currently writing a tutorial on udev and i'm drawing a blank on
something that should be simple -- what variation of udevadm can i use
to print just the KERNEL and SUBSYSTEM values corresponding to a
device?
here's the tutorial:
http://www.crashcourse.ca/wiki/index.php/Udev
it's still
I have a wireless B router and a clock radio to give away.
Any idea where?
Maybe Valu Village?
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On Sat, Mar 16, 2013 at 01:44:52PM -0400, James wrote:
I have a wireless B router and a clock radio to give away.
Any idea where?
Maybe Valu Village?
Yeah, Good plan. Value Village would sell that stuff.
slainte mhath, RGB
--
Richard Guy Briggs -- ~\-- ~\
On 03/16/13 15:31, Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
On Sat, Mar 16, 2013 at 01:44:52PM -0400, James wrote:
I have a wireless B router and a clock radio to give away.
Any idea where?
Maybe Valu Village?
Yeah, Good plan. Value Village would sell that stuff.
slainte mhath, RGB
--
Hi Rob
Taking the simple method, this works for me:
udevadm info -a -p $(udevadm info -q path -n /dev/tty3) | grep -e KERNEL -e
SUBSYSTEM
Signed,
Captain Obvious!
g
--
Rob Echlin, B. Eng.
613-266-8311 - Ottawa, ON
http://talksoftware.wordpress.com - http://picasaweb.google.com/coderoller
Summary of what I've found.
Note that I was trying to work with a fairly old 40GB IDE (PATA) drive
in a NextStar case. 2.5, powered by USB with Y cable to get extra
power. I suspect a lot of the issues I've encountered are that BIOS code
does not always handle boot from USB HDD as well as USB