Oops... the one thing I did change other than adding the tabs is that: I check for /sys/block/fd0...BarryK wrote:Floppy drive not showing? ....aaargh! I just fixed it for someone else.
Tabbed Pmount
- Dougal
- Posts: 2502
- Joined: Wed 19 Oct 2005, 13:06
- Location: Hell more grotesque than any medieval woodcut
I've updated "pmount3" in the original post.
Changes:
- fixed all high-partition-number bugs (including the size)
- fixed ordering of partitions inside device frame (was backwards)
- added support for exotic partition types (assuming probepart sees them)
Changes:
- fixed all high-partition-number bugs (including the size)
- fixed ordering of partitions inside device frame (was backwards)
- added support for exotic partition types (assuming probepart sees them)
What's the ugliest part of your body?
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Pmount3 - revised
Dear Dougal,
I get the following error with the revised pmount3:
Any idea why?
With kind regards,
vovchik
I get the following error with the revised pmount3:
Code: Select all
./pmount3
Killing old window
./pmount3: line 782: 16229 Terminated yaf-splash -font "8x16" -outline 0 -margin 4 -bg orange -text "Puppy Drive Mounter
Please wait, probing hardware..."
** ERROR **: gtkdialog: Error in line 21, near token '</notebook>': syntax error
aborting...
root$ [~/my-applications/bin/test/puppy-scripts]->
With kind regards,
vovchik
It's an error in the GTK syntax, which appears to be output to:
/tmp/pmountdlg.txt
mine is this:
I'm reviewing the output from pmount2 and it's a bit different. Something isn't nesting correctly in the loops I think.
/tmp/pmountdlg.txt
mine is this:
Code: Select all
<window title="Pmount Puppy Drive Mounter "icon-name="gtk-harddisk">
<vbox>
<text use-markup="true">
<label>"<b>DO NOT REMOVE MOUNTED MEDIA</b>"</label></text>
<notebook labels="sdb|sda|hda|cdroms">
<vbox><frame Drive: Maxtor 6 Y160P0 >
<hbox>
<text><label>"/dev/sdb2
51.1G ext3"</label></text>
<button>
<input file>/usr/local/lib/X11/pixmaps/hd24red.xpm</input>
<action>echo 'EXIT=/dev/sdb2_XXX_RED'</action>
</button>
</hbox> </notebook>
<hbox>
<button><input file stock="gtk-refresh"></input><label>REFRESH</label>
<action>echo 'EXIT=REFRESH'</action>
</button>
<button><input file stock="gtk-quit"></input><label>QUIT</label></button>
</hbox>
</vbox>
</window>
pmount3_1
Dear Dougal and Barry,
It works like a charm now on my system (version 3.1). Thanks to both of you for this excellent utility. One perhaps trivial question, though: why use yaf-script now when that same function was accomplished by gtkmessage in previous versions? yaf-script is uglier than gtxmessage (which can display antialiased fonts whereas yaf dislplays ugly X fonts) but it does have a nice clock function if you are waiting for some other process to finish. Just wondering...
With kind regards,
vovchik
It works like a charm now on my system (version 3.1). Thanks to both of you for this excellent utility. One perhaps trivial question, though: why use yaf-script now when that same function was accomplished by gtkmessage in previous versions? yaf-script is uglier than gtxmessage (which can display antialiased fonts whereas yaf dislplays ugly X fonts) but it does have a nice clock function if you are waiting for some other process to finish. Just wondering...
With kind regards,
vovchik
- Dougal
- Posts: 2502
- Joined: Wed 19 Oct 2005, 13:06
- Location: Hell more grotesque than any medieval woodcut
Re: pmount3_1
That is a matter for philosophical debate... I find yaf-splash pretty ugly, but apparently Barry prefers it.vovchik wrote:One perhaps trivial question, though: why use yaf-script now when that same function was accomplished by gtkmessage in previous versions?
What's the ugliest part of your body?
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Great work!!
All it needed was this one line in probepart at line 63:
just before this comment:
#for compatibility with old probepart from antonio gallo...
All it needed was this one line in probepart at line 63:
Code: Select all
[ "$FSTYPE" = "unknown" ] && if [ "`disktype /dev/$DEVICE | grep 'HFS Plus'`" = "HFS Plus file system" ];then
FSTYPE="hfsplus"
fi
#for compatibility with old probepart from antonio gallo...
- Attachments
-
- pmount-hfsplus-small.png
- pmount mounting hfsplus filesystem for the first time!
- (24.28 KiB) Downloaded 838 times
- BarryK
- Puppy Master
- Posts: 9392
- Joined: Mon 09 May 2005, 09:23
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
- Contact:
Note, the probepart-bk4 posted earlier by me is way out of date. The latest probepart and probedisk are in 2.17alpha. Okay, attached here too:
- Attachments
-
- put-into-sbin-dir.tar.gz
- (2.86 KiB) Downloaded 445 times
thanks Barry. you saved me a couple reboots. my wireless doesn't work (same as kirk's wife's laptop) and i have to keep reboot 2.17 anytime i want to test and then booting back into 2.16 to post, anyway...
same results. just throw that code in (it's about line 65). I'll attach it.
btw, mut sees it when mounted.
same results. just throw that code in (it's about line 65). I'll attach it.
btw, mut sees it when mounted.
- Attachments
-
- mut-hfsplus-small.png
- (19.95 KiB) Downloaded 863 times
-
- probepart.gz
- (1.38 KiB) Downloaded 464 times
Barry, any thoughts on making puppy support hfsplus at boot up and shutdown?
that would really help puppy "Rule the Day"!
intel mac users would dig it also.
the module is pretty small for initrd, ~80k I think from memory.
probepart is used at shutdown to find the parts isn't it?
i can't remember a thing about how the boot up script finds them.
that would really help puppy "Rule the Day"!
intel mac users would dig it also.
the module is pretty small for initrd, ~80k I think from memory.
probepart is used at shutdown to find the parts isn't it?
i can't remember a thing about how the boot up script finds them.
Pmount3
Dougal, I installed pmount3.
whenever I want to mount CD driver, I have to change the tab from hda to cdroms then click on the CD icon. That's okay. But as you know pmount refreshes once you mount something and this time it again opens up in hda tab. If I want to (and I usually do) view the contents of the cdrom I have to change the tab once again. and then click on the Rox button.
can we change this? If I mount cdrom it open in the cdrom tab once it refreshes?
Taha Selim
whenever I want to mount CD driver, I have to change the tab from hda to cdroms then click on the CD icon. That's okay. But as you know pmount refreshes once you mount something and this time it again opens up in hda tab. If I want to (and I usually do) view the contents of the cdrom I have to change the tab once again. and then click on the Rox button.
can we change this? If I mount cdrom it open in the cdrom tab once it refreshes?
Taha Selim
- BarryK
- Puppy Master
- Posts: 9392
- Joined: Mon 09 May 2005, 09:23
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
- Contact:
Ideally, Jesses /usr/lib/mut/bin/guess_fstype should be extended to recognise hfsplus filesystems.John Doe wrote:Barry, any thoughts on making puppy support hfsplus at boot up and shutdown?
that would really help puppy "Rule the Day"!
intel mac users would dig it also.
the module is pretty small for initrd, ~80k I think from memory.
probepart is used at shutdown to find the parts isn't it?
i can't remember a thing about how the boot up script finds them.
One problem with your modification to probepart is that 'disktype' will run everytime, for all partitions that are 'unknown' -- there could be a few of these. disktype is a bit slow.
What about 'fdisk -l'? -- does it identify a hfsplus f.s.?
-- the problem is, fdisk identifies the partition type, but that doesn't mean the partition has the correct f.s. in it.
The initial ramdisk has its own slightly modified version of probepart, called probepart_init. See /initrd/sbin.
- Dougal
- Posts: 2502
- Joined: Wed 19 Oct 2005, 13:06
- Location: Hell more grotesque than any medieval woodcut
Re: Pmount3
Yes, I thought of that when I first implemented the tabs.tahaselim wrote:pmount refreshes once you mount something and this time it again opens up in hda tab. If I want to (and I usually do) view the contents of the cdrom I have to change the tab once again. and then click on the Rox button.
I don't know of a way to have a certain tab selected when you start, so I can't change that.
As for the Rox button, Pmount used to not have that, instead opening Rox automatically when the partition was mounted. This seems to have changed at some stage...
What's the ugliest part of your body?
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
- Dougal
- Posts: 2502
- Joined: Wed 19 Oct 2005, 13:06
- Location: Hell more grotesque than any medieval woodcut
I'll have another look at the gtkdialog examples, but as far as I know there's no option of a default tab.tahaselim wrote:there Must be a way of defining a default tab, recording the tab number as the default while mounting a partition would solve the issue.
What's the ugliest part of your body?
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Re: Pmount3
Yep. I requested that change way back, so that you didn't have to umount/mount to get a Rox window open in the event you closed it while the partition was still mounted. This was considered a usability feature for Window$ refugees who had enough trouble understanding the whole mount/umount process, much less finding the mounted partition contents in Rox.Dougal wrote:As for the Rox button, Pmount used to not have that, instead opening Rox automatically when the partition was mounted. This seems to have changed at some stage...
[i]Actions speak louder than words ... and they usually work when words don't![/i]
SIP:whodo@proxy01.sipphone.com; whodo@realsip.com
SIP:whodo@proxy01.sipphone.com; whodo@realsip.com
- Dougal
- Posts: 2502
- Joined: Wed 19 Oct 2005, 13:06
- Location: Hell more grotesque than any medieval woodcut
Re: Pmount3
But that was one stage back, when there was a Rob button and the window opened automatically, wasn't it?WhoDo wrote:I requested that change way back, so that you didn't have to umount/mount to get a Rox window open in the event you closed it while the partition was still mounted. This was considered a usability feature for Window$ refugees who had enough trouble understanding the whole mount/umount process, much less finding the mounted partition contents in Rox.
The problem now is that rox only opens from that button.
I looked again and there doesn't seem to be a way of selecting a tab in gtkdialog.
What's the ugliest part of your body?
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Some say your nose
Some say your toes
But I think it's your mind
Re: Pmount3
Dougal what do you think if we gather every secondary storage device in the first tab and show HD's in the second or third tab.Dougal wrote: But that was one stage back, when there was a Rob button and the window opened automatically, wasn't it?
The problem now is that rox only opens from that button.
I looked again and there doesn't seem to be a way of selecting a tab in gtkdialog.
First tab will include : Cdrom-Dvd, and USB (maybe Floppy, I doubt if somebody still uses one)
Second Tab : HDD drives
etc.
I know this time mounting HDD's will be a problem but its more likely that a user would like to mount a CD or a flash disk and view the contents than mounting HDD every now and then.
Taha Selim