I'm running Opensuse 11.1. And running the most recent version listed in the
repositories. Now my thing is I can run everything for Barry as root. But under
my own user profile it does't see the blackberry and I get this error message.
This is when I run the barrybackup gui.
(-1, error send
On Wednesday 11 February 2009 05:17:13 pm Phil Kimpton wrote:
> I'm running Opensuse 11.1. And running the most recent version listed in
> the repositories. Now my thing is I can run everything for Barry as root.
> But under my own user profile it does't see the blackberry and I get this
> error m
Now with this info do I delete the other blackberry rules file? So the new file
works?
> From: bojanvon...@hotmail.com
> To: barry-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
> Date: Wed, 11 Feb 2009 18:45:24 +0100
> Subject: Re: [Barry-devel] having a slight issue with barrybackup
>
> On Wednesday 11 Febru
On Wednesday 11 February 2009 07:49:20 pm Phil Kimpton wrote:
> Now with this info do I delete the other blackberry rules file? So the new
> file works?
Yes, I think so, this is the only blackberry rules file I have in
my /etc/udev/rules.d directory, and according to Magnus,
50-udev-default-rule
Still not working... :(
I try as a normal user...
btool -t
Usb::Error caught: (-1, error sending control message: Operation not
permitted): Probe: GetConfiguration failed
I log in as root and I get this... (left out my device info though.
Blackberry devices found:
Device ID: -. PIN:
I had the same problem with SUSE 10.3 as you have now, but I think I solved it
only with this 65-blackberry.rules file, so maybe problem lies somewhere
else. Maybe you should also be a member of uucp group, I know that this is
required for communication over serial port and it could be that this
I tried putting myself off from the uucp group, but I still can talk to my
Blackberry, so unfortunately, this is not solution to your problem. I have one
machine with clean SUSE 10.3 install and without Barry, maybe I can, in a day
or two, install Barry and add this rules file, just to be be sur
On Wed, Feb 11, 2009 at 03:17:11PM -0500, Phil Kimpton wrote:
>
> Still not working... :(
>
> I try as a normal user...
>
> btool -t
> Usb::Error caught: (-1, error sending control message: Operation not
> permitted): Probe: GetConfiguration failed
This is a permissions error, and needs to be
On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 06:04:37PM +, peter white wrote:
>
> I refer to the post below.
>
> The output I get from the -d option is:
>
> http://www.mail-archive.com/barry-devel@lists.sourceforge.net/msg00904.html
>
> Output: -
> SocketZero::RawReceive: Endpoint 131
> Received:
> 000
On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 12:28:32PM +0100, Bojan Vondra wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have trouble in synchronization of contacts that contain croatian
> characters "ćčđ" (barry-opensync reports an error: "Desktop: unexpected
> command of 0x41 instead of expected 0x40"). I use Blackberry Curve 8300 and
On Wed, Feb 11, 2009 at 06:52:55PM -0500, Chris Frey wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 12:28:32PM +0100, Bojan Vondra wrote:
> > did tests with Barry-0.15, built on openSUSE 10.3.
[...]
> I'm not sure which version of Barry you are using
Doh. Sorry, missed that.
Ok, if you're using 0.15, then y
I don't understand anything about udev rules but here is what I've been able to
find. I can only seem to find my Blackberry if I run barrybackup as root using
sudo barrybackup.
I'm running Ubuntu Desktop 7.04 LTS with Kernel 2.6.24-23-generic #1 SMP.
The contents of my /etc/udev/rules.d/10-blac
On Sat, Feb 07, 2009 at 10:32:38AM +0100, Nicolas wrote:
> Hi,
>
> A little patch :
> http://www.progweb.com/modules/blackberry/opensync-plugin/
> (I have built the patch with the "git format-patch" command)
Hi Nicolas,
Thanks very much for these patches, but they do not apply cleanly.
There are
On Fri, Feb 06, 2009 at 11:41:32PM +0100, Nicolas wrote:
> Le mardi 27 janvier 2009 ?? 18:58 -0500, Chris Frey a ??crit :
> > I noticed that you have changed the format of the config file to XML.
> > In your travels through opensync, have you found an easy way to edit
> > this configuration, withou
On Fri, Feb 06, 2009 at 09:13:41PM -0500, Martin Owens wrote:
> I tried to tell them to use well defined, auto created data points via
> HAL and other services infrastructures. I even created a bunch of fdi
> files for windows mobile and barry to show how it could be done.
>
> I was ignored.
>
>
On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 12:01:27AM +, peter white wrote:
> I'm running Ubuntu Desktop 7.04 LTS with Kernel 2.6.24-23-generic #1 SMP.
That's fairly old, so none of the newer ConsoleKit issues should apply
to you. And especially not with Ubuntu.
> BUS=="usb", SUBSYSTEM=="usb_device", ACTION==
I uninstalled barry and looked for any hidden directories and other random
files nothing found. But when I go to reinstall it through Yast I get this
error message.
nothing provides libusb needed by libbarry0-.15-cvs20090131.i586
And I know both libusb and libusb-devel are installed. And tha
> I can see how static configs can be a benefit though. I wouldn't want
> PIN numbers changing in my sync config depending on what device was
> plugged in at the time.
That's not how it works. If you have a device, you assign a unique id
which is used to identify that device when ever it's plugg
I haven't figured it out yet, but I did learn something today that may
be helpful for this. Adding a couple entries to the Windows Registry
will create verbose log files in your temp directory. This may help
shed some light on some things. Additionally, with logging enabled
this way, we can sniff t
Shannon McMackin wrote:
> 1st, Andy, I apologize for not getting back to you on FC10. I've had
> to switch back to Ubuntu.
>
> We had it working on Intrepid. I don't know for the life of me what
> changed. I'm using the libs from try3 that you sent me and here's the
> output in the attached f
On Wed, Feb 04, 2009 at 08:42:36PM +0100, Nicolas wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This mail follows my issue with barrybackup (or opensync plugin) timout.
>
> See the mail :
> - Subject : Barry issue
> - Data : Sun, 01 Feb 2009 18:11:15 +0100
>
> After several tests and some hair lost !
>
> I have found a sol
On Wed, Feb 11, 2009 at 08:38:46PM -0500, Martin Owens wrote:
> That's not how it works. If you have a device, you assign a unique id
> which is used to identify that device when ever it's plugged in. This is
> how CUPS knows which printer of the exact same type to send print jobs.
>
> The config
> H... I think I need an example to grok this. :-)
Apart from the cups example? When you plug in another hard drive into
your computer. Even if you make it a master drive, which messes up
your /dev/sda numbering, the uuid on the drive in fstab will make sure
your boot will still mount the rig
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