On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 09:54, Andrew Wafula wrote: > I got a copy of Fedore C1 and since acpi was said to be working in > this version, I decided to upgrade. However, now I have acpi, firewire > and the sony memory stick working but I simply cannot get the system > to see the USB HDD. Run usbview and see if that device's entry is red. If it is not red then some sort of driver has been loaded. If a driver is loaded then proceed. (Sorry, not much help if there's no driver.) Hopefully this will be helpful. I'm going to assume your hard disk is working perfectly fine and drivers are loaded properly. If that is not the case then perhaps someone else will have some suggestions. (e.g. If it is a multi-LUN USB bulk storage device you may need to manually probe each LUN.) > It shows up in /proc/bus/usb/devices but it is not assigned a device > /dev/sdb which I used to get before in RH8. Where could the problem > be? More importantly, make sure there is a usb-storage directory in /proc/scsi/ for each USB storage device you have connected. Since you mention a hard disk and memory stick you probably will have usb-storage-0 and usb-storage-1. One of those should be your hard disk. Let's take a look... Here is what I see on my system: $ grep Product /proc/scsi/usb-storage-*/* /proc/scsi/usb-storage-0/0: Product: USB 2.0 Storage Device /proc/scsi/usb-storage-1/1: Product: USB 2.0 Storage Device /proc/scsi/usb-storage-2/2: Product: USB Storage Device /proc/scsi/usb-storage-3/3: Product: USB FDC GOLD-1.30 /proc/scsi/usb-storage-4/5: Product: ImageMate CompactFlash USB OK, my hard disks are USB 2.0, not a floppy, and not a Compact flash card. So that must mean my hard disk is either 0 or 1. OK, once you have found your hard disk's "Product:" information you can add it to Kudzu's /etc/updfstab.conf config file. Assuming your product info is "USB 2.0 Storage Device" like mine then add an entry to the updfstab.conf file like the one below. Take care not to disturb any existing entries. $ su - Password: # gedit /etc/updfstab.conf Add an entry like this: device usb-disk { partition 1 match hd "USB 2.0 Storage Device" } Save the file and exit gedit. Now, run updfstab to update your fstab: # /usr/sbin/updfstab You should now have /mnt/usb-disk in your /etc/fstab. After a few seconds your Nautilus "Disks" desktop menu should refresh. When you disconnect the disk the usb-disk entry should be removed. When you connect the disk again the entry should be recreated. The device name can be anything you like. The device name you specify will be used as the mount point under /mnt. "man updfstab" for more information and configuration options. -- David Norris http://www.webaugur.com/dave/ ICQ - 412039
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