Did you follow the instructions on this page?  Especially steps 1 and 2.

Are you certain that the port is getting the name you expected?.

It may get a name ttyUSB0 or it may get something like ttyACM0. On some of
my radios it gets USB and on others it gets ACM.  I think that is related
to the specific chipset in the programming cable (or maybe the linux distro
used could be a factor)
You may be able to run `ls /dev/tty*` before plugging in the cable and
again after plugging it in to identify the name it actually is assigned.

In some cases it may be necessary to enter the device (port) name manually
before chirp can see it.
It also may be necessary to add your user to the `dialout` group for access
to the device.  If you have not already done so the command `sudo usermod
-a -G dialout <username>` should add the user to that group. Then a logout
and back in will be required before the group assignment becomes active.

Jeff
KI7GJG



On Sat, Jan 11, 2025 at 10:23 PM Gregory Beyer via Users <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi, I'm having trouble with CHIRP not recognizing any USB ports.  I'm
> running LinuxMint 21, Mate.  I've installed
> chirp-20250110-py3-none-any.whl per the instructions at
> /wiki/ChirpOnLinux.  Other than needing to install python3-yattag, it
> went smoothly.  Love how fast chirp loads over the flatpak I used to use
> a long time ago!
>
> When I run chirp, and scroll through the ports, there are no USB ports
> listed.  Tried "Help me" and got "Unable to determine a port for your
> cable.  Check your drivers and connections."   Under Mate System
> Reports/System Information, I see the cable listed under USB hub 1:
> Device-2: 1-2:40 info: QinHeng CH340 serial converter type: <vendor
> specific> driver: usbfs    rev: 1.1 speed: 12 Mb/s chip-ID: 1a86:7523.
> I plugged my cable into a different USB port, cable appears under hub 2
> in the report.    So, my OS is recognizing the cable, on either USB
> port, but CHIRP does not.
>
> Even tho I'm not getting a permission denied error, I tried "sudo
> usermod -a -G $(stat -c %G /dev/ttyUSB0) $USER" anyway, and got "stat:
> cannot statx '/dev/ttyUSB0': No such file or directory."  Same error
> when I tried command for USB1 and USB2.
>
> Any suggestions on how I can resolve?
>
> Thanks much,
>
> *________________________*
>
> *Greg Beyer
> [email protected]*
>
>
> KQ4AVZ
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