Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-18 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 17:58:26 -0700, Richard Fish wrote: Don't use that file, that is for udev's own settings, so it will be updated when udev is. Use 10-udev.rules (create it if not present) which won't be affected by udev updates and takes precedence over the higher numbered file. It

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-18 Thread Richard Fish
On 1/18/06, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 17:58:26 -0700, Richard Fish wrote: That only happens under certain circumstances. udev generally stops at the first matching rule. := is the safest option though. This behavior changed at some point in the last 20

[gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Tom Smith
I'm working on a manual QEMU install (that is, I'm installing from source downloaded from their website). There's a reference in their kqemu documentation about setting UDEV permissions on /dev/kqemu. I initially disregarded this, but now it's become an issue. It was easily resolved by /manually/

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 14:50:08 -0700, Tom Smith wrote: What I'm having difficulty with is finding information on the illusive /etc/udev/permissions.d directory. According to the kqemu docs, I should edit the file /etc/udev/permissions.d/50-udev.permissions and add the following line to it:

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Richard Fish
On 1/17/06, Tom Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: What I'm having difficulty with is finding information on the illusive /etc/udev/permissions.d directory. According to the kqemu docs, I should edit the file /etc/udev/permissions.d/50-udev.permissions and add the following line to it:

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Tom Smith
Thank you. I am using the latest udev from Portage. The file I found in /etc/udev/rules.d is 50-dev.rules. Haven't tired it yet but will tomorrow. Neil Bothwick wrote: On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 14:50:08 -0700, Tom Smith wrote: What I'm having difficulty with is finding information on the illusive

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Tom Smith
Well, I didn't emerge the Gentoo qemu--it is a few versions behind the official so I opted for using the official release (0.8.0, I believe). Perhaps I'll try the Portage version of qemu before proceeding much further. :-? Richard Fish wrote: On 1/17/06, Tom Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Richard Fish
On 1/17/06, Tom Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Well, I didn't emerge the Gentoo qemu--it is a few versions behind the official so I opted for using the official release (0.8.0, I believe). Perhaps I'll try the Portage version of qemu before proceeding much further. :-? echo

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Holly Bostick
Tom Smith schreef: Well, I didn't emerge the Gentoo qemu--it is a few versions behind the official so I opted for using the official release (0.8.0, I believe). I don't know why you think this: motub - eix qemu * app-emulation/kqemu Available versions: 0.7.2 Installed:

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 15:37:13 -0700, Tom Smith wrote: Thank you. I am using the latest udev from Portage. The file I found in /etc/udev/rules.d is 50-dev.rules. Haven't tired it yet but will tomorrow. Don't use that file, that is for udev's own settings, so it will be updated when udev is. Use

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Dale
On Tuesday 17 January 2006 18:40, Neil Bothwick wrote: Don't use that file, that is for udev's own settings, so it will be updated when udev is. Use 10-udev.rules (create it if not present) which won't be affected by udev updates and takes precedence over the higher numbered file. So that's

Re: [gentoo-user] UDEV permissions

2006-01-17 Thread Richard Fish
On 1/17/06, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 15:37:13 -0700, Tom Smith wrote: Thank you. I am using the latest udev from Portage. The file I found in /etc/udev/rules.d is 50-dev.rules. Haven't tired it yet but will tomorrow. Don't use that file, that is for

[gentoo-user] Udev Permissions

2006-01-08 Thread Alex Bennee
I've been having trouble getting udev to create stuff with the right permissions. The latest is with my phone which has a USB Mass Storrage Interface. I've added this line to my 10-local.rules: # My Phone BUS=usb, SYSFS{interface}=Sony Erics Memory Stick, KERNEL=sd?1,NAME=%k, SYMLINK=phonemem,

Re: [gentoo-user] Udev Permissions

2006-01-08 Thread Richard Fish
On 1/8/06, Alex Bennee [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I've been having trouble getting udev to create stuff with the right permissions. The latest is with my phone which has a USB Mass Storrage Interface. I've added this line to my 10-local.rules: # My Phone BUS=usb, SYSFS{interface}=Sony Erics

[gentoo-user] udev permissions problem?

2005-06-15 Thread Mark Knecht
Hi, I have these devices: dragonfly ~ # ls -al /dev/v4l/ total 0 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 140 Jun 14 19:25 . drwxr-xr-x 22 root root14100 Jun 14 19:25 .. crw-rw 1 root video 81, 64 Jun 14 19:25 radio0 crw--- 1 mark sys 81, 224 Jun 14 19:25 vbi0 crw--- 1 mark sys

Re: [gentoo-user] udev permissions problem?

2005-06-15 Thread Bob Sanders
On Wed, 15 Jun 2005 07:01:54 -0700 Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I have these devices: dragonfly ~ # ls -al /dev/v4l/ total 0 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 140 Jun 14 19:25 . drwxr-xr-x 22 root root14100 Jun 14 19:25 .. crw-rw 1 root video 81, 64 Jun 14 19:25