On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 07:30:02AM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote: > No command-line tools? Is k3b a frontend to something?
k3b uses the command line cdrecord tool that does the real burning. Here is the depends list for my version of k3b: Depends: k3blibs (>= 0.11.12), kdelibs4 (>= 4:3.2.3), libart-2.0-2 (>= 2.3.16), libarts1 (>= 1.2.3), libasound2 (>> 1.0.5), libaudio2, libaudiofile0 (>= 0.2.3-4), libc6 (>= 2.3.2.ds1-4), libesd0 (>= 0.2.29-1) | libesd-alsa0 (>= 0.2.29-1), libfam0c102, libgcc1 (>= 1:3.3.3-1), libglib2.0-0 (>= 2.4.1), libice6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libmad0 (>= 0.15.1b), libogg0 (>= 1.1.0), libpng12-0 (>= 1.2.5.0-4), libqt3c102-mt (>= 3:3.2.3), libsm6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libstdc++5 (>= 1:3.3.3-1), libvorbis0a (>= 1.0.1), libvorbisfile3 (>= 1.0.1), libx11-6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libxext6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libxrender1, libxt6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), zlib1g (>= 1:1.2.1), cdrecord (>= 4:2.0+a18-1), cdparanoia (>= 3a9.8), mkisofs (>= 1.10), kdelibs-data (>= 4:3.1.4-2), kdebase-bin To the original poster: your program may be able to clone a data cd/dvd if you provide it with an image file yourself. No touchy-feely GUI interface, but there you go. :) Insert the cd you want copied. On the command line type dd if=/dev/cdrom of=imagefile.iso where imagefile.iso should be on a partition where you have enough free space to store a cd image. 700 MB should usually do it. See `man dd' for more info. Now you should be able to burn that image file to a blank cd with your tool. If it can't handle image files, you may need to just copy the contents of the original cd/dvd to a new folder and burn that one. -- Maurits van Rees | http://maurits.vanrees.org/ [Dutch/Nederlands] "Let your advance worrying become advance thinking and planning." - Winston Churchill -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]