You are not logged in.
Same here, had to get my old cable mouse out of retirement
Error creating Bluetooth Server - KBluetooth4
Launch helper exited with unknown return code 127
Offline
I have similar problem with bt mouse after last upgrade of bluez
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
To solve this you should install bluez-gnome from testing. It works like a charm, and even integrates with policykit.
Offline
To solve this you should install bluez-gnome from testing. It works like a charm, and even integrates with policykit.
unless you use kde like me
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
Did you guys check your .pacsave config files? I noticed the bluetooth library updates dumped all the old configs to .pacsave files so of course nothing would work over here either...
Got Leenucks? :: Arch: Power in simplicity :: Get Counted! Registered Linux User #392717 :: Blog thingy
Offline
which ones you mean?:
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
primarily this one was replaced, the old one renamed to bluetooth.pacsave
/etc/conf.d/bluetooth
this is a signature
Offline
yes, I used new one
that does not help
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
To solve this you should install bluez-gnome from testing. It works like a charm, and even integrates with policykit.
This doesn't work for me. Well now other options are visible, but I can't connect to any device, or send files.
Offline
Same problem here. During update I noticed some remarks
[2009-02-13 21:44] warning: /etc/conf.d/bluetooth saved as /etc/conf.d/bluetooth.pacsave
[2009-02-13 21:44] warning: /etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf saved as /etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf.pacsave
[2009-02-13 21:44] warning: /etc/bluetooth/network.conf saved as /etc/bluetooth/network.conf.pacsave
[2009-02-13 21:44] warning: /etc/bluetooth/hcid.conf saved as /etc/bluetooth/hcid.conf.pacsave
[2009-02-13 21:44] warning: /etc/bluetooth/audio.conf saved as /etc/bluetooth/audio.conf.pacsave
[2009-02-13 21:44] removed bluez-utils (3.32-1)
[2009-02-13 21:44] removed bluez-libs (3.32-1)
[2009-02-13 21:44] installed bluez (4.29-1)
So it seems 2 packages were replaced by one. It became obvious that some symlinks or dependencies will be broken by this It's quite annoying in Linux (general) that quite often there're some very strange and unintelligible package changes which break something, that was working flawlessly before...
Here's what I get when trying to launch Bluetooth Monitor from console
zbyszek ~ $ kbluemon
kbluemon: error while loading shared libraries: libbluetooth.so.2: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
How to fix this?
EDIT
Seems new bluez version brougth some new content of which my system is not fully aware
zbyszek ~ $ pacman -Ql bluez
(...)
bluez /usr/lib/libbluetooth.la
bluez /usr/lib/libbluetooth.so
bluez /usr/lib/libbluetooth.so.3
bluez /usr/lib/libbluetooth.so.3.1.2
(...)
As you can see it contains libbluetooth.so.3, and KBluemon seeks libbluetooth.so.2...
Last edited by Zibi1981 (2009-02-13 21:11:33)
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
Offline
what about this:
Release of bluez-4.30
12th February 2009, 10:30 pm by Marcel Holtmann
This previous release was not one of our best ones. At the UnPlugFest we focused so much on Simple Pairing support, that we actually broke the Legacy Pairing with Bluetooth 2.0 and earlier devices. This has been fixed now. In addition one show-stopper for Bluetooth 2.1 qualification has also been fixed.
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
some problem here, bluetooth tray icon disappeared after upgrade. I start bluetooth service on boot up. Any workgrounds to this yet?
Last edited by leeyee (2009-02-14 02:43:36)
Archlinux x86_64 on Thinkpad T400
Intel X4500MHD / ATI HD3470 Graphics, 2G RAM, 160G HD
Offline
I too failed using bluez-gnome, however I managed to connect to my mobile-phone using "rfcomm connect X".
I had to start a passkey-agent before executing that command - but this depends on whether or not the devices already know each other (stored in /var/lib/bluetooth).
The passkey agent i used is the python "sample-agent" in one of the bluez4 source packages which can be obtained from www.bluez.org.
After hours of fiddling around with dbus and bluez-gnome I finally got my laptop->mobile phone connection working again.
Offline
I also got the problem after bluez upgrade.
I use -since this morning- bluez-gnome-1.8-4 from extra. Now, I'm able to use my bluetooth mouse, but there is a need for confirmation that "I trust the mouse", every time I start the pc.
I've noticed some changes in /etc/rc.d/bluetooth. The DAEMON_NAME is now "bluetoothd" instead of "hcid" and the DAEMON_CONFIG file: /etc/bluetooth/hcid.conf seems that isn't usable anymore.
There are 2 new files in /etc/bluetooth: main.conf & input.conf
Offline
as I see also my BT mouse after some time of idle mode does not reconnect - only hcitool scan and hidd connect make it working again
what a pity !
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
It's just like my signature says
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
Offline
as I see also my BT mouse after some time of idle mode does not reconnect - only hcitool scan and hidd connect make it working again
what a pity !
I have the same problem here too... I also noticed you can't have two devices connect simultaneously like you could before .
Same behaviour shows with bluez 4.30, btw.
Got Leenucks? :: Arch: Power in simplicity :: Get Counted! Registered Linux User #392717 :: Blog thingy
Offline
Do anyone still have old BlueZ packages on his/her system? If so, please share them.
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
Offline
Do anyone still have old BlueZ packages on his/her system? If so, please share them.
Some outdated mirrors as seen on http://users.archlinux.de/~gerbra/mirrorcheck.html still have the old packages.
Like the belnet one:
ftp://ftp.belnet.be/mirror/archlinux.org/extra/os/i686/
m.
Offline
I've got these two packages, which enabled me to restore proper bluetooth mouse function:
bluez-libs-3.32-1-x86_64.pkg.tar.gz
bluez-utils-3.32-1-x86_64.pkg.tar.gz
These are the two packages that were replaced on 12 Feb 2009 with the new bluez-4.29 package.
If your revert to the bluez-libs and bluez-utils packages from the bluez-4.29 package, you may encounter a message regarding gnokii and pilot-link. Bluez-4.29 required an upgrade of these packages. To be safe, I reverted these two packages to the immediately preceding versions.
I have these packages as well, for Arch64.
If someone can provide a location where I can upload these files, I'll gladly do so. I could also e-mail the bluez* packages, as they're not very large -- though if I get 20,000 requests, I might not be able to follow through .
I'm much happier having proper bluetooth mouse function back. I don't usually like to revert packages, but in this case, it was a good move, I think.
Offline
I reverted to bluez libs and utils too
what a shame :-(
Zygfryd Homonto
Offline
Can anyone that hasn't updated his ABS tree yet post the PKGBUILDs for bluez-libs and bluez-utils? I'd like to upgrade to the latest 3.36 version.
Much appreciated .
Got Leenucks? :: Arch: Power in simplicity :: Get Counted! Registered Linux User #392717 :: Blog thingy
Offline
Can anyone that hasn't updated his ABS tree yet post the PKGBUILDs for bluez-libs and bluez-utils? I'd like to upgrade to the latest 3.36 version.
Much appreciated .
Well, I can't figure out how to upload a file to the site, but here's the code for each.
(1) bluez-libs-3.32
# $Id: PKGBUILD 2478 2008-06-03 13:47:05Z thomas $
# Maintainer: Thomas Baechler <thomas@archlinux.org>
pkgname=bluez-libs
pkgver=3.32
pkgrel=1
pkgdesc="Libraries for the Linux Bluetooth protocol stack"
arch=('i686' 'x86_64')
url="http://www.bluez.org/"
depends=('glibc')
license=('GPL')
options=(!libtool)
source=(http://bluez.sf.net/download/bluez-libs-${pkgver}.tar.gz)
md5sums=('5b75852a088e77647c1244c9319be2eb')
build() {
cd ${startdir}/src/${pkgname}-${pkgver}
./configure --prefix=/usr
make || return 1
make DESTDIR=${startdir}/pkg install
}
(2) bluez-utils-3.32
# $Id: PKGBUILD 2479 2008-06-03 13:47:31Z thomas $
pkgname=bluez-utils
pkgver=3.32
pkgrel=1
pkgdesc="Utilities for the Linux Bluetooth protocol stack"
arch=(i686 x86_64)
url="http://www.bluez.org/"
makedepends=('alsa-lib' 'hal')
depends=("bluez-libs=$pkgver" 'libusb' 'dbus>=0.93' 'glib2')
optdepends=('alsa-lib: support for bluetooth audio'
'hal: support for bluetooth networking')
license=('GPL')
backup=(etc/bluetooth/{audio,hcid,network,rfcomm}.conf
etc/bluetooth/{audio,input,network,serial}.service
etc/conf.d/bluetooth)
source=(http://bluez.sf.net/download/bluez-utils-${pkgver}.tar.gz
bluetooth.rc bluetooth.conf.d)
options=(!libtool)
md5sums=('781ad0e5b3583d90e562e408a5226da1'
'6f3b248670fe80626466b47bc52330e6'
'dda606b16264859b007ec777c7a5627d')
build() {
cd ${startdir}/src/${pkgname}-${pkgver}
./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --libexecdir=/lib \
--localstatedir=/var --enable-pcmcia --enable-inotify --enable-alsa \
--enable-cups --enable-pcmciarules --enable-bccmd --enable-avctrl \
--enable-dfutool --enable-audio --enable-input --enable-network \
--enable-serial --enable-hal --enable-dund --enable-hidd \
--enable-pand --enable-hid2hci --enable-sdpd --enable-glib
make || return 1
# appease the RedHat-centric Makefile
mkdir -p ${startdir}/pkg/etc/init.d
make DESTDIR=${startdir}/pkg install || return 1
install -D -m644 ${startdir}/src/bluez-utils-${pkgver}/network/network.conf ${startdir}/pkg/etc/bluetooth/network.conf
install -D -m644 ${startdir}/src/bluez-utils-${pkgver}/audio/audio.conf ${startdir}/pkg/etc/bluetooth/audio.conf
rm -rf ${startdir}/pkg/etc/init.d ${startdir}/pkg/etc/rc.d
install -D -m755 ${startdir}/src/bluetooth.rc ${startdir}/pkg/etc/rc.d/bluetooth || return 1
install -D -m644 ${startdir}/src/bluetooth.conf.d ${startdir}/pkg/etc/conf.d/bluetooth || return 1
install -D -m755 ${startdir}/src/bluez-utils-${pkgver}/daemon/passkey-agent ${startdir}/pkg/usr/bin/passkey-agent || return 1
mkdir -p ${startdir}/pkg/etc/udev/rules.d/
sed 's|RUN+="bluetooth_serial"|RUN+="/lib/udev/bluetooth_serial"|g' ${startdir}/pkg/etc/udev/bluetooth.rules > ${startdir}/pkg/etc/udev/rules.d/bluetooth.rules || return 1
rm ${startdir}/pkg/etc/udev/bluetooth.rules || return 1
}
Offline
Thanks a lot .
Got Leenucks? :: Arch: Power in simplicity :: Get Counted! Registered Linux User #392717 :: Blog thingy
Offline