Burning a data CD

Asheville Joe josephj at main.nc.us
Thu Sep 11 01:09:54 EDT 2003


In the mean time, I found somewhere else to mount it and that worked.
I burned the CD.
Now I want to look at it from Linux.  I tried cd /mnt/cdrom and got an 
I/O error.
I ran X-CD-Roast and tell it to create a CD.  It then reads the CD and 
tells me the size is OK.  (Then, I quit without telling it to burn 
anything.)  But it doesn't let me look at the contents.   It took me a 
minute to figure out that all I had to do was open the CD door and close 
it again.  Then it "supermounted".

Totally cool!

Thank you very much!

Joe

Dave Andruczyk wrote:

>mkisofs -J -o cdimage.iso ~/Documents
>
> The above makes an ISO image of the ~/ (home dir) Documents folder.  the
>contents of the Documents folder will show up on the root directory of the
>cdrom..  The "-J" argument makes the cd image in joliet format which preserves
>long filenames for windoze...
>
>Before you burn it should mount the image you created and make sure it looks
>the way you want.  To do so, run "mount cdimage.iso /mnt/loop -oloop" (you
>should be root to do this..)  Make sure /mnt/loop exists (you could mount it
>anywhere,  but having /mnt/loop around is handy just for this purpose.)
>Everything under /mnt/loop will look exactly how the CD will after you burn it
>to a physical disc below.    After you're done checking the mounted image, cd
>out of the folder (/mnt/loop) to someplace else (home dir is a smart choice),
>make sure you unmount /mnt/loop (umount/mnt/loop) and then follow up with the
>burn command below...
>
>example:
>cdrecord -v -speed=(your CD burn speed), -data -dev=x,y,z (see below),
>cdimage.iso
>
>chaneg the speed line to use the speed at which you wantto write at,  I have a
>12x burner, so I use 12 here...  You can use lower numbers if you want. (like
>if you have media that isn't rated for the speed of your drive (4x rated media
>might wobble if you try to spin it at 12x and cause a coaster...)
>
>x,y,z are the SCSI port, ID, and LUN (logical unit number, usually 0 in 99% of
>most peoples systems)
>
>To find out what your burner is at, run "cdrecord -scanbus" the output will
>look similar to below:
>
>
>dave at shrapnel dave $ cdrecord -scanbus
>Cdrecord 2.01a14 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) Copyright (C) 1995-2003 Jörg Schilling
>Linux sg driver version: 3.1.24
>Using libscg version 'schily-0.7'
>scsibus0:
>        0,0,0     0) 'FUJITSU ' 'MAG3182L SUN18G ' '1111' Disk
>        0,1,0     1) *
>        0,2,0     2) 'FUJITSU ' 'MAG3182L SUN18G ' '1111' Disk
>        0,3,0     3) *
>        0,4,0     4) 'FUJITSU ' 'MAG3182L SUN18G ' '1111' Disk
>        0,5,0     5) *
>        0,6,0     6) *
>        0,7,0     7) *
>scsibus1:
>        1,0,0   100) *
>        1,1,0   101) *
>        1,2,0   102) *
>        1,3,0   103) *
>        1,4,0   104) 'GENERIC ' 'CRD-BP3         ' '1.03' Removable CD-ROM
>        1,5,0   105) 'CREATIVE' 'DVD-RAM RAM1216S' '1311' Removable CD-ROM
>        1,6,0   106) *
>        1,7,0   107) *
>
>
>My burner's "dev=" line would use 1 for "x", 4 for "y" and 0 for "z",  so for
>my system my command to burn the cd would be 
>
>cdrecord -v -speed=12 -data -dev=1,4,0 cdimage.iso
>
>If you have a drive that supports "BurnProof" or "BurnFree",  add
>"-driveropts=burnproof" after the "-data" part, if not don't add that..
>
>
>Your ID of your drive is probably different, adjust the above command to taste.
>
>It sounds like a lot as once,  but once you've done it a couple times, it boils
>down to two commands and is pretty easy from the command line. (I prefer this
>way over a gui, unless I'm burning an audio CD....)
>
>
>
>--- Asheville Joe <josephj at main.nc.us> wrote:
>  
>
>>I want to make a CDROM of everything in $HOME/Documents in a format that 
>>Windoze can read.   Individual files will all read in OOo or M$ Office.  
>>I've never done it before.  I need it to be recursive (handle 
>>subdirectories).  What's the easiest way to do this under Mandrake 9.1?
>>
>>I tried X-CD-Roast, and got as far as selecting the Documents directory, 
>>but couldn't figure out how to tell it to get all the files and 
>>subdirectories.
>>
>>Thanks.
>>
>>-------------------------------------
>>"Everything you've learned in school as 'obvious' becomes less and less
>>obvious as you begin to study the universe. For example, there are no solids
>>in the universe. There's not even a suggestion of a solid. There are no
>>absolute continuums. There are no surfaces. There are no straight lines."
>>--R. Buckminster Fuller (1895 - 1983)
>>
>>
>>    
>>
>
>
>=====
>Dave J. Andruczyk
>
>__________________________________
>Do you Yahoo!?
>Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free, easy-to-use web site design software
>http://sitebuilder.yahoo.com
>
>  
>

-- 

-------------------------------------
"In our obsession with antagonisms of the moment, we often forget how much unites all the members of humanity. Perhaps we need some outside, universal threat to make us realize this common bond. I occasionally think how quickly our differences would vanish if we were facing an alien threat from outside this world. And yet, I ask you, is not an alien force already among us?" --Ronald Reagan





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