I'm saying no such thing. The kernel driver situation
really shouldn't matter one way or another, apart from
a diagnostic which bothers you.
GPhoto problems are separate. Tell GPhoto 0.4.3 that
you've got a dc-240 or dc-280, and it should work OK
(modulo excessive amounts of time getting the index,
someone seems to have broken something on at least
the RH7 distro, that single operation keeps retrying
because it's not reading the camera's acks correctly).
- Dave
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sri Ramkrishna" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "David Brownell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, June 29, 2001 6:38 PM
Subject: Re: [Linux-usb-users] Problems with Gphoto and Kodak 3400 camera
> So what you're saying is that I should not have the dc2xx driver as part
> of the kernel but rather as a module. I've had it as a module before
> but it never did anything for me. I had the same errors as before. But
> I will try again.
>
> sri
>
>
> On 29 Jun 2001 09:52:38 -0700, David Brownell wrote:
> > > Jun 27 19:57:44 sri /etc/hotplug/usb.agent: ... no drivers for USB product
>40a/132/100
> > >
> > > So I have no idea whats going on here. This should work the same as a
> > > Kodak 280. Why would it not be able to get drivers for product
> > > 40a/132/100 when one is alreayd loaded.
> > >
> > > The kodak camera drivers are part of the kernel (ie dcxxx.o) so I can't
> > > fanthom what hte problem would be.
> >
> > That's _exactly_ the problem. I've updated the message (in CVS)
> > to say "no modules" instead of "no drivers". All you're seeing is a
> > misleading diagnostic; most systems link drivers dynamically, not
> > statically.
> >
> > - Dave
> >
> >
> >
>
>
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