Hello debian-kde list,
This problem occurs since a few months with KDE, but NOT with GNOME.
The system is debian/lenny on a dual core Intel PC where we normally use KDE.
Inserting a usbstick for the FIRST TIME after logging in to KDE via kdm or gdm
results
in a delay of about TEN minutes
On Monday 17 November 2008 22:00:52 Heinrich Langos wrote:
IMHO this is the real solution that you are looking for, but
there is (or was?) a problem with making it the default. (See Message#48
for detail
Hi Qt-KDE,
Work on this RC bug seems to of stalled in the last couple of weeks.
Could I
Your message dated Wed, 03 Dec 2008 21:17:21 +
with message-id [EMAIL PROTECTED]
and subject line Bug#500540: fixed in kdebase 4:3.5.9.dfsg.1-6
has caused the Debian Bug report #500540,
regarding kdebase: automounting vfat (partialy) case sensitive due to utf8 is
plain wrong and dangerous
New version of pmount package was uploaded (and unblocked) recently.
Sorry to say that, but upgrading to pmount 0.9.18 didn't fix the problem.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ pmount -V
0.9.18
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dmesg | tail
[64822.927396] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off
[64822.927402] sd
On Tue, Oct 07, 2008 at 06:41:37PM +0200, Ana Guerrero wrote:
I might have time to look at this around next monday (13th October), we will
see about motivation...
If you are reading this bug report, you are a KDE 3 user and you want to
help,
please try this.
Never looked back at this,
New version of pmount package was uploaded (and unblocked) recently.
It deals with the very same issue. Vincent Fourmond on the
debian-release list points to this bug report, see:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-release/2008/10/msg00793.html
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On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 11:31:27PM +0300, Teemu Likonen wrote:
Heinrich Langos [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Now lets try again with more sane vfat options:
# mount | grep vfat
/dev/sda1 on /mnt type vfat
Heinrich Langos [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Now lets try again with more sane vfat options:
# mount | grep vfat
/dev/sda1 on /mnt type vfat
(rw,nosuid,nodev,noatime,uhelper=hal,flush,uid=1000,shortname=lower,check=relaxed,codepage=850,iocharset=iso8859-1)
As you see it is not perfect as the
Hi Sune and thanks for taking up the issue.
On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 07:38:15PM +0200, Sune Vuorela wrote:
KDE uses the information from hal to decide what options to use when
mounting.
On a vfat drive, hal gives the following:
hal-get-property --udi
On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 07:38:15PM +0200, Sune Vuorela wrote:
Thank you to submitter for the nice analysis of the issue.
KDE uses the information from hal to decide what options to use when
mounting.
On a vfat drive, hal gives the following:
hal-get-property --udi
clone 50540 -1
reassign -1 hal
severity -1 important
retitle -1 hal passes unsafe options on
owner -1 !
thanks
Hi!
Thank you to submitter for the nice analysis of the issue.
KDE uses the information from hal to decide what options to use when
mounting.
On a vfat drive, hal gives the
Processing commands for [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
#stupid missing 0 in original commands
clone 500540 -1
Bug#500540: kdebase: automounting vfat (partialy) case sensitive due to utf8 is
plain wrong and dangerous
Bug 500540 cloned as bug 501339.
reassign -1 hal
Bug#501339: kdebase: automounting vfat
Package: kdebase
Version: 4:3.5.9.dfsg.1-5
Severity: grave
Justification: causes non-serious data loss
I just switched from etch to lenny and now gnupod warns me about the case
sensitive filesystem on my iPod:
$ gnupod_check.pl
gnupod_check.pl Version 0.99.8 (C) Adrian Ulrich
Am Samstag 22 Oktober 2005 13:13 schrieb João Silva:
Hi,
does anybody knows if exists any aplication
that automatically mounts devices on desktop
like gnome do?
Hello João,
KDE 3.4 has inbuilt functionality for this using the media:// kio slave,
hal, udev and D-BUS. Either just use the
Martin Steigerwald wrote:
KDE 3.4 ... does not automount, but it puts an icon (or more when
there are several partitions on the medium) that you can click to mount
it.
I don't think that's _quite_ right. aiui, if you create the correct
hal .fdi files, you can specify that the device be
On Friday 28 October 2005 08:24, Derek Broughton wrote:
Martin Steigerwald wrote:
KDE 3.4 ... does not automount, but it puts an icon (or
more when there are several partitions on the medium) that
you can click to mount it.
I don't think that's _quite_ right. aiui, if you create the
it is automatically played.
I don't see automounting a USB memory stick to be an unnecessary risk, and
I've seen enough users demanding it and then writing their own .fdi's so
that their sticks do automount. It's unmounting that's the problem :-)
--
derek
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João Silva schrieb:
does anybody knows if exists any aplication
that automatically mounts devices on desktop
like gnome do?
There was extensive discussion on this list about this; you may find it
in the archives. The conclusion was yes, KDE can do this, as you will
find out if you try out
Well, thanks for your fast awsers.
I had configured autofs.
Maybe i will make some work on it for debian.
My question was, the automounting without the locking of the device.
I already done this with autofs. I know that kunbutu's kde already do that,
with an adaption of gnomevfs.On 10/23/05
Hi,
does anybody knows if exists any aplication
that automatically mounts devices on desktop
like gnome do?
Greetings,
João Silva-- Cumprimentos,João Carlos Galaio da Silva
Hi!
KDE mounts removable devices using pmount. Unfortunately, I can't find an
option to disable mounting devices without the sync option. Is it possible
to specify this somewhere? With this option enabled write access is too slow
and may damage flash devices...
regards,
Jörg
--
Hi! I'm a
, in mandriva(2006), now do hotplug job.
I can't see how. Hotplug inserts the modules required by a device - I see
nothing in udev that's going to do that. hal is a _very_ good way to
enable automounting (amongst other things) - it doesn't mount anything, but
then neither does udev.
--
derek
SuSE 10.0 in LinuxUser (German magazine).
...
udev, in mandriva(2006), now do hotplug job.
I can't see how. Hotplug inserts the modules required by a device - I see
nothing in udev that's going to do that. hal is a _very_ good way to
enable automounting (amongst other things) - it doesn't
On Monday 26 September 2005 19:11, Bellegarde Cedric wrote:
On Monday 26 September 2005 10:30, Roman Kreisel wrote:
And no, afaik, hotplug is _not_ obsolete.
hotplug is obsolete, udev is now the good way to do(and not hal):
Thanks to the replacement of hotplug with udev functions,
all
is a _very_ good way to
enable automounting (amongst other things) - it doesn't mount anything,
but then neither does udev.
hal seems to depend on udev, but I still havn't got a clue what all
these components *really* do.
I think we're all just fumbling in the dark these days, as there isn't
enough
(e.g. Kunbuntu) seem to have gotten this right,
certainly not Sarge.
You're right. KDE starting from 3.4.0 supports this, but it didn't make it
into sarge. Although it's just your 2) + a nice GUI to handle it. It has some
points i dislike:
a) no automounting, you still need to mount the device
into sarge. Although it's just your 2) + a nice GUI to handle it. It has some
points i dislike:
a) no automounting, you still need to mount the device. Fine if you're using
only kde-apps, but annoying for those who want to store a file from
OpenOffice, Mozilla or whatever on the USB-Device. They'
On Monday 26 September 2005 10:43, EmIscA wrote:
Could you post somewhere that scripts?
Thanks
Here you are:
http://www2.fht-esslingen.de/~rokrit01/files/automount-scripts/
Short Installation-Howto:
- Copy those scripts to a location in your $PATH, preferably /usr/local/bin
and make them
On Monday 26 September 2005 10:30, Roman Kreisel wrote:
And no, afaik, hotplug is _not_ obsolete.
hotplug is obsolete, udev is now the good way to do(and not hal):
Thanks to the replacement of hotplug with udev functions,
all machines now boot faster.
udev, in mandriva(2006), now do hotplug
Hi all,
There's been a lot of discussion on this list about automounting of removable
devices. I thought this might be interesting:
A while back I discovered pmount, and along with hal and udev on a 2.6.11
kernel, it worked as expected: plug in, icon appears, already mounted, no
fstab entry
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