On 29 December 2010 12:34, Neal Becker <ndbecker2@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The next message logged should be one reporting the partitions found on /dev/sdc. If this wasn't your Nexus One, I'd say it was because the device didn't have a partition table. It's the lack of partitions that's preventing the kde device notifier saying anything.
Does dmesg report any additional messages? (Not everything is logged by syslog).
Also does /proc/partitions show /dev/sdc or any partitions?
And finally a good way to check what /dev/sdc actually is is to run "file -s /dev/sdc" (as root, of course).
jch
Dec 29 07:24:11 nbecker1 kernel: [ 91.037398] USB Mass Storage support registered.
Dec 29 07:24:12 nbecker1 kernel: [ 92.039281] scsi 5:0:0:0: Direct-Access Google, Inc.Nexus
One PQ: 0 ANSI: 2
Dec 29 07:24:12 nbecker1 kernel: [ 92.040168] sd 5:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg3 type 0
Dec 29 07:24:12 nbecker1 kernel: [ 92.051444] sd 5:0:0:0: [sdc] Attached SCSI removable disk
But kde device notifier says 'No Devices Available'.
The next message logged should be one reporting the partitions found on /dev/sdc. If this wasn't your Nexus One, I'd say it was because the device didn't have a partition table. It's the lack of partitions that's preventing the kde device notifier saying anything.
Does dmesg report any additional messages? (Not everything is logged by syslog).
Also does /proc/partitions show /dev/sdc or any partitions?
And finally a good way to check what /dev/sdc actually is is to run "file -s /dev/sdc" (as root, of course).
jch
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