Em Qua, 2017-11-29 às 13:33 +0100, Wolfgang Bauer escreveu:
Am Mittwoch, 29. November 2017, 12:46:03 schrieb Joerg Schilling:
But why should this be present on a recent Suse? It has been deprecated long ago.
It is still included in the distribution, as well as cdrecord/cdrtools.
But even if not, k3b would still complain about a missing cdrdao on startup if that is not installed. A simple data CD burn (with cdrecord installed) seems to work despite that though (and apparently doesn't use cdrdao either if it is installed).
Kind Regards,
I can confirm a clean openSUSE Leap 42.3 install with KDE/Plasma Desktop has cdrdao, cdrkit-cdrtools-compat, k3b and wodim packages installed.
From software.opensuse.org:
cdrkit-cdrtools-compat Tool for Writing CDRs - cdrtools Compatibility Package This package contains these compatibility symlinks: cdrecord -> wodim mkisofs -> genisoimage cdda2wav -> icedax Install this package if you can't use the cdrkit programs directly. I don't know much (okay, honestly: I know nothing) about command line utilities, libraries or backends to burn optical media, I just use K3b when I need it... but based on what you say, can I conclude that openSUSE is taking the wrong way regarding cdrdao, cdrtools, wodim, cdrkit, cdrecord, you know... the whole burning thing? =/ Googling for "cdrdao deprecated" I found this: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/7/htm... gration_planning_guide/sect-red_hat_enterprise_linux-migration_planning_guide- removed_packages cdrdao has been removed from Red Hat Enterprise Linux between version 6 and version 7 and is no longer supported. Interestingly, Brasero has also been removed. What is the problem with it? Antonio The Linux Kamarada Project https://kamarada.github.io/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org