On Thu, Nov 23, 2017 at 7:29 PM, Dave Stevens <g...@uniserve.com> wrote:

>
>
> what about this:
> https://www.howtogeek.com/192732/android-usb-
> connections-explained-mtp-ptp-and-usb-mass-storage/


Thanks for that. I probably should have guessed some of that myself,
especially the part about needing exclusive access to all of the storage to
prevent data corruption, given my own experiences with high availability
clusters. I had always secretly believed MTP was invented and promoted by
Microsoft to make it hard to access Android devices from Linux :-)  Nice to
see that's not really the case.

But it still begs the question of why I have so much trouble accessing my
Android device files from my Fedora boxes (all running F26). What packages
are needed for this to work? I already have libmtp installed,  but I have
one desktop that I still cannot access my Galaxy S6 phone from. I plug in
the phone, I get the prompt where I click "Allow" to allow the computer to
have access, but nothing ever happens on the Desktop side. (I am running
standard GNOME on the desktop, I have tried it with both Wayland and Xorg,
not that this should matter).

I noticed a package called jmtpfs that looked promising. I installed this
on my Dell laptop, and now it works from there. However, installing jmtpfs
on the problem desktop did not help.

Do others have as much trouble as I do accessing their Android phones from
a Fedora desktop?

--Greg
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