Fedora patch resolved problem after doing podsleuth --rescan -- the patch ONLY applies to the console 'podsleuth' tool at this point, and is not believed to address the root of the problem:
<@abock|out> f) what I think *might* have happened
<@abock|out> is that when the console client gets patched, if you run --rescan,
it probably gets the shit merged into the HAL tree
<@abock|out> the *real bug* is that fedora and ubuntu aren't executing the HAL
callout to merge the stuff in the first place when teh device is
plugged in
<@abock|out> at the end of the day, the real bug, from what I can tell, is in
the distro
<@abock|out> those HAL's are not running the callout we install
<@abock|out> --rescan probably just fudges it
<@abock|out> bhale: the real code is in HalPopulator.cs
I am going to come back to this on Sunday -- the patch I mentioned is now in SVN, but we are going to keep digging to make sure we have a clean fix.
Fedora patch resolved problem after doing podsleuth --rescan -- the patch ONLY applies to the console 'podsleuth' tool at this point, and is not believed to address the root of the problem:
<@abock|out> f) what I think *might* have happened
<@abock|out> is that when the console client gets patched, if you run --rescan,
it probably gets the shit merged into the HAL tree
<@abock|out> the *real bug* is that fedora and ubuntu aren't executing the HAL
callout to merge the stuff in the first place when teh device is
plugged in
<@abock|out> at the end of the day, the real bug, from what I can tell, is in
the distro
<@abock|out> those HAL's are not running the callout we install
<@abock|out> --rescan probably just fudges it
<@abock|out> bhale: the real code is in HalPopulator.cs
I am going to come back to this on Sunday -- the patch I mentioned is now in SVN, but we are going to keep digging to make sure we have a clean fix.