Hi, I have an fc18 box that I use to mount my Samsung Galaxy S4 SPH-L720 to manage files.
It worked fine with my S3, but now with the S4, every time I connect it, it creates a directory similar to /tmp/simple-mtpfs-r1ZApu with the images from the Camera directory on my phone until the filesystem fills up completely (50G root).
It looks like many files are duplicated, because I don't even have 10G worth of pictures on the phone. The files look like "010037f1903cd1a154f69bd11897ad5c656d854f" and contain actual JPEG pictures.
After unmounting the filesystem, the contents of the directory is eventually removed.
What is the cause of this?
Thanks, Alex
On 12/04/2013 06:17 PM, Alex wrote:
It looks like many files are duplicated, because I don't even have 10G worth of pictures on the phone. The files look like "010037f1903cd1a154f69bd11897ad5c656d854f" and contain actual JPEG pictures.
After unmounting the filesystem, the contents of the directory is eventually removed.
What is the cause of this?
I'm only guessing, but it sounds like it's downloading everything on your phone each time you connect, even if you've already downloaded them. Is there a reason that you never remove the files from your phone, or is it just more convenient for you that way?
On 12/05/2013 03:17 AM, Alex wrote:
Hi, I have an fc18 box that I use to mount my Samsung Galaxy S4 SPH-L720 to manage files.
It worked fine with my S3, but now with the S4, every time I connect it, it creates a directory similar to /tmp/simple-mtpfs-r1ZApu with the images from the Camera directory on my phone until the filesystem fills up completely (50G root).
It looks like many files are duplicated, because I don't even have 10G worth of pictures on the phone. The files look like "010037f1903cd1a154f69bd11897ad5c656d854f" and contain actual JPEG pictures.
After unmounting the filesystem, the contents of the directory is eventually removed.
What is the cause of this?
I'd guess, you've hit this bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=971878
Yet another case which demonstrates why having /TmpOnTmpFS is a mistake.
Ralf