Todd Lyons, in a previous post, indicates that /proc/bus/usb should already exist if your modules.conf file is properly setup. The thing to try before going through a reinstall is to undo what you last did that led up to the current problem: remove the fstab entry you added. In this case it may be a quirk with debian (a more hands-on, doityourself distro) that such a line needs to be added to fstab.
Remove the fstab entry, logout and login again and see if you get your system back the way it should be. Mandrake 9.0 uses kernel 2.4.19. That kernel has been nothing but trouble for me on usb and other issues. The problems prevent me from going to 9.0 - I am sticking with 8.2 which fully works for me (kernel 2.4.18). After undoing the fstab entry and relogging in, post, as Todd suggests, the results of running "mount" which will output everything mounted at the time. praedor On Wednesday 11 December 2002 06:00 pm, flacycads wrote: > I already had gphoto2 installed. The other problems occurred right after I > added the lines to fstab and /etc/modules.conf. Now, I can open a fresh > instance of kedit, write someting, save it to my home directory as test, > close it, and when I reopen it with a mouse left click, I no longer can > edit it, and the fonts have changed to a very tiny one. I can't explain it- > the permissions are correct for user. If I right click it it, and open with > kedit, all is fine. > > I also had done Harddrake several times and tried to let it detect the > camera that way, and set it up. Didn't work, and in kde control > center-information-USB devices nothing shows up but the two "hubs."
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