Which is my USB device?
Gustavo Seabra
seabra at ksu.edu
Tue Dec 21 04:57:26 UTC 2004
Christopher J. Bottaro wrote:
>Gustavo Seabra wrote:
>
>
>
>>Christopher J. Bottaro wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>>I installed FC3 on my laptop and it has one USB port. I plugged in my
>>>digicam in that USB port and I want to mount it as a USB file system. The
>>>problem is that I don't know which device the USB port is associated with.
>>>On my home computer, it is /dev/sdx, but I don't see those options in
>>>/dev/ on my laptop.
>>>
>>>That leads me to a general Linux question. How are devices assigned? One
>>>of my computers assigned /dev/sdx to everything, hard drives, optical
>>>drives, USB ports, etc. Another computer assigned /dev/hdx to my hard
>>>drives and optical drives, but /dev/sdx to my USB ports.
>>>
>>>I also have a KDE question. Is there anyway to automatically mount my
>>>camera as a USB file system when it is plugged into my laptop? Is there a
>>>way to detect that it is a camera? I don't want to mount *every* USB
>>>thing plugged into my laptop as a USB filesystem...
>>>
>>>Thanks for the help.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> Take a look at 'man fstab-sync'. There you'll find instructions of
>>how to define a *.fdi file and put it into
>>/usr/share/hal/fdi/95userpolicy/ so that it will recognize your devices
>>practically anyway you want it.
>>
>> In my case, I have a camera and a usbstick. The usbstick was being
>>recognized with a weird name, and the camera as 'usbstick'. Both
>>appeared in /media when inserted, then I just had to mount them. To have
>>them appearing with the right names, I made a fdi file for each
>>(camera.fdi & usbstick.fdi) that redefined the names of each. Now, using
>>KDE, I could put an icon in my desktop for each of these. When I
>>double-click the icon, it automatically mounts the device (assuming it's
>>connected, of course) and opens Konqueror with it.
>>
>>
>
>Cool thanks for the pointer. I'm actually on vacation right now and just
>want to get some videos off my digicam...I don't really have time to figure
>out this fstab-sync stuff. I just need to know which device the dang USB
>port shows up as in /dev/...any ideas? =/
>
>Thanks again.
>
>
>
I'm not very knowledgeable on that, but I can tell what worked for me:
look into the /media folder (ls /media). Usually (nothing connected) I'd
see only cdrom/ and flppy/ . Then, plug in the camera, wait a bit (~30
sec max) then take another look there. There *should* be another point,
that in my case was usbstick/ (even though it was a Gateway digital
camera). Than all you have to do is mount whatever it is (mount
/media/_whatever_shows_), and it should work. Note that it worked for me
because my camera is mountable as an external (USB) HD, but I don't know
which camera is yours, so I can't guarantee anything. However, based on
your initial description, I assume it can be mounted as a USB HD.
If it doesn't work, may your camera really needs a driver. In that case,
you could try to tell KDE to look for your camera: Just plug the camera
in and go to Control Center -> Peripherals -> Digital Camera. There you
may be able to add your camera, provided it is in the database (which is
pretty large).
I hope that helps, and enjoy your vacation!
--
--
----------------------------------
Gustavo Seabra - Graduate Student
Chemistry Department
Kansas State University
----------------------------------
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