Richard Mittendorfer wrote:
lspci --verbose is your friend. IIRC, the parameter of interest is
bcdUSB of the desired device.
Also $ dmesg or a look into /var/log/kern.log should give you an idea
about what linux thinks about the connected device. Usually, speed is
mentioned there.
So weit
Also sprach Marco [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Fri, 25 Aug 2006 11:31:24
+0200):
Richard Mittendorfer wrote:
lspci --verbose is your friend. IIRC, the parameter of interest
is bcdUSB of the desired device.
Also $ dmesg or a look into /var/log/kern.log should give you an
idea about what linux
Hello,
I have a usb2.0 disk connected to a usb2.0 port. But it is much to slow.
How can I check wether disk and port are recognized as 2.0?
Can I easily benchmark the disk to find out real transfer rate?
Regards,
Marco
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On Thu, 24 Aug 2006 16:05:38 +0200, Marco wrote
Hello,
Hello,
first of all, this is a German list. No need to write in English. If you
should need to write in English, there is also an English list:
debian-user@lists.debian.org
I have a usb2.0 disk connected to a usb2.0 port. But it is much to
Also sprach Jan Kohnert [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Thu, 24
Aug 2006 16:54:11 +0200):
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006 16:05:38 +0200, Marco wrote
I have a usb2.0 disk connected to a usb2.0 port. But it is much to
slow.
How can I check wether disk and port are recognized as 2.0?
lspci --verbose is your
Jan Kohnert wrote:
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006 16:05:38 +0200, Marco wrote
How can I check wether disk and port are recognized as 2.0?
lspci --verbose is your friend. IIRC, the parameter of interest is bcdUSB
-^^^ Du meintest sicher 'usb'
HTH und Gruß, Michel
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Bei jedem
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006 17:44:44 +0200, Michelino Caroselli wrote
Jan Kohnert wrote:
lspci --verbose is your friend.
-^^^ Du meintest sicher 'usb'
Meinte ich. Sorry.
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MfG Jan
Open WebMail Project (http://openwebmail.org)
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