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Hi, maybe the problem is with directory permissions. The directory has 000, so nobody can read or write. Regards Georg Chris Clayton wrote:
Hi Reachel
On Friday 28 Oct 2005 07:13, Raquel Paz wrote:
(or should that have been Hi Raquel? :-)
Hello list:
<snip>
I have the same problem, and I sended a mail to the list but anybody answer me, I have the last version of udf, I created that directory then the device file in /dev is not created:
linux:/dev # linux:/dev # ls -ls pkt* total 178 0 d--------- 2 root root 48 Oct 28 01:26 . 178 drwxr-xr-x 36 root root 182088 Oct 28 01:30 ..
but i need the device file then I deleted the directory and When I loaded the module the system created a device file in /dev:
linux:/dev # ls -ls pkt* 0 crw-rw---- 1 root root 10, 62 Oct 28 02:10 pktcdvd After of that i run:
linux:/dev # pktsetup cdrw /dev/hdd ioctl: Inappropriate ioctl for device
then the system created a file cdrw in the directory where i ejecuted pktsetup:
linux:/dev # la cdrw --wSr-sr-x 1 root root 0 Oct 28 02:12 cdrw
I don't understand what is happening here - not that I'm in any way an expert :). The only think I can think of is a mismatch between your kernel version and udftools. What distribution are you using and what are the versions of your kernel and udftools/pktsetup, please?
uname -r will give you kernel version and the output from pktsetup with no arguments will give enough information about your udftools/pktsetup version.
The version of pktcdvd might also help. You can get the version from dmesg after the pktcdvd module has loaded
Chris
pealeeee guys can anybody help me?
Reachel