On Sat, May 06, 2006 at 12:57:57PM +0200, Thierry de Coulon wrote
Since using Gentoo the reader apparently is not seen on boot (if no
card is plugged in). When I plug a card in and try to mount it I get
an error message (no such device).
So my guess is that I am missing a small something in
On Sunday 07 May 2006 09.32, Walter Dnes wrote:
I have *EXACTLY* the same situation, and I figured out what was
causing it, and I came up with with a workaround; I wouldn't call it a
perfect solution.
(...)
Thanks a lot for your report. I'll check what I did, I don't remember if I
compiled
'On Saturday 06 May 2006 11:57, Thierry de Coulon wrote:
Hello,
I've got an usb multi-card reader. The device does work, however since I
run Gentoo it behaves a little different than before. Previously the reader
would be indentified on boot (usually reserving /dev/sda to /dev/sdd). I
set up
On Sunday 07 May 2006 10.59, Ognjen Bezanov wrote:
Sounds like you might be missing a module on startup , try adding
usb-storage to the module autoloading script for your kernel.
Hello Ognjen and thanks for your suggestion. I'm ashamed it really was that
simple. I just thought usb-storage was
Hello,
I've got an usb multi-card reader. The device does work, however since I run
Gentoo it behaves a little different than before. Previously the reader would
be indentified on boot (usually reserving /dev/sda to /dev/sdd). I set up
those drives in /etc/fstab and created devices on the
Thierry de Coulon wrote:
Hello,
I've got an usb multi-card reader. The device does work, however since I run
Gentoo it behaves a little different than before. Previously the reader would
be indentified on boot (usually reserving /dev/sda to /dev/sdd). I set up
those drives in /etc/fstab and
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