mkisofs &| cdrecord
Dave Gavin
dgavin at davegavin.com
Sat Nov 8 09:17:12 EST 2003
Bill,
If you have the iso aready, there's no need to mkisofs. The command you used
just made a new iso9660 filesystem in the file that your iso is in: the -o
means output. If the iso is all set, just burn it to the cd with cdrecord.
This is the script that I use to burn an iso to cd:
#!/bin/bash
echo "Burning $1 to CDROM"
cdrecord -force -v -speed=2 -dev=0,6,0 ${1}
You may have to change the dev info, run "cdrecord --scanbus" to see what your
cd writer shows up as. Also, I'm using an old writer, you probably can change
the speed to something better than 2x...
If you want to check out the iso, you can mount it like this:
#!/bin/bash
echo "mounting $1 as /mnt/iso"
mkdir /mnt/iso 2>/dev/null
mount -t iso9660 -o loop ${1} /mnt/iso
When done, just "umount /mnt/iso".
This all has to be done as root unless oyu've monkeyed with the perms.
HTH,
Dave
On Sat, 08 Nov 2003 13:48:57 +0000
"Bill Holt" <william_holt at speakeasy.net> wrote:
> Hello,
> I was trying to burn a cd from the command line, all my links are set up
> correctly and I followed the HowTo (cd writing). But when I attempt to burn it
> writes over my ISO file instead! DOH! mkisofs -r -o distro.iso /dev/scd0
> is this the correct command? The documentation is a little confusing.
> Thanks for any help.
>
>
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