Daniel da Veiga <danieldaveiga <at> gmail.com> writes:

> > I have (2) usb memory devices that  both work fine with hal/ivman/dbus:

> > /dev/sdb1               500576      6464    494112   2% /media/usbdisk
> > /dev/sda1               127716      3922    123794   4% /media/usbdisk

> > since they both get 'automounted as /media/usbdisk, I cannot have them both
> > active at the same time. I have to plug one in, perform operations, remove 
> > it and plug in the second device.....

> > What do I do, so I can plug in both devices, simultaneously and copy
> > directly from one usb memory stick to the second memory stick?

 
> As root, create another directory, lets say "mkdir /mnt/usbdisk2" and
> edit your /etc/fstab so /dev/sda1 gets mounted at the usbdisk2
> directory. You can simply duplicate an already existing entry and edit
> it, if you have none, you should learn how to do it...

Their is not /mnt/usbdisk dir. It gets created automagically by
hal/ivman/dbus. There is only /mnt/usb .
Both devices work automagically with hal/ivman/dbus, they just do not work
together. Here is the relevant portions of the current fstab: 

none    /dev/shm        tmpfs           defaults        0 0
none            /proc   proc            defaults        0 0
none     /proc/bus/usb  usbfs           defaults        0 0

Sure, I can put manual entries in to fix this, but, isn't that what
udev and hal/ivman/dbus are support to do, automagically? Every time
I want to use 2 usb memory sticks on any computer, my only option is
to manually edit the fstab?

When I put the devices into the computer separately, the gentoo systems
recognize the devices as
/dev/sda1 and /dev/sdb1, so why can the /media/usbxxxxx entries be
created without manual edit of /etc/fstab. After all, isn't this what
udev + hal/ivman/dbus are suppose to do?

confused?

Jamess



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