 MaxoYour tax dollars at work.Premium,VIP join:2002-11-04 Tallahassee, FL | reply to unibroker
Re: adb umount problemssaid by unibroker:root@android:/ # su umount /sdcard/ Unknown id: umount 1|root@android:/ # su umount Unknown id: umount 1|root@android:/ # su mount /sdcard/ sh: /sdcard/: Permission denied
Every single one of those commands where executed on your phone, not your computer. -- "Padre, nobody said war was fun now bowl!" - Sherman T Potter
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 1 edit | I stand corrected. I was at my pc. Now I'm getting a clearer picture of what's going on.
I'm still stuck as to why I can't umount from my phone's sdcard. |
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 MaxoYour tax dollars at work.Premium,VIP join:2002-11-04 Tallahassee, FL | From the adb shell just type "exit" without the quotes to break the adb connection. After that you should be able to cleanly unmount using Nautilus. |
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| The device never shows up in Nautilus. Before it did and that was how I "Safely Removed Device". How can the device be listed in a bash terminal but not in Nautilus.
This thing is maddening. Before when I could see the device in Nautilus and would push to the sdcard, I could never find the file I pushed. Now when I can see the file I pushed the device has disappeared from nautilus so I can't safely unmount! Obviously this is user-error. Maybe that's why Apple makes a locked bootloader for customers like me. |
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 MaxoYour tax dollars at work.Premium,VIP join:2002-11-04 Tallahassee, FL | said by unibroker:Maybe that's why Apple makes a locked bootloader for customers like me. People like you are the best. Those who try, fail, learn, and then succeed are the best. |
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