On Monday 18 February 2002 05:01 pm, Eric Pierce wrote: ---snip------
It says SmartMedia (TM). It's wafer thin...
sounds like what I have (a side note, should you ever get it working, is that you should be able to use your camera as a storage/transfer medium for any type of files you would transfer by a floppy or zip disk up to 32/64mb. I haven't actually tried this yet.)
Treating it like a storage device really should work
------snip----------
I wish that were the case, but the power is definately on, and I get the following output on xconsole the moment I switch the camera's dial to the 'connect' setting. hub.c: USB new device connect on bus1/1, assigned device number 3 usb.c: USB device 3 (vend/prod 0x1132/0x4335) is not claimed by any active driver So I'm sure I've got things on the camera end squared away.
su password /sbin/modprobe usb-storage
The usb-storage module & usb-ochi module are already being loaded up at boot time (see 'lsmod' from my 1st post).
Here's what you had in the first post
SuSE 7.3 loads the usbcore & usb-ohci modules for me ('lsmod' follows). ... usb-ohci 17680 0 (unused) usbcore 47264 1 [usb-ohci] ...
no mention of usb-storage --------This is the only thing that I can see that could keep your camera from showing up in the next commands
/sbin/fdisk -l
Here's what I get. Disk /dev/hda: 255 heads, 63 sectors, 526 cylinders Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 bytes
If I remember you have 2 hard drives so the above should at least have shown /dev/hda and /dev/hdb I'm curious what your output was for this command, this should have given us the info we needed. -----------snip--------------
Unfortunatley, nothing '/dev/sd*' at all.
could be missing scsi-emulation in your kernel? This is the only other thing that I can think of. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Here are some other tips from a thread about a Fuji Finepix Camera that was on this list in late January don't know if any will help you but they're here if you want them Read the setup information at www.linux-usb.org you can find the correct name of a device using fdisk -l as someone suggested, or looking at the kernel log (with the dmesg command) # dmesg | less then search the line with the USB data
From what I've read the usb-storage module is treated as a scsi device, in one message someone mentioned the command;
/bin/rescan-scsi-bus.sh but I never tried this myself +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ I'm really sorry I couldn't help you get this working. Best of luck dh