and the root hubs (ID 0000:0000)
Thanks
nick
> Am Sonntag 11 Dezember 2005 17:07 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
>> > I am on a powerbook G4 800mhz and it is
>> >> plugged into the back of the computer (port 2). Does anyone know
>> how to solve this problem?
>> >> thanks
>> >> nick
>> >
>> > First, next time, please start a new thread instead of replying to
>> an existing one.
>> >
>> > That said, you'll have to provide more information. Can you give us
>> the
>> > kernel messages from dmesg related to the USB stick? Are you sure
>> you
>> > have USB disk support and generic scsi disk support in your kernel?
>> >
>> > -Joe
>> > --
>> > [email protected] mailing list
>> Sorry about replying instead of starting again.
>> Are there any just-X11 browsers besides links -g that I can use?
>> Whenever I press the back arrow it goes back and deletes the email I
>> was writing.
>>
>> Anyway, the only messages in dmesg (I do not know why) are keypress
> events!?!
>> I used to be informative, but now all it has are keypresses...
>>
>> I have SCSI support, and USB mass storage (with all sub-options)
> compiled-in.
>> Do I need to add support for SCSI disks, CDROMS, generic devices, etc
>> in order for USB versions of those to work?
>> Thanks,
>> nick
>>
>>
>> --
>> [email protected] mailing list
>>
>>
> Hello Nick,
> You need modules for SCSI device support, SCSI disk support and please
> enable 'Probe all LUNs on each SCSI device' as it helps with Multi Card
> Readers. As long as the USB is hotpluggable, you should install hotplug
> and udev packages.
> A good idea is to put the USB Disk in and to have look in dmesg
> and/or /var/log/messages.
> Normally I the disk should recognized by the kernel and produce at least
> some messages. (May be a lsusb show if there is something recognized.)
> Best regards Joerg
> --
> [email protected] mailing list
# $Header:
/var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/app-admin/syslog-ng/files/syslog-ng.conf.gentoo,v 1.5
2005/05/12 05:46:10 mr_bones_ Exp $
#
# Syslog-ng default configuration file for Gentoo Linux
# contributed by Michael Sterrett
options {
chain_hostnames(off);
sync(0);
# The default action of syslog-ng 1.6.0 is to log a STATS line
# to the file every 10 minutes. That's pretty ugly after a while.
# Change it to every 12 hours so you get a nice daily update of
# how many messages syslog-ng missed (0).
stats(432000);
};
source src { unix-stream("/dev/log"); internal(); pipe("/proc/kmsg"); };
destination messages { file("/var/log/messages"); };
# By default messages are logged to tty12...
# destination console_all { file("/dev/tty12"); };
# ...if you intend to use /dev/console for programs like xconsole
# you can comment out the destination line above that references /dev/tty12
# and uncomment the line below.
destination console_all { file("/dev/console"); };
log { source(src); destination(messages); };
log { source(src); destination(console_all); };