Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sat, 2 Dec 2006 09:30:14 GMT
From:      Marc Fonvieille <blackend@FreeBSD.org>
To:        freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: docs/106148: [PATCH] extend the documentation for handling USB drives
Message-ID:  <200612020930.kB29UEqc003637@freefall.freebsd.org>

next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
The following reply was made to PR docs/106148; it has been noted by GNATS.

From: Marc Fonvieille <blackend@FreeBSD.org>
To: Roland Smith <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
Cc: FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org, doc@FreeBSD.org
Subject: Re: docs/106148: [PATCH] extend the documentation for handling USB drives
Date: Sat, 2 Dec 2006 10:22:30 +0100

 On Fri, Dec 01, 2006 at 07:15:53PM +0100, Roland Smith wrote:
 > 
 > >Description:
 > The disks chapter of the handbook is quite short in its description of the
 > handling of USB mass-storage drives. The included patch is an attempt to
 > expand/clarify this for new users.
 > 
 > 	
 > >How-To-Repeat:
 > N/A
 > >Fix:
 > This patch has been tested to apply cleanly on revision 1.265 and 1.267.
 > 
 > ------- patch for en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks/chapter.sgml -------
 > --- chapter.sgml.orig	Sun Oct  8 17:01:02 2006
 > +++ chapter.sgml	Sun Oct  8 17:48:40 2006
 > @@ -777,6 +777,68 @@
 >        <para>to your configuration file for USB 2.0 support.  Note
 >  	&man.uhci.4; and &man.ohci.4; drivers are still needed if you
 >  	want USB 1.X support.</para>
 > +
 > +      <para>To make these devices mountable as a normal user, certain steps
 > +	have to be taken. First, the devices that are created when a USB
 > +	storage device is connected need to be accessible. A solution is to
 > +	create a group (e.g. named usb) that users of these devices need to
 > +	belong to. This is done with &man.pw.8;. The users in question also
 > +	need to be added to that group. This is also done with
 > +	&man.pw.8;. Second, when the devices are created, they have to be
 > +	accessible by this group. This is accomplished by adding a line for
 > +	these devices to &man.devfs.rules.5;;
 > +      </para>
 > +
 > +      <programlisting>add path 'da*' mode 0660 group usb</programlisting>
 > +
 > +      <note>
 > +	<para>If you already have SCSI disks in your system, you want to
 > +	  do this a bit different. E.g., if you already have
 > +	  disks <filename>da0</filename> through <filename>da2</filename>
 > +	  attached to the system, change the line as follows:
 > +	</para>
 > +
 > +	<programlisting>add path 'da[3-9]*' mode 0660 group usb</programlisting>
 > +
 > +	<para>This will exclude the already existing disks from the usb
 > +	  group.
 > +	</para>
 
 [...]
 
 Your idea is a great improvement to the current section, but I think it
 would be better to use the same scheme as the one used by the FreeBSD
 GNOME team for HAL, i.e, using operator group as in
 http://www.freebsd.org/gnome/docs/faq2.html#q19
 This would keep a consistency between our docs and would be compatible
 with GNOME and other things using HAL.
 
 -- 
 Marc



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?200612020930.kB29UEqc003637>