On 5 November 2011 19:45, Joost Roeleveld <jo...@antarean.org> wrote: > On Saturday, November 05, 2011 04:48:54 AM Mark Knecht wrote: >> On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 2:39 AM, Joost Roeleveld <jo...@antarean.org> wrote: >> > On Friday, November 04, 2011 06:03:55 PM Mark Knecht wrote: >> >> 2011/11/4 Jorge Martínez López <jorg...@gmail.com>: >> >> > Did you install app-pda/ifuse and app-pda/libimobiledevice >> >> > (dependency >> >> > of ifuse and gtkpod)?. I do not recall touching any udev rule. >> >> > >> >> >> >> Hi Jorge, >> >> Thanks for the ifuse idea. ifuse /mnt/ipod does seem to get the >> >> device mounted. However just poking around in the /mnt/ipod directory >> >> isn't very clear by itself about how music (and one day hopefully >> >> videos) are stored. Maybe I can find some info somewhere to help with >> >> that if necessary. >> >> >> >> Even with the device mounted it doesn't seem to be visible to >> >> gtkpod, and there aren't any new USB disk messages in dmesg. Just a >> >> single ifuse message is all that's added. >> >> >> >> Well, at least I can sort of communicate with the ipod even if I >> >> cannot do anything interesting yet >> > >> > I haven't played with my iPod touch yet, but the "older" models all >> > worked with gtkpod. >> > You might need to tell gtkpod to "open" the ipod by pointing it where it >> > is mounted
I have the same problem, with an iPad, but effectively the same. iPods work on the local Ubuntu machine, and I believe that usbmuxd is the problem in this case. It's supposed to pick up the ipod announce in dmesg and take over. I can't test atm, but it looks like a good place to start. Take a look here: http://marcansoft.com/blog/2009/10/iphone-syncing-on-linux-part-2/ which is a little old, but has piles of info. I'm thinking of updating the HFS+ page on gentoo-wiki - if we figure this out, maybe we can write up a good guide for Apple i* devices.