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i used to have a pretty decent working setup of ivman (and dbus and hal)..i dont know what happened, but dbus and hal start fine, but ivman gives a
/usr/bin/ivman: error while loading shared libraries: libhal.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
also, ive not been able to start the the KDE media manager service in kde 3.4 (control panel->kde components->service manager)
can anyone please tell me what went wrong and how do i set things right again
thanks in advance
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you installed the testing version of hal and dbus. Install the extra version again
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ivman is broken atm, we just have to wait for ikke to give us a new release.
new versions of hal and dbus broke it. symlinking to the new .so's doesnt work.
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it works..thanks very much
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if i can ..
i have i little problem with ivman. i used to use supermount patch, but it isnt perfect. i install ivman, hal, dbus and ... and i dont have now my dvd-rw there is no hda in /dev
i dont know what is wrong
my fstab
/dev/hda /mnt/rw iso9660 user,noauto,ro 0 0
/dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy auto user,noauto 0 0
and i add dbus hal ivman to rc.conf at deamon.
i use fluxbox and rox ->
mount: special device /dev/hda does not exist
thanks!
ps in gentoo ivman works fine
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there is no hda in /dev
It has nothing to do with ivman hal, or dbus. Try adding hotplug to your daemons array to see if it adds any module you may need to have the dvd. First of all you could check if the symlink to /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 is created.
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heh, looks like im not downgrading hal and dbus
[root@localhost iphitus]# pacman -S hal
:: hal-0.5.0-1: local version is newer. Upgrade anyway? [Y/n] y
error: unresolvable dependencies:
nautilus-cd-burner: requires hal>=0.5.0
gnome-utils: requires hal>=0.5.0
gnome-vfs: requires hal>=0.5.0
hal-device-manager: requires hal>=0.5.0
[root@localhost iphitus]# pacman -R hal-device-manager gnome-vfs gnome-utils nautilus-cd-burner
error: this will break the following dependencies:
gnome-vfs: is required by gmpc
gnome-vfs: is required by gst-plugins-gnomevfs
gnome-vfs: is required by gtodo
gnome-vfs: is required by libgnome
gnome-vfs: is required by libgsf-gnome
gnome-vfs: is required by ximian-openoffice
nautilus-cd-burner: is required by gnome-media
nautilus-cd-burner: is required by gnome-python-extras
nautilus-cd-burner: is required by totem
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you'll have to downgrade to all gnome packages to from the testing version to the extra version. I have to do the same, so here's what I'm executing:
pacman -S hal dbus gnome-utils gnome-vfs hal-device-manager nautilus-cd-burner
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there is no hda in /dev
It has nothing to do with ivman hal, or dbus. Try adding hotplug to your daemons array to see if it adds any module you may need to have the dvd. First of all you could check if the symlink to /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 is created.
my /dev
adsp fd0h1200 kmsg loop6 nvidia3 ram0 ram4 sda1 snd
audio fd0u1440 legacy loop7 nvidia4 ram1 ram5 sda10 sound
console fd0u360 log mem nvidia5 ram10 ram6 sda11 stderr
core fd0u720 loop midi nvidia6 ram11 ram7 sda2 stdin
dmmidi floppy loop0 misc nvidia7 ram12 ram8 sda5 stdout
dsp full loop1 mixer nvidiactl ram13 ram9 sda6 tty
fb initctl loop2 null port ram14 random sda7 urandom
fb0 inotify loop3 nvidia0 psaux ram15 rd sda8 vc
fd input loop4 nvidia1 ptmx ram2 rtc sda9 vcc
fd0 kmem loop5 nvidia2 pts ram3 sda shm zero
there is no cdroms/...
i will do pacman -R for hal&dbus&ivman
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hal+dbus+ivman are NOT the fault of your cd drive missing.
Your cd drive doesnt exist in /dev/ because YOU havnt loaded the driver.
Install the 'hwd' package and run lshwd, that will give us a list of your hardware, and hopefully the driver we need.
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heh i found what it is, of course that was my mistake. i dont know how i spoil my .config kernel file
now is ok
thanks
ps Do You try submounta ? is better than ivman ?
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i used to use submount in slack, but could never get it to work in arch, so i switched to ivman
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I used submount. I is ok for CDs or DVDs, but is unuseful with pendrives, as they can get any sd* instance (sda, sdb, sdc, etc)
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I used submount. I is ok for CDs or DVDs, but is unuseful with pendrives, as they can get any sd* instance (sda, sdb, sdc, etc)
It not the submount's job but udev. You need to give a name for a device not dependent on instance (udev rule). Search forums, wiki and udev docs for examples and more info.
Submount works fine with /dev/hdc - there is no cdroms/ - this is also related to udev not submount. Again search the forums for submount and you'll find examples that work fine with udev.
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submount is dirty.
automaticaly mounting drives is a task that should be completed in userspace. Not in the kernel. The rule of thumb, is that if it can be done in userspace, it should. That's the whole idea of udev, to do it in userspace rather than in the kernel.
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