On Mon, 2005-06-06 at 05:35 -0400, Marcus O. White wrote: > G'day All, > > Finally upgraded remaining RHL 9.0 workstation to FC3. Now when I > attempt to access my Sony Mavica CD-1000 digital camera via USB it no > longer works. Whereas it worked under RHL 9.0. The system recognizes the > camera, as can seen from the following: > > Jun 6 05:21:22 tbird kernel: usb 4-1: new full speed USB device using > uhci_hcd and address 3 > Jun 6 05:21:24 tbird kernel: SCSI subsystem initialized > Jun 6 05:21:24 tbird kernel: Initializing USB Mass Storage driver... > Jun 6 05:21:24 tbird kernel: scsi0 : SCSI emulation for USB Mass > Storage devices > Jun 6 05:21:24 tbird kernel: usbcore: registered new driver usb-storage > Jun 6 05:21:24 tbird kernel: USB Mass Storage support registered. > Jun 6 05:21:29 tbird kernel: Vendor: SONY Model: DSC DDX-G2000 > Rev: 1.17 > Jun 6 05:21:29 tbird kernel: Type: CD-ROM > ANSI SCSI revision: 02 > Jun 6 05:21:29 tbird scsi.agent[9551]: cdrom > at /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:10.2/usb4/4-1/4-1:1.0/host0/target0:0:0/0:0:0:0 > Jun 6 05:21:30 tbird kernel: sr0: scsi3-mmc drive: 8x/8x writer > xa/form2 cdda pop-up sr0 is the driver > Jun 6 05:21:30 tbird fstab-sync[9614]: added mount > point /media/cdrecorder2 for /dev/scd0 > Jun 6 05:21:30 tbird kernel: cdrom: This disc doesn't have any tracks I > recognize! > Normal message for a usb attached cdrom with no disk in the drive. It sees the drive but can't access the disk. Everything up to this point seems normal > When I attempt to mount it I see the following messages: > [root@tbird ~]# mount -t udf /dev/sr0 /media/cdrecorder2 You are trying to mount /dev/sr0 (the driver). In the message about the mount point above it says the device is /dev/scd0. Thus it cannot be mounted with your command. Since the fstab entry has been made, if you have need to manually mount it the command (as root) would be "mount /media/cdrecorder2". The rest of the data is taken from the fstab entry. Media device by default will automount when a disk is available. Did you even look at /media/cdrecorder2 to see if the content was already mounted? Mine shows an icon on the desktop when I attach a media device (cdrom, camera, flash disk, etc.) and it auto-mounts. Also, you need to have a disk in the drive with a recognized filesystem to do the mount. Verify that is the case. A friend had a Sony camera that used a cdrom for the pictures. The pictures were not actually in a filesystem until he told the camera to close the session and thus could not be read directly on another cdrom drive. I never tried to connect it to my linux machine so I don't know if it would have been mountable while in the camera or not.