Re: comment to F23 Final RC10 - still card reader problem

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Hi,
a further investigation with the internal card reader of my Acer E15 E5-571G with lspci brought up amongst other well defined components:
"01:00.0 Unassigned class [ff00]: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Device 5287 (rev 01)"
I think this could be the Realtek card reader of the laptop?
Is it possible that "unassigned class" is the reason why I don't find this laptop internal card reader in the file list on the left hand side of the Gnome file display?
In lshw I also don't find the laptop internal card reader (SD card is inserted), even when I can see the SD card in /run/media/joerg/  (my user name is joerg).
Is this F23/Gnome special? Or have I to live with this behaviour also in F24,F25,....?
Kind Regards


-----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung----- 
Von: Richard Ryniker <ryniker@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
An: For testing and quality assurance of Fedora releases <test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Joerg Lechner <julechner@xxxxxxx>
Verschickt: Sa, 31 Okt 2015 4:34 pm
Betreff: Re: comment to F23 Final RC10 - still card reader problem


I think you may be the victim of GNOME's "Do what you maybe probably
want."
attitude.  This is something you might be able to configure to
your taste,
given sufficient knowledge about what specifications to
change.

I have a
Lenovo machine with a Realtec card reader:

[ryniker@lenovo ~]$ lspci | grep
Card
02:00.0 Unassigned class [ff00]: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTS5209
PCI Express Card Reader (rev 01)

This is known as /dev/mmcblk0, and when I
insert a SD card with file
systems on a couple of partitions:

[root@lenovo
ryniker]# blkid | grep mmc
/dev/mmcblk0: PTUUID="ba2edfb9"
PTTYPE="dos"
/dev/mmcblk0p1: SEC_TYPE="msdos" LABEL="boot" UUID="74BD-74CF"
TYPE="vfat" PARTUUID="ba2edfb9-01"
/dev/mmcblk0p2:
UUID="ec2aa3d2-eee7-454e-8260-d145df5ddcba" TYPE="ext4"
PARTUUID="ba2edfb9-02"

GNOME kindly mounts these under
/run/media:

[ryniker@lenovo ~]$ mount | grep mmc
/dev/mmcblk0p1 on
/run/media/ryniker/boot type vfat
(rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,uid=501,gid=501,fmask=0022,dmask=0022,codepage=437,iocharset=ascii,shortname=mixed,showexec,utf8,flush,errors=remount-ro,uhelper=udisks2)
/dev/mmcblk0p2
on /run/media/ryniker/ec2aa3d2-eee7-454e-8260-d145df5ddcba type ext4
(rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,seclabel,data=ordered,uhelper=udisks2)

which I find
sometimes helpful, sometimes not.  In any case, these are
"user" mounts.  I
have not explored what happens when multiple users are
logged in when a card is
loaded.  If I do not want these file systems
mounted, I can:

[ryniker@lenovo
~]$ umount /dev/mmcblk0p1
[ryniker@lenovo ~]$ umount /dev/mmcblk0p2

and then
remove the SD card when umount completes (this may take a while
if a lot of
data must be flushed to the media).

Often, I want to write a new image onto a
SD card (dd of=/dev/mmcblk0).
If I do not first umount these
automatically-mounted file systems, dd
output is buffered in memory - dd may
report a transfer rate of one
gigabyte per second - and I am exceedingly
careful to wait until I
observe activity to the SD card has ended before I
remove it (without any
umount operations, which I fear may corrupt the image I
just wrote.)

The automatic behavior may be right for most users.  I have
enough
experience to (usually) avoid the pits, and recognize what has gone
wrong
when I stumble into one.

This Lenovo machine also has a reboot problem
similar to one you
reported.  Windows reboots successfully, but Fedora does
not.  Fedora
shuts down, I see the Lenovo splash screen, but no boot.  I must
force
power off, then wait through a ten-second "Power Saving"
countdown
displayed on-screen before actual power off, then I can
boot
successfully.  Peculiarity of the Lenovo hardware, I suppose, and I
just
live with it.


-- 
test mailing list
test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test




[Index of Archives]     [Fedora Desktop]     [Fedora SELinux]     [Photo Sharing]     [Yosemite Forum]     [KDE Users]

  Powered by Linux