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Operating Systems Linux Debian Write permission for USB device Post 302545259 by snorkack59 on Sunday 7th of August 2011 09:32:49 PM
Old 08-07-2011
Hi Yazu,

The link you supplied is interesting. I need to study it more to see if it solves my problem. I am still not sure what group to use. The plugdev group is the only one that mentions USB but according to the pmount man page it is for storage devices. It tries to figure out a filesystem type. The logic programmer does not use a filesystem. It has an embedded controller that needs to connect directly to the application program.

Thanks for the help.
Best regards,
Fred
 

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SND_UAUDIO(4)						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 					     SND_UAUDIO(4)

NAME
snd_uaudio -- USB audio device driver SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines in your kernel configuration file: device sound device usb device snd_uaudio Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): snd_uaudio_load="YES" DESCRIPTION
The snd_uaudio driver provides support for USB audio class devices. A USB audio device consists of a number of components: input terminals (e.g. USB digital input), output terminals (e.g. speakers), and a num- ber of units in between (e.g. volume control). Refer to the 'USB Audio Class Specification' for more information. SEE ALSO
sound(4), usb(4) USB Audio Class Specifications, http://www.usb.org/developers/devclass_docs/. HISTORY
The snd_uaudio driver first appeared in FreeBSD 4.7. AUTHORS
This manual page was adopted from NetBSD 1.6 and modified for FreeBSD by Hiten Pandya <hmp@FreeBSD.org>. BUGS
The PCM framework in FreeBSD, as of this writing, does not handle device un-registrations in a properly abstracted manner, i.e., a detach request is refused by the PCM framework if the device is in use. For USB and supposedly other detach-able busses, it is necessary to allow the device un-registration to complete successfully, otherwise the driver leaves wild pointers to invalid data structures and thus leading to a panic. BSD
December 15, 2005 BSD
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