I have established it's not just this one USB storage device. It happens on two, from different vendors. As soon as I plug one in this stuff starts. I see lots of reads from the device (in detail!) then a little info from the SCSI subsystem, and finally just what seems to be "Are you ready?" checks.
Loglevel 4 reduces it to a few messages from the SCSI that it can't find a Caching mode, using a default. But it also disappears the message from udev(?) that it is noticed and what device node it's connected to. That's very desireable. So I've rebuilt the kernel a few times, concentrating on the USB & SCSI sections. I eliminated a couple verbose debugging message options, and made usbmon a module rather than built-in. So far none of that has "worked". I'm really focused on that USB driver now. I'm begining to think 3.10.62 just isn't the LTS version for me. I'm thinking of checking for another 3.10 patch, or maybe shifting to a different kernel, forward or back. Maybe 3.5 to 3.10 was just too long a jump. I need this "fixed" before I carry on with BLFS. I'd take more advice, of course, and thank you for what you've given me this morning. The explorations noted in the previous paragraph may take me some time. ;-) -- Paul Rogers [email protected] Rogers' Second Law: "Everything you do communicates." (I do not personally endorse any additions after this line. TANSTAAFL :-) -- http://www.fastmail.com - Accessible with your email software or over the web -- http://lists.linuxfromscratch.org/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page Do not top post on this list. A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? A: Top-posting. Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style
