USB camera being seen twice in debian buster

2019-06-21 Thread Seba Kerckhof
Hello, I'm testing out Debian buster rc 1, and I have a problem that my usb camera (the very common logitech c930) is seen twice, so there are 2 devices (/dev/video0 & /dev/video1). Inspecting /dev/video0 with v4l-info works, while /dev/video1 throws some errors. I believe this to be a

Re: USB camera;

2018-01-14 Thread peter
>> Is any USB camera working in Debian 9? * From: Reco recovery...@gmail.com * Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2017 18:11:57 +0300 > This one does, at least right now it did with mpv. > lsusb tells me that it's: > > 058f:5608 Alcor Micro Corp * From: deloptes

Re: USB camera.

2017-12-06 Thread peter
* From: Reco * Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2017 18:11:57 +0300 > This one does, at least right now it did with mpv. > lsusb tells me that it's: > > 058f:5608 Alcor Micro Corp * From: deloptes * Date: Fri, 03 Nov 2017 18:04:40 +0100 > ID

Re: USB camera;

2017-11-03 Thread deloptes
r camera has a similar failure. Is any USB camera > working in Debian 9? > > Many packages in 9 are being updated. Maintainers must be swamped. > I can be patient until commotion subsides. > > Thanks for the help,... Peter E. ID 0471:2036 Philips (or NXP) Webcam

Re: USB camera;

2017-11-03 Thread Reco
bug=877558 > > A Labtec/Vivitar camera has a similar failure. Is any USB camera > working in Debian 9? This one does, at least right now it did with mpv. lsusb tells me that it's: 058f:5608 Alcor Micro Corp Got this one built into a laptop so I doubt it can be purchased separately. Reco

Re: USB camera;

2017-11-03 Thread peter
* From: Reco <recovery...@gmail.com> * Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 18:50:58 +0300 > I suggest you to file a bug report unless you did it already. https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=877558 A Labtec/Vivitar camera has a similar failure. Is any USB camera working in

Re: USB camera;

2017-10-02 Thread Reco
Hi. On Mon, Oct 02, 2017 at 07:28:58AM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote: > From: Reco > Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 10:16:20 +0300 > > Try (assuming that you have appropriate device permissions): > > > > mpv tv:// --tv-device=/dev/video0 > > peter@dalton:~$ mpv tv://

Re: USB camera;

2017-10-02 Thread peter
From: Reco Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 10:16:20 +0300 > Try (assuming that you have appropriate device permissions): > > mpv tv:// --tv-device=/dev/video0 peter@dalton:~$ mpv tv:// --tv-device=/dev/video0 Playing: tv:// [tv] Selected driver: v4l2 [tv] name: Video 4 Linux 2

Re: USB camera;

2017-10-02 Thread Reco
On Sun, Oct 01, 2017 at 04:12:19PM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote: > * From: Reco > * Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2017 14:10:35 +0300 > > reportbug is teasing you. > > Today's kernel update bumped the kernel to 4.9.30-2+deb9u5. > > Update the kernel, disregard reportbug

Re: USB camera.

2017-10-01 Thread peter
* From: Curt * Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2017 13:22:48 + (UTC) > I'm reading that this material requires a tweak: > options uvcvideo quirks=0x100 > in > /etc/modprobe.d/uvcvideo.conf I was using quirks=0x80 but can try 100 also. Thanks,... Peter E. --

Re: USB camera;

2017-10-01 Thread peter
* From: Reco * Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2017 14:10:35 +0300 > reportbug is teasing you. > Today's kernel update bumped the kernel to 4.9.30-2+deb9u5. > Update the kernel, disregard reportbug warning and file a bugreport. Now I have the kernel you mention and a

Re: USB camera; was Re: Video input vs. systemctl enable.

2017-09-21 Thread anonymous
Hi. On Thu, Sep 21, 2017 at 01:22:48PM +, Curt wrote: > On 2017-09-20, Reco wrote: > > Hi. > > > > On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 05:56:22AM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote: > >> * From: Reco > >> * Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 09:20:18 +0300 >

Re: USB camera; was Re: Video input vs. systemctl enable.

2017-09-21 Thread Curt
On 2017-09-20, Reco wrote: > Hi. > > On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 05:56:22AM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote: >> *From: Reco >> *Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 09:20:18 +0300 >> > What does 'lsusb' and 'lsusb -t' show for you? >> >> peter@dalton:~$

Re: USB camera;

2017-09-21 Thread Reco
Hi. On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 02:49:21PM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote: > * From: Reco > * Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 17:03:39 +0300 > > If the trick does not work I suggest to try the kernel from the > > backports. > > Began to create a bug report and found

Re: USB camera;

2017-09-20 Thread peter
* From: Reco * Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 17:03:39 +0300 > If the trick does not work I suggest to try the kernel from the > backports. Began to create a bug report and found this. "Your version of linux-image-4.9.0-3-686-pae (4.9.30-2+deb9u3) is newer than that

Re: USB camera; was Re: Video input vs. systemctl enable.

2017-09-20 Thread Reco
Hi. On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 05:56:22AM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote: > * From: Reco > * Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 09:20:18 +0300 > > What does 'lsusb' and 'lsusb -t' show for you? > > peter@dalton:~$ lsusb > Bus 001 Device 006: ID 045e:00f8 Microsoft Corp.

USB camera; was Re: Video input vs. systemctl enable.

2017-09-20 Thread peter
5:01 /dev/vcsa7 crw--- 1 root root 10, 63 Sep 20 05:00 /dev/vga_arbiter crw--- 1 root root 10, 137 Sep 20 05:00 /dev/vhci crw--- 1 root root 10, 238 Sep 20 05:00 /dev/vhost-net Sure enough, lsusb -t shows no driver for bus 1, device 6. What do others find for a usb camera in stretch

USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Ron
I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI; but I do not care to install a load of Gnome or KDE bloat. Any idea, advice, etc ? Cheers, Ron. -- Learning does not consist of knowing

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Marcos Toro Oyarzo
you should try cheese https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Cheese cheers, 2015-01-04 17:10 GMT-03:00 Renaud OLGIATI ren...@olgiati-in-paraguay.org: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Hans
Am Sonntag, 4. Januar 2015, 17:10:04 schrieb Renaud OLGIATI: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI; but I do not care to install a load of Gnome or KDE bloat. Any idea, advice, etc

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Javier Vasquez
On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 2:10 PM, Renaud OLGIATI ren...@olgiati-in-paraguay.org wrote: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI; but I do not care to install a load of Gnome or KDE bloat

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Javier Vasquez
On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 2:37 PM, Javier Vasquez j.e.vasque...@gmail.com wrote: On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 2:10 PM, Renaud OLGIATI ren...@olgiati-in-paraguay.org wrote: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Ron
On Sun, 4 Jan 2015 17:15:17 -0300 Marcos Toro Oyarzo mart...@gmail.com wrote: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI; but I do not care to install a load of Gnome or KDE bloat

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Ron
On Sun, 04 Jan 2015 21:19:46 +0100 Hans hans.ullr...@loop.de wrote: Maybe Camorama or GUVCView is what you are looking for. Maybe, there are some commandline tools, too. Many thanks, Camorama is exactly what I was hoping for. Cheers, Ron. -- King Herod has been greatly

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Lisi Reisz
On Sunday 04 January 2015 22:01:53 Renaud OLGIATI wrote: On Sun, 4 Jan 2015 17:15:17 -0300 Marcos Toro Oyarzo mart...@gmail.com wrote: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI

Re: USB camera prog ?

2015-01-04 Thread Patrick Bartek
On Sun, 04 Jan 2015, Renaud (Ron) OLGIATI wrote: I am looking for a prog that will display on screen, and save, pictures taken with a USB camera connected to the box. Better obviously with a GUI; but I do not care to install a load of Gnome or KDE bloat. Any idea, advice, etc ? Geeqie

IEEE 1394 camera appearing as a USB camera.

2009-02-20 Thread Peter Crawford
A Skype forum mentions redirecting the output from an IEEE 1394 camera to make it appear as a USB camera. A trivial search hasn't yielded any help. Can anyone describe how this is done or cite instructions? Thanks, ... p. crawford

Re: usb camera for skype etc.

2008-06-19 Thread Bob
Jordi Gutiérrez Hermoso wrote: On 18/06/2008, Bob [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I used Skype video conferencing yesterday and the quality was nowhere near as good as SIP, though in all fairness it is a bit easier to setup. Yuck, Skype. I've been earnestly looking for free alternatives.

usb camera for skype etc.

2008-06-18 Thread PETER EASTHOPE
Folk, Video in Skype works well for friends using Imacs and MS-Win.  I'm thinking of buying a camera. USB webcams must use USB 2 by now.  So does a Firewire camera retain any advantage over current USB cameras.  Can a digital still camera with a USB cable be used for this purpose? Thanks, 

Re: usb camera for skype etc.

2008-06-18 Thread Sam Kuper
On 18/06/2008, PETER EASTHOPE [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Can a digital still camera with a USB cable be used for this purpose? Some can, yes. But check first: don't assume that every model is capable of this. I have used a Fujifilm 6900Z as a web cam.

Re: usb camera for skype etc.

2008-06-18 Thread Bob
PETER EASTHOPE wrote: Folk, Video in Skype works well for friends using Imacs and MS-Win. I'm thinking of buying a camera. USB webcams must use USB 2 by now. So does a Firewire camera retain any advantage over current USB cameras. Some, they're apparently better supported and better

Re: usb camera for skype etc.

2008-06-18 Thread Jordi Gutiérrez Hermoso
On 18/06/2008, Bob [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I used Skype video conferencing yesterday and the quality was nowhere near as good as SIP, though in all fairness it is a bit easier to setup. Yuck, Skype. I've been earnestly looking for free alternatives. wengophone was good before it was abandoned

Etch doesn't see an usb camera

2006-07-31 Thread Mirto Silvio Busico
Hi all, anyone experienced this problem? Using Etch and a Canon s1 is (ptp prtotcol?) I am not able to access the photo in the camera. The camera is correctly detected as an usb device. When I connect the camera a popup window (I'm using KDE) asks If I want to open the camera as a folder or with

Odp: Etch doesn't see an usb camera

2006-07-31 Thread Zbigniew Wiech
I had the same problem in sarge. add the user tocamera group. regards Zbigniew Mirto Silvio Busico [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2006-07-31 12:04 Do debian-user@lists.debian.org DW Temat Etch doesn't see an usb camera Hi all, anyone experienced this problem? Using Etch and a Canon s1

PD: Etch doesn't see an usb camera - errata

2006-07-31 Thread Zbigniew Wiech
in sarge. add the user tocamera group. regards Zbigniew Mirto Silvio Busico [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2006-07-31 12:04 Do debian-user@lists.debian.org DW Temat Etch doesn't see an usb camera Hi all, anyone experienced this problem? Using Etch and a Canon s1 is (ptp prtotcol?) I am

Re: PD: Etch doesn't see an usb camera - errata

2006-07-31 Thread Mirto Silvio Busico
]* 2006-07-31 12:04 Do debian-user@lists.debian.org DW Temat Etch doesn't see an usb camera Hi all, anyone experienced this problem? Using Etch and a Canon s1 is (ptp prtotcol?) I am not able to access the photo in the camera. The camera

Sony USB camera mounts read-only

2006-06-09 Thread Larry Hunter
Folks, I recently purchased a Sony DSC N-1 camera. Plug it into to two different debian boxes (both running fairly current unstable distributions on kernel 2.6.16-2) and it nicely automounts as a USB drive. However, it mounts read only, which is problematic. I'm just looking at the internal

Re: Access to USB camera requires root access

2006-05-18 Thread Ryan Nowakowski
On Wed, May 17, 2006 at 09:22:37PM -0700, Christopher Nelson wrote: On Wed, May 17, 2006 at 08:27:01PM -0700, David E. Fox wrote: Hello. I am a newbie when it comes to using USB devices. Nevertheless, I opted for a Kodak easyshare C310. The camera is supported well enough by linux,

Access to USB camera requires root access

2006-05-17 Thread David E. Fox
Hello. I am a newbie when it comes to using USB devices. Nevertheless, I opted for a Kodak easyshare C310. The camera is supported well enough by linux, using gphoto2. It seems to be a PTP device, not a mass storage device. Plugging in the cable, I get message that the device is detected, but

Re: Access to USB camera requires root access

2006-05-17 Thread Christopher Nelson
On Wed, May 17, 2006 at 08:27:01PM -0700, David E. Fox wrote: Hello. I am a newbie when it comes to using USB devices. Nevertheless, I opted for a Kodak easyshare C310. The camera is supported well enough by linux, using gphoto2. It seems to be a PTP device, not a mass storage device.

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-15 Thread Christopher Nelson
emulation of USB camera Mail-Followup-To: debian-user@lists.debian.org On Fri, Apr 14, 2006 at 05:42:52PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote: On Fri, 2006-04-14 at 21:52 +0100, James Westby wrote: [snip] You must force the camera to use PTP mode in whatever app you are using. I tried

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-15 Thread James Westby
On (14/04/06 23:44), Ron Johnson wrote: To: debian-user@lists.debian.org From: Ron Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 23:44:11 -0500 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera On Sat, 2006-04-15 at 02:45 +0100, James Westby wrote: On (15/04/06 10:58), David Purton wrote

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-15 Thread James Westby
On (14/04/06 23:32), Christopher Nelson wrote: Regarding the Could not find USB device, run it as root. And if that works, add yourself to the 'camera' group rather than continuing to run it as root everytime you want it. Thankyou, this works also. James. -- James Westby [EMAIL

SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread James Westby
Hi all, I am trying to get my Canon S1 IS to work under Debian. I am running a mixed testing/unstable system (mostly testing, except for libc6, X.org, udev and linux-image and their dependencies). It appears to me that there is some problem with SCSI emulation of my camera. I insert the camera

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread Ron Johnson
On Fri, 2006-04-14 at 21:52 +0100, James Westby wrote: Hi all, I am trying to get my Canon S1 IS to work under Debian. I am running a mixed testing/unstable system (mostly testing, except for libc6, X.org, udev and linux-image and their dependencies). [snip] snd_page_alloc 8328

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread James Westby
On (14/04/06 17:42), Ron Johnson wrote: To: debian-user@lists.debian.org From: Ron Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.0 required=7.0 tests=none autolearn=ham version=3.1.1 X-Spam-Level: Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 17:42:52 -0500 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread Ron Johnson
2006 17:42:52 -0500 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera On Fri, 2006-04-14 at 21:52 +0100, James Westby wrote: Hi all, I am trying to get my Canon S1 IS to work under Debian. I am running a mixed testing/unstable system (mostly testing, except for libc6, X.org, udev

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread James Westby
On (14/04/06 18:52), Ron Johnson wrote: To: debian-user@lists.debian.org From: Ron Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 18:52:17 -0500 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera [snip] Hmmm. Which version of libusb-0.1-4, usbutils usbview are you using? ii libusb-0.1-4

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread John O'Hagan
On Sat, 15 Apr 2006 06:52 am, James Westby wrote: I tried writing a udev rule for the camera BUS=usb, SYSFS{vendor}=Canon Inc., SYSFS{product}=Canon Digital Camera, NAME=camera%n but this has no effect. I have neither /dev/sd* nor /dev/camera* with or without this rule. I think you need

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread David Purton
On Fri, Apr 14, 2006 at 05:42:52PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote: On Fri, 2006-04-14 at 21:52 +0100, James Westby wrote: Hi all, I am trying to get my Canon S1 IS to work under Debian. I am running a mixed testing/unstable system (mostly testing, except for libc6, X.org, udev and

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread James Westby
On (15/04/06 11:24), John O'Hagan wrote: To: debian-user@lists.debian.org From: John O'Hagan [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Sat, 15 Apr 2006 11:24:50 +1000 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera On Sat, 15 Apr 2006 06:52 am, James Westby wrote: I tried writing a udev rule for the camera

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread James Westby
On (15/04/06 10:58), David Purton wrote: To: debian-user@lists.debian.org From: David Purton [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Sat, 15 Apr 2006 10:58:13 +0930 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera Mail-Followup-To: debian-user@lists.debian.org On Fri, Apr 14, 2006 at 05:42:52PM -0500, Ron

Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera

2006-04-14 Thread Ron Johnson
On Sat, 2006-04-15 at 02:45 +0100, James Westby wrote: On (15/04/06 10:58), David Purton wrote: To: debian-user@lists.debian.org From: David Purton [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Sat, 15 Apr 2006 10:58:13 +0930 Subject: Re: SCSI emulation of USB camera Mail-Followup-To: debian-user

Re: usb camera on 100% scsi machine

2005-05-19 Thread Eric Gaumer
gothicdoom wrote: Hi there. I'm trying to read the flash memory from my digital camera without success. This is the scenario: linux-2.6.11.7 100% SCSI machine (4 discs - sda, sdb, sdc, sdd) [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# cat /proc/bus/usb/devices S: Manufacturer=Eastman Kodak Company S:

usb camera on 100% scsi machine

2005-05-17 Thread gothicdoom
Hi there. I'm trying to read the flash memory from my digital camera without success. This is the scenario: linux-2.6.11.7 100% SCSI machine (4 discs - sda, sdb, sdc, sdd) [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# cat /proc/bus/usb/devices T: Bus=01 Lev=00 Prnt=00 Port=00 Cnt=00 Dev#= 1 Spd=12 MxCh= 2 B: Alloc=

Re: Re: usb camera / filesystem question

2004-11-30 Thread Jim McCloskey
Ron Johnson, Jr. wrote: | To use a Sony digital camera with my Debian laptop, all I had to do | was to include this line in /etc/udev/udev.rules: | |BUS=scsi, SYSFS_vendor=Sony, NAME=camera | | If you ever get another hot-pluggable Sony device, your rule | will fail. Better to be a bit

Re: usb camera / filesystem question

2004-11-29 Thread Jim McCloskey
Christian Convey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: | I'm curious about the way a USB camera gets set up when plugged into | a Sarge / 2.6.9 system. I'm also using 'udev'. Anyone know the | following? | | When I plug in the camera, I assume there are three devices that must | be created in the /dev

Re: usb camera / filesystem question

2004-11-29 Thread Ron Johnson
On Mon, 2004-11-29 at 14:52 -0800, Jim McCloskey wrote: Christian Convey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: | I'm curious about the way a USB camera gets set up when plugged into | a Sarge / 2.6.9 system. I'm also using 'udev'. Anyone know the | following? | | When I plug in the camera, I assume

usb camera / filesystem question

2004-11-26 Thread Christian Convey
Hi guys, I'm curious about the way a USB camera gets set up when plugged into a Sarge / 2.6.9 system. I'm also using 'udev'. Anyone know the following? When I plug in the camera, I assume there are three devices that must be created in the /dev directory, no? #1 : a device for the camera's

Re: usb camera / filesystem question

2004-11-26 Thread Ron Johnson
On Fri, 2004-11-26 at 21:35 -0500, Christian Convey wrote: Hi guys, I'm curious about the way a USB camera gets set up when plugged into a Sarge / 2.6.9 system. I'm also using 'udev'. Anyone know the following? When I plug in the camera, I assume there are three devices that must

udev + USB camera = ?

2004-11-22 Thread Christian Convey
Hey guys, I'm running Sarge / 2.6.8 kernel with udev installed. I've got a Kodak DX-series camera that connects via USB and whose name appears on digikam's list of supported cameras. Back when I was running Fedora Core 2/3, programs had no problem finding me camera. Under Sarge, however, no

Re: udev + USB camera = ?

2004-11-22 Thread Greg Madden
On Monday 22 November 2004 10:35 am, Christian Convey wrote: Hey guys, I'm running Sarge / 2.6.8 kernel with udev installed. I've got a Kodak DX-series camera that connects via USB and whose name appears on digikam's list of supported cameras. Back when I was running Fedora Core 2/3,

Re: udev + USB camera = ?

2004-11-22 Thread Matt Zagrabelny
Is this supposed to be something that I have to wrestle to make work right, or is this something that in Sarge/2.6.8/udev is supposed to Just Work? when i was running 2.6.8 the usb mass-storage was broken. plug in the camera and see what 'dmesg' has to say. either use 2.6.7 or 2.6.9. i

Re: udev + USB camera = ?

2004-11-22 Thread Ron Johnson
On Mon, 2004-11-22 at 14:35 -0500, Christian Convey wrote: Hey guys, I'm running Sarge / 2.6.8 kernel with udev installed. I've got a Kodak DX-series camera that connects via USB and whose name appears on digikam's list of supported cameras. Back when I was running Fedora Core 2/3,

Re: udev + USB camera = ?

2004-11-22 Thread Greg Madden
On Monday 22 November 2004 10:35 am, Christian Convey wrote: Hey guys, I'm running Sarge / 2.6.8 kernel with udev installed. I've got a Kodak DX-series camera that connects via USB and whose name appears on digikam's list of supported cameras. Back when I was running Fedora Core 2/3,

Re: udev + USB camera = ?

2004-11-22 Thread Ron Johnson
On Mon, 2004-11-22 at 14:35 -0500, Christian Convey wrote: Hey guys, I'm running Sarge / 2.6.8 kernel with udev installed. I've got a Kodak DX-series camera that connects via USB and whose name appears on digikam's list of supported cameras. Back when I was running Fedora Core 2/3,

Re: USB camera is not recognised as a SCSI device

2004-04-23 Thread Nick Lidakis
Tom Peters wrote: Following the HOWTO's I try to mount my digital USB camera in the following way: sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /camera mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device May I ask what type of media your digital camera is using, and is it removable? I ask this because I has trouble

Re: USB camera is not recognised as a SCSI device

2004-04-22 Thread Tom Peters
On Wed, 21 Apr 2004, Kevin Mark wrote: On Wed, Apr 21, 2004 at 12:22:11AM +0200, Tom Peters wrote: Following the HOWTO's I try to mount my digital USB camera in the following way: sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /camera mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device This works

Re: USB camera is not recognised as a SCSI device

2004-04-22 Thread Derek Broughton
From: Tom Peters [EMAIL PROTECTED] I don't get the proper name for the valid device from that. If I am not misguided by the manuals, there is a vfat filesystem on the memory card, and we are supposed to use the ide-scsi driver, so access it as a SCSI disk. As I said, that is how it works up

USB camera is not recognised as a SCSI device

2004-04-20 Thread Tom Peters
Following the HOWTO's I try to mount my digital USB camera in the following way: sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /camera mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device The mount table has: none on /proc/bus/usb type usbdevfs (rw,devuid=0,devgid=107,devmode=0660) /proc/bus/usb/devices does see: T

Re: USB camera is not recognised as a SCSI device

2004-04-20 Thread Kevin Mark
On Wed, Apr 21, 2004 at 12:22:11AM +0200, Tom Peters wrote: Following the HOWTO's I try to mount my digital USB camera in the following way: sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /camera mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device The mount table has: none on /proc/bus/usb type usbdevfs (rw

User cannot use usb camera

2003-07-09 Thread Joan Tur
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hallo! User belongs to USB group, but he cannot reach data in the photo camera (root does). I don't know what to check... help is appreciated !! ;) TIA - -- Joan Tur. Eivissa-Spain AOL quini2k, ICQ 11407395 www.ClubIbosim.org Linux:

Re: User cannot use usb camera

2003-07-09 Thread Bret Comstock Waldow
There are at least two fundamentally different camera-to-computer systems, and thus at least two fundamentally different systems to figure out. Which do you have? What camera? What commands does root try to access it? Is it a usb mass storage device, or is it accessed through the gtkam or

Kodak DC220 USB Camera

2003-06-10 Thread Tom Allison
: USB device 2 (vend/prod 0x40a/0x100) is not claimed by any active driver. Jun 10 06:25:43 bilbo kernel: usb.c: registered new driver dc2xx Jun 10 06:25:43 bilbo kernel: dc2xx.c: USB Camera #0 connected, major/minor 180/80 Jun 10 06:25:43 bilbo kernel: dc2xx.c: v1.0.0:USB Camera Driver for Kodak DC

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-06 Thread Thomas H. George
On Sat, Apr 05, 2003 at 10:10:19AM +0100, Tim wrote: Tim wrote: Olivier wrote: scsi1 means it's /dev/sdb1 ? mount: /dev/sdb1 is not a valid block device I have a Sony with a memory stick which stores the images in jpeg format. I had no trouble in configuring a 2.4.18 kernel to

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-06 Thread Tim
Craig Dickson wrote: Tim wrote: Is it the case that unless there is individual support for a model built into the kernel, it won't be recognised? From this do I deduce that I will be unable to mount my Nikon Coolpix E4300? And thus will need to buy a CF card reader? Well, a quick web

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-06 Thread Tim
Thomas H. George wrote: I have a Sony with a memory stick which stores the images in jpeg format. I had no trouble in configuring a 2.4.18 kernel to support usb mass storage and adding /dev/sdb1 /sony vfat ro,users,noauto 0 0 to my fstab. I already had append=hdd=ide-scsi in lilo.conf under

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-05 Thread Tim
Tim wrote: Olivier wrote: scsi1 means it's /dev/sdb1 ? mount: /dev/sdb1 is not a valid block device Is it the case that unless there is individual support for a model built into the kernel, it won't be recognised? From this do I deduce that I will be unable to mount my Nikon Coolpix

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-05 Thread Craig Dickson
Tim wrote: Is it the case that unless there is individual support for a model built into the kernel, it won't be recognised? From this do I deduce that I will be unable to mount my Nikon Coolpix E4300? And thus will need to buy a CF card reader? Well, a quick web search turns up the

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-03 Thread Antonio Gutiérrez Mayoral
I have a cam too and when I want to connect it to the computer, I use the /dev/sda1 device (scsi) like a vfat file system. I think you should have scsi support on kernel. Regards. El jue, 03 de 04 de 2003 a las 09:13, Tim escribió: Hi, I've compiled my kernel, mass storage as a module, and

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-03 Thread Tim
Olivier wrote: scsi1 means it's /dev/sdb1 ? mount: /dev/sdb1 is not a valid block device -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: USB camera mount

2003-04-03 Thread Tim
Antonio Gutiérrez Mayoral wrote: I have a cam too and when I want to connect it to the computer, I use the /dev/sda1 device (scsi) like a vfat file system I think you should have scsi support on kernel I do believe that is set in my kernel config. mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device #

mounting USB Camera Pentax Optio 330

2003-04-02 Thread Lukas Ruf
Dear all, being owner of a Pentax OPTIO for quite a while I would like to access the data on my camera from Linux. *The manufacturer is not interested in supporting me.* So, I contact you -- maybe anyone managed to attach this nice camera to a Linux box. I am running 2.4.20, all USB options

Re: mounting USB Camera Pentax Optio 330 -- solved

2003-04-02 Thread Lukas Ruf
* Lukas Ruf [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2003-04-02 22:03]: being owner of a Pentax OPTIO for quite a while I would like to access the data on my camera from Linux. *The manufacturer is not interested in supporting me.* So, I contact you -- maybe anyone managed to attach this nice camera to a Linux

Re: mounting USB Camera Pentax Optio 330

2003-04-02 Thread Chris Metzler
On Wed, 2 Apr 2003 22:03:43 +0200 Lukas Ruf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Dear all, being owner of a Pentax OPTIO for quite a while I would like to access the data on my camera from Linux. *The manufacturer is not interested in supporting me.* So, I contact you -- maybe anyone managed to

Re: mounting USB Camera Pentax Optio 330

2003-04-02 Thread Craig Dickson
Lukas Ruf wrote: Dear all, being owner of a Pentax OPTIO for quite a while I would like to access the data on my camera from Linux. *The manufacturer is not interested in supporting me.* So, I contact you -- maybe anyone managed to attach this nice camera to a Linux box. I am running

Re: mounting USB Camera Pentax Optio 330 -- solved

2003-04-02 Thread Craig Dickson
Lukas Ruf wrote: A personal hint: Do not buy a camera not explicitely supported by Linux (as I did) -- you can avoid a lot of frustration! My preference is to use a media reader (compact flash, smart media, or whatever is needed) that works with Linux. That way, I can choose a camera based

Re: mounting USB Camera Pentax Optio 330

2003-04-02 Thread Mark L. Kahnt
On Wed, 2003-04-02 at 15:03, Lukas Ruf wrote: Dear all, being owner of a Pentax OPTIO for quite a while I would like to access the data on my camera from Linux. *The manufacturer is not interested in supporting me.* So, I contact you -- maybe anyone managed to attach this nice camera to a

USB camera mount

2003-04-02 Thread Tim
Hi, I've compiled my kernel, mass storage as a module, and all compact flash media options enabled. Yet I cannot determine what device this camera is set to, from which I can mount it. Does anyone have any clues? I've attached 'tail /var/log/messages'. TIA, Tim Apr 3 08:03:21 debian xfs:

Accessing USB Camera pics

2002-10-07 Thread DSC Siltec
Okay, I have Debian, Woody, Hotplug, USB, and a cheap junk USB camera. How do I access my pics? I'd really like three answers: (1) How to access them directly as files, if possible (2) Best way to download them as pictures, and save them (3) How to create nice compressed .mpgs from

Re: Accessing USB Camera pics

2002-10-07 Thread Craig Dickson
DSC Siltec wrote: Okay, I have Debian, Woody, Hotplug, USB, and a cheap junk USB camera. How do I access my pics? I'd really like three answers: (1) How to access them directly as files, if possible (2) Best way to download them as pictures, and save them (3) How to create nice

Re: Accessing USB Camera pics

2002-10-07 Thread Alan Chandler
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Monday 07 October 2002 7:25 pm, Alan Chandler wrote: As a result of what you have done, you should see the contents of your camera on /etc/sda1 (unless you already have scsi devices when it may be something different. Oops that should

Re: Accessing USB Camera pics

2002-10-07 Thread Craig Dickson
Alan Chandler wrote: As a result of what you have done, you should see the contents of your camera on /etc/sda1 (unless you already have scsi devices when it may be something different. Only if the camera supports USB Mass Storage or is supported by some other Linux kernel module, and he has

Re: Accessing USB Camera pics

2002-10-07 Thread Alan Chandler
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Monday 07 October 2002 8:03 pm, Craig Dickson wrote: What make/model of SmartMedia reader do you have? Its a Belkin F5U141xMSD bought in the UK from www.dabs.com I've been looking for one that works under Linux. With the debian hotplug

Re: Accessing USB Camera pics

2002-10-07 Thread Mark L. Kahnt
On Mon, 2002-10-07 at 15:03, Craig Dickson wrote: Alan Chandler wrote: As a result of what you have done, you should see the contents of your camera on /etc/sda1 (unless you already have scsi devices when it may be something different. Only if the camera supports USB Mass Storage or