On Tuesday 18 January 2005 08:55, Anders Johansson wrote:
Change 'subfs' to 'auto' and remove the 'fs=xxxfss' altogether. Add 'user' to the mount options, if you want to be able to mount as user.
To disable it temporarily, you could also simply do 'umount /dev/dvd', then it won't be mounted automatically and you can do 'mount /dev/dvd /media/dvd' to mount it manually. If you give more than one parameter to mount it won't look in fstab. But then you always have to be root to mount.
ok, that little test worked but only with my DVD (so I can use the manual mount method for the moment), but not my DVD-writer: linux:/var/log # umount /dev/dvd linux:/var/log # mount /dev/dvd /media/dvd mount: block device /dev/dvd is write-protected, mounting read-only linux:/var/log # ls /media/dvd . .. autorun.bat autorun.inf boot cdrom.ico index.html KNOPPIX linux:/var/log # umount /dev/dvd linux:/var/log # umount /dev/dvdrecorder linux:/var/log # mount /dev/dvdrecorder /media/dvdrecorder mount: block device /dev/dvdrecorder is write-protected, mounting read-only mount: No medium found linux:/var/log # ls /media/dvdrecorder/ . .. linux:/var/log # umount /dev/dvdrecorder umount: /dev/dvdrecorder: not mounted Now, I must suspect that the dvdrecorder has a physical problem? I will have to try it on another machine to be sure then... hope it is all right it was quite reliable until now.. sniff :-( Ok, that is also the initial error that k3b gave me when trying to burn...
You only mount file systems, and until you've burned the CD there is no file system on it, so k3b doesn't mount it.
Nice explanation! thx! Kostas