Steve Weigold wrote:
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 12:12 AM, Jason
Stahls <m("justuscare.ca","jason");">>
wrote:
<snip>
I would say that your card reader is probably handling the LUNs on it's
own and not exposing them if they don't have a card inserted into them.
Try adding a SD card as well and see if it shows two devices then.
Also, it's possible that the card reader is only capable of utilizing a
single card at a time and shares pins between them, detecting which
card
is inserted via switches (I have such a card slot here.)
I've tried using multiple cards in the reader, a CF and an SD. Both
separately and at the same time. There is no change in the results.
I also tried getting a Lexar card reader, and when I plug that one in,
I get an error about the device not accepting the address. It seems
I'm going the wrong way!
Steve
Hey Everyone,
I thought I'd report back that the problem I reported with a USB card
reader has been resolved. I would have though that all USB card
readers were created equal. This is apparently not the case. I was
unable to get both an inland card reader (I think a 16 in 1) and a
Lexar professional CF/SD card reader to work. The Inland would not
expose all of the slots (even with a card in it - LUN issue?) and the
Lexar was giving me errors about the device not accepting the address.
After a suggestion by Grant in tech support, I tried a SanDisk reader
and it works like a champ! It's a SanDisk ImageMate All in One. It
works fine under both TS Linux and Debian on a 7200 having done nothing
more than make sure USB support is enabled. On Debian (sarge), it just
worked. On TSLinux, I used the USB support script to enable USB
support, and then it just worked...
Steve
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