Re: [gentoo-user] How can I make udev play nicely with my palm pilot
William Kenworthy schrieb: I can sync my palm fine using jpilot by hitting sync on the palm, then sync on jpilot. udev creates the nodes (I have set them as /dev/tts/USB0 and /dev/tts/USB1) when the palm sync is run, and deletes them when finished. The problem is that most software (pilot-link, gnome-pilot, ...) seems to expect the nodes to be present all the time - and udev keeps deleting them! Even if I manually create the nodes udev will politely delete them after a sync - causing gnome-pilot to never sync again (until killed/restarted) Manually creating the nodes and commenting out the rule in 50-udev.rules didnt work either (the nodes stayed, just didnt work - no sync). How can I make udev play nicely? BillK Just create a link like /dev/pilot pointing to the special node... I think that should help, but i don't know your exact problem. Necoro -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How can I make udev play nicely with my palm pilot
Necoro schrieb: William Kenworthy schrieb: I can sync my palm fine using jpilot by hitting sync on the palm, then sync on jpilot. udev creates the nodes (I have set them as /dev/tts/USB0 and /dev/tts/USB1) when the palm sync is run, and deletes them when finished. The problem is that most software (pilot-link, gnome-pilot, ...) seems to expect the nodes to be present all the time - and udev keeps deleting them! Even if I manually create the nodes udev will politely delete them after a sync - causing gnome-pilot to never sync again (until killed/restarted) Manually creating the nodes and commenting out the rule in 50-udev.rules didnt work either (the nodes stayed, just didnt work - no sync). How can I make udev play nicely? BillK Just create a link like /dev/pilot pointing to the special node... I think that should help, but i don't know your exact problem. Necoro So ... ehm... after having had the same problem (I migrated to udev yesterday night), i know what you are meaning. And I have it solved as following: a) when you are using /dev/pilot as the device change in 50-udev.rules: KERNEL=ttyUSB[0-9]*, NAME=tts/USB%n to KERNEL=ttyUSB0*, NAME=tts/USB0 KERNEL=ttyUSB[2-9]*, NAME=tts/USB%n KERNEL=ttyUSB1*, NAME=tts/USB%n, SYMLINK=pilot The important one is the last of the three.. (And perhaps there's somebody out there to put the first and second line together in a single one) b) when you are using /dev/tts/USB1 feed gnome-pilot with this as the device... it puts out an error message which could be ignored - it works nevertheless hth Necoro -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How can I make udev play nicely with my palm pilot
In the end I changed to static nodes for this - I think the whole udev/devfs thing is a solution looking for a problem to solve - overall it creates far more difficulties than the old static system. Next Iam trying to solve the problem why the backup crashes while trying to save some of the java modules. BillK On Mon, 2005-05-23 at 06:11 +0200, Necoro wrote: Necoro schrieb: William Kenworthy schrieb: I can sync my palm fine using jpilot by hitting sync on the palm, then sync on jpilot. udev creates the nodes (I have set them as /dev/tts/USB0 and /dev/tts/USB1) when the palm sync is run, and deletes them when finished. ... -- William Kenworthy [EMAIL PROTECTED] Home! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] How can I make udev play nicely with my palm pilot
I can sync my palm fine using jpilot by hitting sync on the palm, then sync on jpilot. udev creates the nodes (I have set them as /dev/tts/USB0 and /dev/tts/USB1) when the palm sync is run, and deletes them when finished. The problem is that most software (pilot-link, gnome-pilot, ...) seems to expect the nodes to be present all the time - and udev keeps deleting them! Even if I manually create the nodes udev will politely delete them after a sync - causing gnome-pilot to never sync again (until killed/restarted) Manually creating the nodes and commenting out the rule in 50-udev.rules didnt work either (the nodes stayed, just didnt work - no sync). How can I make udev play nicely? BillK -- William Kenworthy [EMAIL PROTECTED] Home! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list