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    KDE connect dosn't see any devices

    I have KDE connect on my laptop via 17.04 and the android app on my LG Aristo and neither device can see the other.
    Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

    http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

    #2
    Do they use a common LAN?

    Comment


      #3
      In my experience, it's a bit sketchy in picking up the initial connection and after that it's fine. So make sure you are as close to the Wi Fi antenna with your devices as possible.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Bings View Post
        In my experience, it's a bit sketchy in picking up the initial connection and after that it's fine. So make sure you are as close to the Wi Fi antenna with your devices as possible.
        Iput the Xfinity gateway right beside my laptop and still nothing and my smart phone can't see anything either.
        Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

        http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

        Comment


          #5
          I have no doubt that ModemManager is trying to connect. Open a konsole and issue
          dmesg | less
          and look for error msgs related to your wifi driver or the 802.11 listings.


          Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
          "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
          – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

          Comment


            #6
            I found my phone wasn't connected to my WI-FI! For some reason my lap top keeps loosing the pairing. Maybe connection manager is bugged for my computer or who knows but when I redo the pairing everything seems to work... Until it looses the phone again. Strange behavior.

            I just found this in my log:

            0.388195] PCI: Using host bridge windows from ACPI; if necessary, use "pci=nocrs" and report a bug * back to looking for wifi stuff.

            Another interesting line:

            0.440636] acpi PNP0A08:00: [Firmware Info]: MMCONFIG for domain 0000 [bus 00-3f] only partially covers this bridge
            Last edited by steve7233; May 21, 2017, 12:15 PM.
            Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

            http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

            Comment


              #7
              Are you trying to connect your phone to the web through your laptop? Or, are you trying to connect your phone to your laptop through KConnect?

              Why not just connect it directly, then it won't matter if the laptop is on or not.
              "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
              – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by GreyGeek View Post
                Are you trying to connect your phone to the web through your laptop? Or, are you trying to connect your phone to your laptop through KConnect?

                Why not just connect it directly, then it won't matter if the laptop is on or not.
                through Connect.
                Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

                http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

                Comment


                  #9
                  KDE Connect is not super stable here, but works 80%-ish of the time. Do you have a firewall up? For ufw, add these rules:

                  Code:
                  sudo ufw allow 1714:1764/udp
                  sudo ufw allow 1714:1764/tcp
                  sudo ufw reload
                  About once a week or so , I have to re-pair. They seem to "forget" each other every so often.

                  Please Read Me

                  Comment


                    #10
                    No Firewall. I wounder if connection manger might be part of the problem as it keeps connecting to the wrong WI fi.
                    Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

                    http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I just manually connected and kdeconnect gives the following error:
                      Code:
                      Unable to save bookmarks in /home/vince/.locale/share/user-places.xbel is not writable. This error message will only be shown once. The cause of the error needs to be fixed as quickly as possible, which most likely is a full hard drive.
                      vince@vince-HP-Pavilion-dv6-Notebook-PC:~$ df
                      Filesystem     1K-blocks     Used Available Use% Mounted on
                      udev             1964388        0   1964388   0% /dev
                      tmpfs             397448     6488    390960   2% /run
                      /dev/sda6       19092136  5426476  12672792  30% /
                      tmpfs            1987224        0   1987224   0% /dev/shm
                      tmpfs               5120        4      5116   1% /run/lock
                      tmpfs            1987224        0   1987224   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                      /dev/sda5      167166488 43402664 115202572  28% /home
                      /dev/sda8       28704676    45196  27178316   1% /usr/local
                      /dev/sda7       38183144  1261712  34952080   4% /var
                      tmpfs             397444        0    397444   0% /run/user/119
                      tmpfs             397444       12    397432   1% /run/user/1000
                      vince@vince-HP-Pavilion-dv6-Notebook-PC:~$
                      Maybe it's because of the way I partitioned. Maybe it's trying to right using a bad path. Is there a way to system link it to the correct path?
                      Last edited by steve7233; May 22, 2017, 03:39 PM.
                      Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

                      http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

                      Comment


                        #12
                        What are the file permissions for /home/vince/.locale/share/user-places.xbel?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          You should turn on your ufw firewall.

                          /home/vince/.locale/share/user-places.xbel is not writable. This error message will only be shown once. The cause of the error needs to be fixed as quickly as possible, which most likely is a full hard drive.
                          WTF points out that user-places.xbel is either not owned by your or is read only. You need to fix that. It suggests that other files & directories of your home account may have incorrect ownership a/o permissions.

                          If it is read-only you'll need to
                          chattr +rw ....
                          if it is owned by root then you will need to
                          sudo chown yourname:yourname ...
                          Last edited by GreyGeek; May 22, 2017, 06:59 PM.
                          "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
                          – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by GreyGeek View Post
                            You should turn on your ufw firewall.

                            WTF points out that user-places.xbel is either not owned by your or is read only. You need to fix that. It suggests that other files & directories of your home account may have incorrect ownership a/o permissions.

                            If it is read-only you'll need to
                            chattr +rw ...
                            if it is owned by root then you will need to
                            sudo chown yourname:yourname ...
                            I suspect it is looking in the wrong place as I made several partitions.
                            vince@vince-HP-Pavilion-dv6-Notebook-PC:~$ df
                            Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
                            udev 1964412 0 1964412 0% /dev
                            tmpfs 397448 11480 385968 3% /run
                            /dev/sda6 19092136 5532884 12566384 31% /
                            tmpfs 1987224 20024 1967200 2% /dev/shm
                            tmpfs 5120 4 5116 1% /run/lock
                            tmpfs 1987224 0 1987224 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                            /dev/sda7 38183144 1301948 34911844 4% /var
                            /dev/sda5 167166488 71470104 87135132 46% /home
                            /dev/sda8 28704676 45196 27178316 1% /usr/local
                            tmpfs 397444 0 397444 0% /run/user/119
                            tmpfs 397444 20 397424 1% /run/user/1000
                            vince@vince-HP-Pavilion-dv6-Notebook-PC:~$
                            Do I need a system link or something?
                            Last edited by steve7233; May 25, 2017, 06:50 PM. Reason: I put my answer in the qute by mistake
                            Just to remind users and devs that Ubuntu and its flavors have a long way to go to be as usr friendly as they should be.

                            http://www.kubuntu.org/getkubuntu

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by steve7233 View Post
                              I suspect it is looking in the wrong place as I made several partitions.
                              vince@vince-HP-Pavilion-dv6-Notebook-PC:~$ df
                              Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
                              udev 1964412 0 1964412 0% /dev
                              tmpfs 397448 11480 385968 3% /run
                              /dev/sda6 19092136 5532884 12566384 31% /
                              tmpfs 1987224 20024 1967200 2% /dev/shm
                              tmpfs 5120 4 5116 1% /run/lock
                              tmpfs 1987224 0 1987224 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                              /dev/sda7 38183144 1301948 34911844 4% /var
                              /dev/sda5 167166488 71470104 87135132 46% /home
                              /dev/sda8 28704676 45196 27178316 1% /usr/local
                              tmpfs 397444 0 397444 0% /run/user/119
                              tmpfs 397444 20 397424 1% /run/user/1000
                              vince@vince-HP-Pavilion-dv6-Notebook-PC:~$
                              Do I need a system link or something?
                              The df command reveals nothing about the permission or ownership of the /home/vince/.locale/share/user-places.xbel file.
                              Paste the output of
                              vdir /home/vince/.locale/share/user-places.xbel
                              in your reply. It should tell us who owns that file and what its permissions are.

                              Also, why did you put /usr/local and /var on separate partitions? That is very wasteful of disk space. And what are you doing with geoclue? (ID = 119).
                              /dev/sda8 28704676 45196 27178316 1% /usr/local
                              /dev/sda7 38183144 1261712 34952080 4% /var
                              tmpfs 397444 0 397444 0% /run/user/119
                              Except for a swap file (when using EXT4, not Btrfs) or creating partitions on which to install additional distros, there is little gained by arbitrarily slicing up the HD space for various system subdirectories, and lots of space to lose, or the possibility of running out of space in a partition. Say you have a 500Gb HD and 8 Gb of RAM and you are going to install only one distro using EXT4 as the fs. You partition /dev/sda into /dev/sda1 using 490Gb and /dev/sda2 using 10Gb. You set "/" as the mount point for /dev/sda1 and format it using EXT4. You make /dev/sda2 the swap partition. It has to be as big or bigger than RAM to allow hibernation. The system files automatically use what ever space they need under / and that includes /home. If you create additional partitions and assign various root subdirectories to them you have to hope that you've assigned enough space so that you don't experience disk out of space errors for those subdirectories, OR, that you've assigned too much space to them and that space becomes wasted. Your account is put under /home as /home/youracctname and you have ownership and rw permission in youracctname and its subdirectories. If you mess with your home account files while running as root in a Konsole or with some GUI app you'll change the ownership of those files to root and possibly their permission as well.

                              Because you cannot write to user-places.xbel it suggests that either you've set the immutable setting or you've marked it as read only, or it is owned by root or some other user with an ID less than yours, which is 1000. Geoclue perhaps?
                              Last edited by GreyGeek; May 25, 2017, 10:14 PM.
                              "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
                              – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

                              Comment

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