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Diffstat (limited to 'www/hacking.html')
-rw-r--r-- | www/hacking.html | 8 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/www/hacking.html b/www/hacking.html index bf54f222..4cc1ca6b 100644 --- a/www/hacking.html +++ b/www/hacking.html @@ -568,7 +568,7 @@ typedefs.</p> <h2 id="udev">The moving target that is udev.</h2> <p>The Linux udev system has been prone to change out from under us, -breaking our hotplug support for USB receivers. Accordongly, here's a +breaking our hotplug support for USB receivers. Accordingly, here's a short guide to verifying that the different pieces are working correctly, with indications of where to troubleshoot on failure.<p> @@ -584,9 +584,9 @@ like a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mini-DIN_connector#6-pin">6-pin mini-DIN connector</a>, with a component housing between that and the USB plug, be aware that the serial converter may live in that housing and you have to unplug the <b>entire cable</b> from your computer, not -just separate the halves of the mini-DIN connector. If there os no +just separate the halves of the mini-DIN connector. If there is no such joint, it may be that your receiver is defective or dead. The -leatt likely failure is for the USB hardware on the PC side to be +least likely failure is for the USB hardware on the PC side to be buggy.</p> <p>Next thing to try is watching the hotplug events in your system logs. @@ -618,7 +618,7 @@ udev rules may not be installed correctly. Or the handler they call may be unable to run for some reason; it has two layers, a shellscript wrapper around a little Python program that does the real work. You may have to figure out where the udev log messages go on your system -an use udevadm(8) to crank up the log level until you can see what's +and use udevadm(8) to crank up the log level until you can see what's going on.</p> <p>If your GPS uses an unusual serial-to-USB converter, the GPSD rules |