| Summary: | udev-135 does not mount device | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Product: | Gentoo Linux | Reporter: | Davide <netcelli> |
| Component: | [OLD] Core system | Assignee: | udev maintainers <udev-bugs> |
| Status: | RESOLVED INVALID | ||
| Severity: | normal | CC: | chainsaw |
| Priority: | High | ||
| Version: | 2008.0 | ||
| Hardware: | AMD64 | ||
| OS: | Linux | ||
| Whiteboard: | |||
| Package list: | Runtime testing required: | --- | |
|
Description
Davide
2009-02-08 08:40:24 UTC
Well, udev itself does not mount anything. So you use maybe hal to manage the devices and mount them. Things udev can do wrong: 1. Modify the event it sends to hal to not contain stuff hal expects. 2. Setting the permissions wrong. Did you do any other changes to your system? Does it get back working if you downgrade udev? Please include: emerge -pv hal (In reply to comment #2) > Please include: > emerge -pv hal > [ebuild R ] sys-apps/hal-0.5.11-r8 USE="X crypt -acpi -apm -debug -dell -disk-partition -doc -laptop (-selinux)" 0 kB Thank you. What environment is this occuring in? Gnome with gnome-mount, XFCE, KDE? (In reply to comment #4) > Thank you. What environment is this occuring in? Gnome with gnome-mount, XFCE, > KDE? > I'm using gnome with gnome-base/gnome-mount-0.8 I think its gnome problem since i can mount device from shell without problem :) This morning all works without a reason :) Closing as INVALID then. |