2016-05-01T23:34:49 Unable to establish:
+ ZWO CCD
Please ensure the device is connected and powered on.
2016-05-01T23:34:44 INDI services started on port 7625. Please connect devices.
2016-05-01T23:34:44 Starting INDI services...
Device is connected ... I believe it is powered on simply by being connected.
The 'Connect' button stays greyed out/disabled, so there's nothing to click.
I'll try updating to the latest Ekos. Is there anything in the VM settings I should adjust?
If under a VM, make sure the camera is powered and connected and also visible to the VM before you start Ekos. Select the camera from the USB list in Virtual Box and it must have a check-mark next to it.
Thanks. First, here are the lines from dmesg re: the connected camera:
[ 7439.424993] usb 4-2: new SuperSpeed USB device number 6 using xhci_hcd
[ 7439.437002] usb 4-2: New USB device found, idVendor=03c3, idProduct=120e
[ 7439.437019] usb 4-2: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0
[ 7439.437022] usb 4-2: Product: ASI120MC-S
[ 7439.437024] usb 4-2: Manufacturer: ZWO
I can only presume that all this looks normal.
I have set up a USB filter in the VirtualBox Settings, here is what I've put there (drawing on the dmesg information):
Name: ZWO
Vendor ID: 03c3
Product ID: 120e
Revision:
Manufacturer: ZWO
Product: ASI120MC-S
Serial No: 0
Port:
Remote: No
Does this look reasonable?
Still can't connect to the camera. Sorry to be a pain.
Ok, I tried to connected to ASI120MC in Ekos VM and it connected fine. However, there was a problem with capture. I checked on my machine and the same problem appeared. I updated to the latest ASI SDK and now it works OK. However, it should be detected without problems in the Ekos VM.
At any rate, you can wait tomorrow to get the update in the PPA and see if that helps. Under some circumstances, you also have to install the drivers on the host OS. So if you're using Windows, install ZWO Windows drivers.
well, perhaps it is a permission issue. Copy the /lib/udev/rules.d/99-asi.rules file (from the VM) to where ever Slackware stores the udev rules files and restart. That might make a difference.
OK, I've established that Ekos is not able to see the attached USB device.
Installing the ZWO drivers on the host machine seems the logical next step. Will try that tonight when I get home from work.
If that fails, I can try installed kstars-bleeding (I've seen instructions how to install this on Ubuntu but not Debian, but since the former is based on the latter, it shouldn't be too hard) and see if I can make it all work without a VM. Or I guess I could replace Debian with Ubuntu ... it's important to me to get this working.