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We might fight about the device with polling processes, or other
users who probe the device. Retry a few times if the other one goes
away in the meantime.
Based on a patch from Harald Hoyer.
Even when there is no medium in the drive, we should still check the
profiles supported by the drive. Otherwise we fail to detect things
like Blu-ray drives. See
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=600273
for more information.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Fix spelling in docbook comments, code comments, and a local variable
name. Thanks to "ispell -h" for docbook HTML and "scspell" for source
code.
Signed-off-by: Alan Jenkins <alan-jenkins@tuffmail.co.uk>
Instead of using multiple recursive Makefile.am files, use a single
Makefile.am that sets and builds all the basic suite of libraries and
binaries for udev. This reduces the number of files in the source tree, and
also reduces drastically the build time when using parallel-make.
With this setup, all the compile steps will be executed in parallel, and
just the linking stage will be (partially) serialised on the libraries
creation.
These are mostly dummy man pages, without real content, some even
outdated. None of these tools are part of any offered public interface,
and they should not pretend to be by offering a man page.
[...] running the command
`make maintainer-clean' should not delete `configure' even if
`configure' can be remade using a rule in the Makefile. More
generally, `make maintainer-clean' should not delete anything that
needs to exist in order to run `configure' and then begin to build
the program. This is the only exception; `maintainer-clean' should
delete everything else that can be rebuilt.
"Hello world!" linked against libselinux parses /proc/mounts and
whatever else on startup, even when the lib is not needed at all.
Not funny! Get rid of that thing where it's not absolutely needed.
None of these rules is supposed to be changed by users, so move
them out of /etc. Custom rules, and automatically generated rules
stay in /etc. All rules are still processed in lexical order,
regardless which directory they live in.
This is a 12 track audio CD with additional data session:
$ extras/cdrom_id/cdrom_id /dev/dvd
ID_CDROM=1
ID_CDROM_CD_R=1
ID_CDROM_CD_RW=1
ID_CDROM_DVD=1
ID_CDROM_DVD_R=1
ID_CDROM_DVD_RW=1
ID_CDROM_DVD_RAM=1
ID_CDROM_DVD_PLUS_R=1
ID_CDROM_DVD_PLUS_RW=1
ID_CDROM_DVD_PLUS_R_DL=1
ID_CDROM_MEDIA_CD=1
ID_CDROM_MEDIA_STATE=complete
ID_CDROM_MEDIA_HAS_AUDIO=1
ID_CDROM_MEDIA_SESSION_COUNT=2
ID_CDROM_MEDIA_TRACK_COUNT=13
ID_CDROM_MEDIA_SESSION_LAST_OFFSET=444508160