On พ., 2006-05-03 at 09:32 +0200, Florian Kulzer wrote: > On Wed, May 03, 2006 at 09:14:27 +0700, Surachai Locharoen wrote: > > > > On ???., 2006-05-02 at 19:28 +0200, Florian Kulzer wrote: > > > On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 23:52:41 +0700, Surachai Locharoen wrote: > > > > I install gnome 2.14. When I insert usbdisk or cdrom, there is no > > > > automount action take place. I can mount mannually from command line. > > > > > > > > However I can't manually mount usb disk because I can't find /dev/sda1 > > > > or /dev/sda which I use to mount usb disk. > > > > > > > > could you suggest how to obtain automount feature again and why /dev/sda > > > > disappear? > > > > > > (I am assuming that you are using Sid aka Unstable, based on the version > > > of Gnome that you mention.) > > [...] > > > I reboot computer and see the log file. The message semilar as your > > sugguesion. Now I can mount usbdisk manaually. Thank you very much. > > > > The next goal is how to set up automount for usb disk. for example when > > I attach usbdisk. It should show usbdisk icon on desktop for ready to > > use. This feature was worked in sarge. but It missing in gnome 2.14 > > I do not know the specifics of Gnome, but I can give you a few general > pointers: As far as I know, all icons-appear-on-desktop behavior needs > the packages "udev", "hal" and "dbus". For Gnome you will probably need > "gnome-volume-manager" in addition to that. Therefore we should first > check if you have all these packages installed properly. Please post the > output of the following command: > > dpkg -l udev hal* dbus* hotplug* gnome-volume-manager > > -- > Regards, > Florian > > My problem is solved. The cause is missing of gnome-volume-manager. I accidently remove it. Thank you very much for your help :)
Kan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]