Problems with USB Palm sync
Damian Wiest
dwiest at vailsys.com
Fri Oct 20 21:12:57 UTC 2006
On Thu, Oct 19, 2006 at 09:25:19AM -0400, Jonathan Arnold wrote:
[snip]
> Thanks for all your help here! When I first read this, I said to myself
> that
> it wouldn't help, that I've tried all these various permutations. Imagine
> my
> surprise when it *did* work! I will post a complete followup on my blog, but
> I did have to load the 'uvisor' driver to get this process to work:
>
> # kldload uvisor
>
> Which I'm sure I played with before, but now it works. Now I am just
> struggling
> to get my Palm, which was recently hard-reset, back to where it was a few
> months
> ago. I have the data on my hard drive, but I can't seem to figure out the
> magical
> incantation to move it over to the Palm. It is in JPilot, but I haven't
> quite
> gotten that to work smoothly.
Be extremely careful with this. I was in the exact same situation and
managed to wipe out my local Palm data doing a restore. My phone
(actually all of the Palm devices I've owned) tends to crash pretty
frequently and require hard resets, which wipes out the username and all
stored data. In order for J-Pilot to sync with the device, it's going
to want the usernames to match between the two. Do _not_ use the
File->Restore_Handheld command in J-Pilot to reset the username on the
phone. I had an older version of J-Pilot installed and when I did this
(only selecting to restore Preferences) and watched as my local data was
replaced, not merged, with the data from the phone. Instead, use
File->Install_User.
I'd recommend that you sync devices daily and also keep backups of the
Palm files on your computer. Also, keeping hardcopy backups is a good
idea.
> >I know I shouldn't be running the apps as root, but I haven't bothered
> >to configure /etc/devd.conf and /etc/devfs.rules on my laptop.
>
> I've played with this a bit and it is a little weird. Again, I hope to
> have a full
> report on my blog some day real soon.
>
> And thanks for your (and Anish's) help. Learned a lot about run-time
> devices!
>
> --
> Jonathan Arnold (mailto:jdarnold at buddydog.org)
> Daemon Dancing in the Dark, a FreeBSD weblog:
> http://freebsd.amazingdev.com/blog/
>
> UNIX is user-friendly. It's just a bit picky about who its friends are.
I'm glad I could be of assistance.
-Damian
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