Summet,
If you are not the log messages for usb storage devices, then probably
 sda1 device node is not the correct one for the camera. May be its
sda2 or sda3, just a guess.  Are you able to mount any other usb mass
storage devices, like a usb stick. Could you see anything in the log,
anything related to usb.
If nothing works, it might be because any of those faulty modules,
recompiling the latest kernel will be an good option then.

Waiting for your feedback.

-siddhartha
 


On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 03:56:09 +0530, A. Mani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sumeet Madhukar Moghe wrote:
> 
> >Hi,
> >I bought the camera(Sony DS-P150 - 7.2 MP), I mentioned a few days back. I
> >havent had a problem running it on either of my desktops, which run
> >Fedora/Suse/Mandrake. It runs flawlessly under both modes... USB Mass Storage
> >and PTP. I faced some issues though, while getting it to work with Slackware,
> >which runs my notebook. I wasnt planning to use gphoto2, which in any case
> >doesnt ship with Slackware. I started off to use USB mass storage. But I
> >faced a problem right away
> >
> >        [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ su
> >        Password:
> >        [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/sumeet# mount /dev/sda1 -t vfat /mnt/camera
> >        mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device
> >
> >I did have all the necessary modules loaded, so I didnt see a reason why it
> >shouldnt work.
> >
> >        [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/sumeet# lsmod
> >        Module                  Size  Used by    Not tainted
> >        uhci                   25852   0  (unused)
> >        sd_mod                 11180   0  (autoclean) (unused)
> >        8139too                15400   1
> >        mii                     2400   0  [8139too]
> >        crc32                   2880   0  [8139too]
> >        i810_audio             24796   0
> >        ac97_codec             13652   0  [i810_audio]
> >        soundcore               3652   2  [i810_audio]
> >        ds                      6932   1
> >        yenta_socket           10880   1
> >        pcmcia_core            42788   0  [ds yenta_socket]
> >        ide-scsi               10288   0
> >        evdev                   4576   0  (unused)
> >        input                   3328   0  [evdev]
> >        usb-storage            70048   0  (unused)
> >        usbcore                62956   0  [uhci usb-storage]
> >        scsi_mod               58264   2  [sd_mod ide-scsi usb-storage]
> >        agpgart                46628   0  (unused)
> >
> >I then downloaded gphoto2 and digikam, but that didnt work either. In fact I
> >had my hotplug system messed up, cos /proc/bus/usb/devices didnt exist. I
> >solved this part with a "mount -t usbfs none /proc/bus/usb". I made an
> >appropriate entry in /etc/fstab for the same. But even then /var/log/messages
> >doesnt report the usb-storage driver or scsi_mod seeing the camera. Also a
> >#cat /proc/scsi/scsi gives
> >Attached devices: none
> >
> >While digikam was autodetecting the camera in PTP mode, it failed to
> >connect/download from the camera. I solved this problem with a minor tweak:
> >a) Added the following lines to /etc/hotplug/usb.usermap
> ># usb module         match_flags idVendor idProduct bcdDevice_lo bcdDevice_hi
> >bDeviceClass bDeviceSubClass bDeviceProtocol bInterfaceClass
> >bInterfaceSubClass bInterfaceProtocol driver_info
> ># USB PTP Class Camera
> >usbcam               0x0080      0x0000   0x0000    0x0000       0x0000
> >0x00         0x00            0x00            0x06            0x00
> >0x00               0x00000000
> >
> >b)Next I hand created the script /etc/hotplug/usb/usbcam to read thus
> >#!/bin/bash
> >
> >if [ "${ACTION}" = "add" ] && [ -f "${DEVICE}" ]
> >then
> >chmod a+rw "${DEVICE}"
> >fi
> >
> >a chmod u+x /etc/hotplug/usb/usbcam finished the job. I am now able to use a
> >digikam+gphoto2 combo to access the camera through PTP. However PTP isnt
> >really my first choice as it drains the batteries very fast as Siddhartha-da
> >indicated. I still want to use USB Mass Storage, and I happen to be facing
> >issues with that. Everytime I try to do a
> ># mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera
> >
> >I get "mount: /dev/sda1 is not a valid block device". I think I am at a dead
> >end here, because "tail -f /var/log/messages" doesnt show the camera being
> >claimed by the usb-storage driver. OTOH /proc/bus/usb/devices does display
> >the device when plugged in via Mass Storage mode. Any hints??
> >
> >
> >
> Try automounting the device.  The message from mount is not specific. I
> have a fresh slackware-10 (quite new for me) installed. ..will try that.
> 
> Best,
> 
> A. Mani
> Member, Cal. Math. Soc.
> 
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