On 6 Sep 2001, Rick Green wrote:
Thanks. I pulled your .rpm. Did you build it a while ago, for an earlier release of SuSE? I noticed that it overlayed parts of three SuSE rpms, but not entirely replaced them. So I used the -replacefiles option in order to keep the /usr/doc/packages/... stuff that I would have lost by uninstalling the SuSE 7.2 rpms first...
No, I'm using SuSE 7.2. The RPM was compiled using gcc 2.95.3 and glibc 2.2.2 (SuSE defaults). The GPG sig was created using gpg 1.0.6. The reasons you get errors is because SuSE creates a RPM for each tool: cdrecord.rpm, mkisofs.rpm, cdda2wav.rpm, etc. Joerg Schilling distributes his 'cdrtools' package with everything in one set, and so I have stuck with that method. So, check if you still have the following installed: mkisofs, cdrecord, cdda2wav, etc. by "rpm -qa | grep packagename".
I got Xcdroast to start up as root. It found both CD drives, and setting up an initial configuration seemed intuitive. However, when I put an audio CD in the CD-ROM drive, and selected 'duplicate CD', the program hung. I went to bed, slept 8 hours, got up, made breakfast, reconfigured my kppp initialization, read some e-mail, and finally, some 9 or 10 hours later, Xcdroast woke up and gave me the TOC on the audio disk! Somehow, I think I should get better performance than that!
Heh. Yes... what was the CDR drive? Do you have vendor specific instructions enabled for the sg module?
KOnCD still doesn't see my CD-RW drive... I'll give up on that and pursue Xcdroast for now...
I would try from the console using 'clean' cdrecord. If you figure out the tags, then you can set it up in _any_ package. What does "cdrecord -scanbus" say? Try ripping a CD using cdda2wav: cdda2wav -D /dev/scd1 -g -x -H -B -O wav Don't output to /dev/dsp... let's just see if it rips correctly... Replace /dev/scd1 with your appropriate device... by the way, are you trying this as root or as a normal user? If you use the cdrtools are a normal user, I'd recommend you use the package "sudo" (found on the SuSE CDs) to allow your normal user to run certain programs (/usr/bin/cdrecord, /bin/eject, /usr/bin/cdda2wav, etc.) with or even without the root password. -- noodlez: Karol Pietrzak PGP KeyID: 0x3A1446A0