On Wednesday 15 November 2006 08:28, Boyan Tabakov wrote:
> I am not sure if you accomplish this by means of KDE,
but here is what I'd
> do to make it work:
> You have hal, right? There is a command line tool
called hal-device that
> lists all the devices recognized by hal that are
connected to the system.
> Type hal-device | less and look through the list when
your PDA is
> connected. Find the line that identifies it. You can
then right a simple
> daemon that monitors when this device is plugged and
make it show/hide your
> desktop icon. It ma look something like this:
>
>
> #!/bin/bash
>
> while true ; do
>
> if [ `hal-device | grep "identification string
goes here" | wc -l` -ge 1 ]
> then
> -f ~/Desktop/.My Hidden Icon &&
> mv ~/Desktop/.My Hidden Icon ~/Desktop/My Visible
Icon
> else
> -f ~/Desktop/My Visible Icon &&
> mv ~/Desktop/My Visible Icon ~/Desktop/.My Hidden
Icon
> fi
>
> sleep 5 # sleep for 5 seconds before attempting to
refresh
>
> done
>
>
> Just make sure the script is started when you launch
KDE, buy copying it to
> ~/.kde/Autostart
>
> There maybe are ways to detect the kernel notification
upon the PDA
> connect, but I don't know how to do that...
Thanks Boyan... that got me thinking. The solution I have
come up with is to
use a udev rule. When I plug in my PDA, a network interface
called usb0 is
created for it, so I created a file
/etc/udev/rules.d/85-PDA.rules
containing:
KERNEL=="usb0",
RUN+="/home/paul/bin/PDA"
and a /home/paul/bin/PDA script containing:
#! /bin/sh
case "$ACTION" in
"add")
cp /home/paul/PDA.desktop /home/paul/Desktop
;;
"remove")
rm -f /home/paul/Desktop/PDA.desktop
;;
esac
This needs a bit of polishing, but it seems to do what I
wanted.
Thanks again
--
Paul
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