I haven't tested this out yet, but I don't see why it shouldn't work. Edit /etc/system.d/bluetooth.conf by adding the following lines before <policy at_console="true">: [code] <policy group="btuser"> <allow send_destination="org.bluez"/> <allow send_interface="org.bluez.Agent"/> </policy> [/code] Then create the group btuser and add yourself to it. Restart dbus or your computer. You should probably then be able to pair as yourself. As a note, I don't know if you need the send_interface as well, but I assume you do. MAQ. On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 2:08 PM, Thomas Bächler <thomas@archlinux.org>wrote:
Dieter Plaetinck schrieb:
I have a system where everything is up to date, bluez is installed etc. the configs are all pretty much default. I did need to enable HID2HCI_ENABLE="true" in /etc/conf.d/bluetooth otherwise the bluetoothd daemon would abort immediately after startup ( ? )
Your bluetooth dongle shows in the system as a HID device. This allows operating systems that are not bluetooth-aware (or even the bootloader) to use a bluetooth keyboard or mouse. hid2hci switches your bluetooth dongle to HCI mode, so you have full bluetooth functionality.
I've never had such a dongle before.
ERROR:dbus.proxies:Introspect error on org.bluez:/:
dbus.exceptions.DBusException: org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.AccessDenied: Rejected send message, 2 matched rules; type="method_call", sender=":1.33" (uid=1000 pid=5982 comm="/usr/bin/python /usr/bin/blueman-manager ") interface="org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable" member="Introspect" error name="(unset)" requested_reply=0 destination="org.bluez" (uid=0 pid=4642 comm="/usr/sbin/bluetoothd "))
This error is different from the one we had on the weekend. Probably because none of us thought about "ps ax|grep bluetoothd"
do i need to be in some kind of group or something? There was no post
install message, nor info about this on the wiki page ( http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Bluetooth)
I still think this is some dbus permission stuff, but that is voodoo for me.
2b) if I run blueman-manager as root I can pair (hooray).
But actually I don't want to run stuff as root, nor do I want to use the bloatware that is blueman-manager.
You only need to pair once, so you don't need root for now. However, it would be nice to do the next pairing without it.