch
On Sunday 01 November 2015 02:34:38 Chris Bannister wrote: > On Sat, Oct 31, 2015 at 01:08:24PM +0100, Rainer Dorsch wrote: > > Changeing this to > > > > blackbox:~# cat /etc/udev/rules.d/z61_sispmctl.rules > > SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="04b4", ATTRS{idProduct}=="fd13", > > GROUP="sispmct

Re: Access Gembird USB device as non-priviledged user

2015-10-31 Thread Chris Bannister
On Sat, Oct 31, 2015 at 01:08:24PM +0100, Rainer Dorsch wrote: > > Changeing this to > > blackbox:~# cat /etc/udev/rules.d/z61_sispmctl.rules > SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="04b4", ATTRS{idProduct}=="fd13", > GROUP="sispmctl", MODE="0664" > blackbox:~# > > fixed the problem. > > I am wo

Re: Access Gembird USB device as non-priviledged user

2015-10-31 Thread Rainer Dorsch
On Saturday 31 October 2015 12:12:53 Rainer Dorsch wrote: > Hi, > > is there a good way to access a Gembird USB device as non-root user? > > I have > > rd@blackbox:~$ lsusb -v -d 04b4:fd13 > > Bus 004 Device 002: ID 04b4:fd13 Cypress Semiconductor Corp. Programmabl

Access Gembird USB device as non-priviledged user

2015-10-31 Thread Rainer Dorsch
Hi, is there a good way to access a Gembird USB device as non-root user? I have rd@blackbox:~$ lsusb -v -d 04b4:fd13 Bus 004 Device 002: ID 04b4:fd13 Cypress Semiconductor Corp. Programmable power socket Couldn't open device, some information will be missing Device Descriptor: bL

Re: KDE file copy to usb device without file cache

2015-10-03 Thread Stuart Longland
On 03/10/15 18:31, Thomas Schmitt wrote: > If it is about a mounted filesystem, then your question should > rather be how to properly unmount the device before removing it. > Unmounting is supposed to flush pending filesystem data. I would concur here… yanking a removable storage device just after

Re: KDE file copy to usb device without file cache

2015-10-03 Thread Tony van der Hoff
On 03/10/15 00:02, Serkan KURT wrote: > How can i a file copy to usb device without file cache? > KDE notifier shows copy completed but actually copy process does not > finished. > > > How can I solve it? > > Debian Jessie amd64, KDE. In KDE click on the USB icon i

Re: KDE file copy to usb device without file cache

2015-10-03 Thread Thomas Schmitt
n should rather be how to properly unmount the device before removing it. Unmounting is supposed to flush pending filesystem data. > ACTION=="remove", KERNEL=="sd[a-z][0-9]", RUN+="su -l $USER -c > '/usr/bin/pumount %k'" If this is triggered by hot unplugg

Re: KDE file copy to usb device without file cache

2015-10-02 Thread Thomas Schmitt
Hi, Serkan KURT wrote: > How can i a file copy to usb device without file cache? > KDE notifier shows copy completed but actually copy process does not > finished. After the GUI programs reported success, execute command "sync" in a shell and wait until it is done. If you r

Re: usb device umount option in menu missing for some devices [SOLVED]

2015-05-16 Thread deloptes
For the record in /opt/trinity/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus/media_unmount.desktop add media/camera_mounted to [Desktop Entry] X-TDE-ServiceTypes=,media/camera_mounted at the end of the list like above. Then reload the desktop session and the unmount option appears as expected. rega

Re: usb device umount option in menu missing for some devices

2015-05-15 Thread deloptes
Liam O'Toole wrote: > > Are you using GNOME (the default) in Jessie? If so, the device should > appear in the nautilus sidebar, with an 'unmount' icon next to it. > No I use trinity, but in my opinion it is not about the desktop but how the device is associated with the set of options to displa

Re: usb device umount option in menu missing for some devices

2015-05-14 Thread Liam O'Toole
On 2015-05-13, deloptes wrote: > Hi > where I can look for a resolution of following problem. > > When I plug usb stick or memory card in the notebook I see the option in the > menu to mount/umount it and it works great. > > When I plug the phone (select use as usb storage device in the phone) it

usb device umount option in menu missing for some devices

2015-05-13 Thread deloptes
Hi where I can look for a resolution of following problem. When I plug usb stick or memory card in the notebook I see the option in the menu to mount/umount it and it works great. When I plug the phone (select use as usb storage device in the phone) it appears in the menu and I can mount it but c

Dvb usb device crashes khubd in kernel 3.16.7-ckt4-3, how to debug?

2015-02-17 Thread Tilman Schröder
Hello everybody, on recent kernels, my dvb usb device does not work any more and crashes khubd when I remove it. It has worked perfectly on wheezy and works perfectly in Windows, so it is no hardware failure. Since I do not know a lot about the kernel internals I have no idea how to debug this or

Re: kvm - mount usb device in windows guest

2012-06-26 Thread green
Randall wrote at 2012-06-26 07:55 -0500: > again, i'm not looking to mount the original USB via passthrough, > just to have a virtual/fake usb drive mimicking the behavior as > originally intended. With simple kvm, you can connect a USB device to the guest OS using command-line op

kvm - mount usb device in windows guest

2012-06-26 Thread Randall
hi all, for a certain web application i need an IE browser with an usb device containing a security key (the USB is formatted as a isofs) my idea was to simply run a windows copy on a server with KVM, logon with RDP and use that to connect to that dreaded website, it all works except that i

Re: debian losing usb detection after guest OS sees a USB device in virtualbox

2012-01-30 Thread H.S.
On 29/01/12 09:07 PM, Scott Ferguson wrote: > > Clear the VirtualBox log, reset all warnings, then retry. Then post the > log to paste.debian.net and post a link here. Nothing much in the logs. I get the following errors though: 00:00:12.331 nspr-2 ERROR [COM]: aRC=VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE (0x8

Re: debian losing usb detection after guest OS sees a USB device in virtualbox

2012-01-29 Thread Scott Ferguson
On 30/01/12 01:42, H.S. wrote: > On 29/01/12 01:14 AM, Bob Proulx wrote: >> Scott Ferguson wrote: >>> H.S. wrote: So, looks like I need to somehow make network manager not mess with Tomtom when it is plugged in. >>> >>> I would be useful for others if you post your success at getting NM t

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