Adding your user to dialout group only takes effect after you log out and log back in which is not practical for a live environment IIRC.
You can use something like the following for live environments:
sudo -g dialout chirpw
This gives the dialout group permission to chirpw program while running as the current user. But I don't see any advantage to doing that over plain "sudo chirpw" (what Jim recommended) unless you get X11/Wayland/Mir errors.
Tony ________________________________ From: chirp_users-bounces@intrepid.danplanet.com chirp_users-bounces@intrepid.danplanet.com on behalf of Glenn K0LNY glennervin@cableone.net Sent: Friday, May 22, 2020 12:57:34 PM To: Discussion of CHIRP chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com Subject: Re: [chirp_users] No USB Port Error
I wondered about that, but I have used this computer and this Chirp program to program other radios, but do you suppose the dialout thing needs to be run with a different cable? This is a live instance of Ubuntu and I already added Ubuntu as the user in dialout I am sure, because the CSV files for my other radios are there as well. That is what has me puzzled. Glenn ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jim Unroe" rock.unroe@gmail.com To: "Discussion of CHIRP" chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com Sent: Friday, May 22, 2020 12:51 PM Subject: Re: [chirp_users] No USB Port Error
On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 1:06 PM Glenn K0LNY glennervin@cableone.net wrote:
Hi, I just got a new used radio, a Kenwood TH-F6. So I plugged in the radio using a non-Kenwood cable and I went into "radio" and download from radio and selected my radio model and USB0 and I get the message: error no 2 cannot open tty/usb0 error cannot locate tty/USB0. or something similar. I have used this cable and that Ubuntu with Chirp in the past for my other radios, and other than different brands of radios, I have always been able to do this. I know a guy who has done this to this model using the Baofeng cable using a different software in Windows, not the Kenwood software, but one that they purchased. I don't recall the name, but I think it starts with an R. At any rate, I'd sooner buy a Kenwood cable than that other software and keep using Chirp. Hopefully I didn't get it mixed up with the Radioddity cable. I thought I had the right cable with the Radioddity when I sent it off. I don't know if they put the name of the associated radio on the cables, since I'm Blind. But any who, would this be an error for the wrong cable? Thanks. Glenn
Hi Glenn,
From what you are describing it sounds like you Linux user doen't have
permission to access the port. Either run CHIRP as root or as your Linus user to the dialout group.
I also have a Kenwood TH-F6a. CHIRP programs it in "live" mode.
Jim KC9HI _______________________________________________ chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users This message was sent to Glenn at glennervin@cableone.net To unsubscribe, send an email to chirp_users-unsubscribe@intrepid.danplanet.com
_______________________________________________ chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users This message was sent to Tony F at goldstar611@hotmail.com To unsubscribe, send an email to chirp_users-unsubscribe@intrepid.danplanet.com