Le mercredi 03 décembre 2003, 02:30:28 ou environ Philipp Thomas <philipp.thomas@t-link.de> a écrit:
Tony Alfrey <tonyalfrey@earthlink.net> [2 Dec 2003 17:08:23 -0800]:
a) why do I need the "hardware scan"? I have other distros that clearly do not do this.
Many users want the automatic detection of new hardware like they're used to under Win*.
Now I know what's the use of that damned "hardware scan". It is what we can call the "gameboy syndrom". Now I'll type use 'hwinfo --short --usb' if I want to know on which /dev/sd* my usb storage disk is linked.
b) which script does this?
/etc/init.d/hwscan. If you want to disable the scan at boot-up, just issue an 'insserv -r hwscan'.
c) where in /etc might I find a script that lists the overall order of boot scripts particular to SuSE?
I know of none.
Philipp
-- Philipp Thomas work: pthomas AT suse DOT de SUSE LINUX AG private: philipp DOT thomas AT t-link DOT de
A practical question. I have a "USB Flash-Disk". I can mount it without problem on all stations I know but my Dell Latitude laptop boot-up (SuSE-8.2) gets completely stucked during the "hardware scan" (and also if I type 'hwinfo -usb' of course). The only way out is a hard reboot (fortunately I have journaling file-system now). If it happens with 'hwinfo --usb' or with mount '/media/sda1' I can't event stop the process with a 'kill' instruction (strange isn't it Watson)?. I don't have that problem with the same USB-Disk on other posts with SuSE-8.2 too, SuSE-8.1 or redHat-7.1. Thus it looks like it is a problem of detection of a particular USB device (on the Dell laptop I have a one port USB1). Somebody recommended me SuSE-9.0 but it is like replacing Windows-200* with Windows-2010. -- Alain Barthélemy cassandre@bartydeux.be http://bartydeux.be Linux User #315631