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Re: Canon A520 not detected in Testing, but works in Unstable



H.S. wrote:
> $> sudo fdisk /dev/sdb1
>
> Command (m for help): p
>
> Disk /dev/sdb1: 512 MB, 512110080 bytes
> 16 heads, 62 sectors/track, 1008 cylinders
> Units = cylinders of 992 * 512 = 507904 bytes
> Disk identifier: 0x73657250
>
> This doesn't look like a partition table
> Probably you selected the wrong device.
>
>      Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
> /dev/sdb1p1   ?     1884648     3664955   883032122   74  Unknown
> Partition 1 has different physical/logical beginnings (non-Linux?):
>      phys=(288, 115, 35) logical=(1884647, 13, 32)
> Partition 1 has different physical/logical endings:
>      phys=(82, 111, 32) logical=(3664954, 8, 41)
> Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
> /dev/sdb1p2   ?     1833514     1840216     3324218+  6f  Unknown
> Partition 2 has different physical/logical beginnings (non-Linux?):
>      phys=(66, 107, 32) logical=(1833513, 9, 57)
> Partition 2 has different physical/logical endings:
>      phys=(288, 111, 52) logical=(1840215, 10, 47)
> Partition 2 does not end on cylinder boundary.
> /dev/sdb1p3               4           4           0   70  DiskSecure
> Multi-Boot
> Partition 3 has different physical/logical beginnings (non-Linux?):
>      phys=(0, 0, 0) logical=(3, 1, 35)
> Partition 3 has different physical/logical endings:
>      phys=(0, 0, 0) logical=(3, 1, 34)
> Partition 3 does not end on cylinder boundary.
> /dev/sdb1p4         1135261     3300083  1073751719+  42  SFS
> Partition 4 has different physical/logical beginnings (non-Linux?):
>      phys=(73, 0, 0) logical=(1135260, 15, 46)
> Partition 4 has different physical/logical endings:
>      phys=(329, 77, 2) logical=(3300082, 15, 60)
> Partition 4 does not end on cylinder boundary.
>
> Partition table entries are not in disk order
>
> Command (m for help):
>   

I've seen weird output like this is devices in which there are no
partitions, you mount the whole device: mount /dev/sdb /mnt/camera.
Worth giving a try.

-- 
The problem with any unwritten law is that you don't know where to go
to erase it.
		-- Glaser and Way

Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
eduardo@kalinowski.com.br
http://move.to/hpkb


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