hea Posted October 29, 2002 Report Share Posted October 29, 2002 I have tried everything but the only respond from the system when plugging in the camera (Olympus C-2040Z) is the following in /var/log/messages: Oct 28 22:56:22 aopen kernel: hub.c: USB new device connect on bus1/1, assigned device number 4 Oct 28 22:56:25 aopen kernel: usb_control/bulk_msg: timeout Oct 28 22:56:25 aopen kernel: usb.c: USB device not accepting new address=4 (error=-110) Oct 28 22:56:25 aopen kernel: hub.c: USB new device connect on bus1/1, assigned device number 5 Oct 28 22:56:28 aopen kernel: usb_control/bulk_msg: timeout Oct 28 22:56:28 aopen kernel: usb.c: USB device not accepting new address=5 (error=-110) Its not much. Ive searced through forums and tons of web pages trying to get a solution. I dont get any sda-entry under /dev, i do not get any /proc/bus/scsi device, no luck with gphoto2. USB is running. If anyone has something to lead me further i would be very grateful. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hea Posted November 7, 2002 Author Report Share Posted November 7, 2002 Could it possibly have something to do with SCSI emulation? Is theresome way to verify if this works ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mtweidmann Posted November 7, 2002 Report Share Posted November 7, 2002 Does your camera have removable storage (eg flash media). If so I would suggest buying a card reader. It took ages for me to get my camera to work in Linux, but the card reader worked first time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alpha13 Posted November 7, 2002 Report Share Posted November 7, 2002 I have always had to "su" to root and "rmmod dc2xx" before using gphoto2 with my Kodak dc3400 camera. I can never get gphoto 0.34 or whatever version is the older to work because of a mysterios pemission problem I am unable to resolve. KDE's camera:/ will not work either, test always fails. ===Alpha13 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hea Posted November 9, 2002 Author Report Share Posted November 9, 2002 Thanks for replys, but, well i cant give up. This is for me a question of getting totally rid of Windows, as transferring pictures is the only thing i still use a Microsoft product for :) . The Kodak way dont seem to apply to Olympus as far as i can see. I have done some more reading since last and found that i have to actually makethe /dev/sd* entrys. They dont just pop up (well i am new on this) I did the following: mknod /dev/sda b 8 0 mknod /dev/dsa1 b 8 1 and so on. This is obviously neccssary, but not enough. Listing these devices gives: brw-r--r-- 1 root root 8, 0 Nov 9 12:02 /dev/sda brw-r--r-- 1 root root 8, 1 Nov 9 12:02 /dev/sda1 brw-r--r-- 1 root root 8, 2 Nov 9 13:26 /dev/sda2 Do they look OK? I have seen other listings containing the same but with a 'disk' in each line. Dont know if its important. All this said i still have a problem with the camera 'not accepting new address' with the following errormessage 'error= -110'. Is there a list of errormessages somewhere on the system? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hea Posted November 11, 2002 Author Report Share Posted November 11, 2002 Finally made it!!! The answer was at the www.linux-usb.org under faq: Som hardware interrupt conflict between PCI and USB at my AOpen AK73Pro motherboard. Solved by turning off the BIOS option: "Assign IRQ for USB". Not interesting to the majority of you i guess, but if you have problems with USB, linux-usb.org will obviously be a site to visit. :wink: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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