Hi All
Has anyone been successful in using the obexftp package to work with their Nokia N72 models? I can see the phone in the browser, connect to the phone, but I can not get it to display any data!
Now I know that Nokia, pretty much like ATI, is a pain when it comes to good integration with linux, but none the less, has anyone been able to get this to work?
thanks, Rogue
Rogue wrote:
Has anyone been successful in using the obexftp package to work with their Nokia N72 models? I can see the phone in the browser, connect to the phone, but I can not get it to display any data!
The same happens with my Nokia 6670. I'm assuming it is because my phone is seen as a modem rather than a storage device. The same may be the case with yours.
I get the following in /var/log/messages whenever I connect it using a Nokia DKU-2 USB cable.
Jul 15 19:37:59 marvin kernel: usb 1-2: new full speed USB device using ohci_hcd and address 6 Jul 15 19:37:59 marvin kernel: usb 1-2: configuration #1 chosen from 1 choice Jul 15 19:37:59 marvin kernel: cdc_acm 1-2:1.5: ttyACM0: USB ACM device
I'm getting an access denied error trying to serve the Fedora 7 DVD under apache 2.2.3.... I'm trying to set up for an http install. Any ideas?
Michael Smith wrote:
I'm getting an access denied error trying to serve the Fedora 7 DVD under apache 2.2.3.... I'm trying to set up for an http install. Any ideas?
Works for me out of the box. I'm using 2.2.4. The apache homepage says that large file support was added in this release.
Also, please don't reply to a previous message from the list to start a new topic. It messes up the threading and shows the message as part of a previously ongoing topic.
On Sun, 2007-07-15 at 11:33 -0400, Michael Smith wrote:
I'm getting an access denied error trying to serve the Fedora 7 DVD under apache 2.2.3.... I'm trying to set up for an http install. Any ideas?
The disc, itself, or the ISO that you can burn a disc from? Where on the directory tree are you serving from? What's the directory and file permissions?
SELinux might be your problem if you're not serving from the usual webserving locations.
I've mounted the ISO and created a symlink to the root directory of my htdocs - I have read that SELinux would have a problem unless I "setenforce 0", but I am serving this off of a SUSE 10.2 box.
I'm trying to upgrade a machine without a DVD drive and wanted to serve the iso from inside my network.
On Mon, 2007-07-16 at 12:25 +0930, Tim wrote:
On Sun, 2007-07-15 at 11:33 -0400, Michael Smith wrote:
I'm getting an access denied error trying to serve the Fedora 7 DVD under apache 2.2.3.... I'm trying to set up for an http install. Any ideas?
The disc, itself, or the ISO that you can burn a disc from? Where on the directory tree are you serving from? What's the directory and file permissions?
SELinux might be your problem if you're not serving from the usual webserving locations.
-- (This box runs FC5, my others run FC4 & FC6, in case that's important to the thread.)
Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.
On Mon, 2007-07-16 at 08:04 -0400, Michael Smith wrote:
I've mounted the ISO and created a symlink to the root directory of my htdocs - I have read that SELinux would have a problem unless I "setenforce 0", but I am serving this off of a SUSE 10.2 box.
SELinux affects the system you're running from, disallowing certain file accesses. If you had issues with it, you can disable SELinux protection of the HTTP server, without disabling it system-wide. You might have to do that, unless you mount the disc with appropriate HTTP serving SELinux contexts applied. Without proper contexts, the files can't be served out over HTTP. This is a SELinux issue, whether it's Fedora or SUSE, but I have no experience in configuring it on SUSE.
And rather than symlinking, which brings its own issues with webserving, I'd mount the disc on the /var/www/html directory as its mount point. Or onto a subdirectory if you have other things in /var/www/html that you want to serve.
Michael Smith wrote:
I've mounted the ISO and created a symlink to the root directory of my htdocs - I have read that SELinux would have a problem unless I "setenforce 0", but I am serving this off of a SUSE 10.2 box.
I'm trying to upgrade a machine without a DVD drive and wanted to serve the iso from inside my network.
Check if you Apache installation allows symlinks. What I did was create a /var/www/html/fedora directory and use that as the mount point to loop mount the .iso. It worked fine for me.
Mikkel
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Hi Vivek,
Vivek J. Patankar wrote:
Rogue wrote:
Has anyone been successful in using the obexftp package to work with their Nokia N72 models? I can see the phone in the browser, connect to the phone, but I can not get it to display any data!
The same happens with my Nokia 6670. I'm assuming it is because my phone is seen as a modem rather than a storage device. The same may be the case with yours.
I get the following in /var/log/messages whenever I connect it using a Nokia DKU-2 USB cable.
Jul 15 19:37:59 marvin kernel: usb 1-2: new full speed USB device using ohci_hcd and address 6 Jul 15 19:37:59 marvin kernel: usb 1-2: configuration #1 chosen from 1 choice Jul 15 19:37:59 marvin kernel: cdc_acm 1-2:1.5: ttyACM0: USB ACM device
I do not think the issue is that the phone is seen as a modem. It would certainly be the case if i was connecting my phone via cable. But since I use obexftp over bluetooth, it shouldn't matter to the system what the device looks like. Because, to the system, the phone is a device that supports the bluetooth OBEX FTP profile!
Now having said that, I would also like to mention that IMO Nokia support for standards is pretty sad!
None the less, I have been trying to get other things working and hence haven't given this issue much thought. If you do manage to find a solution, that would be great.
later, Rogue