William Meyer wrote:
Of course you could (I think) remove^H^H^H^H^H^Hcomment out this code
and revert back to a symlink, but then I'm not sure whether you could
mount a CD as a standard user (not root) ...
Why not just edit the content of /etc/fstab?
You are right, I expressed myself
Good People
I've install Mandrake 6.0 on a machine with two CDROMS. hdb is a CD-R
and hdc is a standard CD drive. Right now the CD-R (hdb) is considered
the default CD drive (/dev/cdrom). How do I switch the two CD drives
such that hdc is considered the default (/dev/cdrom). I've looked in
ln -s /dev/hdc /dev/cdrom
This *should* work.
John
- Original Message -
From: Darryl White [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 8:45 PM
Subject: [expert] CDROM Issues
Good People
I've install Mandrake 6.0 on a machine with two CDROMS. hdb
Try looking at the SCRIPTS in /etc/rc.d/ I remember seeing the bonding
of hdx to cdrom mentioned in the startup messages.
Civileme
Darryl White wrote:
Good People
I've install Mandrake 6.0 on a machine with two CDROMS. hdb is
a CD-R
and hdc is a standard CD drive. Right now the CD-R (hdb) is
Darryl White wrote:
Good People
I've install Mandrake 6.0 on a machine with two CDROMS. hdb is a CD-R
and hdc is a standard CD drive. Right now the CD-R (hdb) is considered
the default CD drive (/dev/cdrom). How do I switch the two CD drives
such that hdc is considered the default
Darryl White wrote:
I don't see a link. /dev/cdrom seems to be its own device. What have I
done wrong and what does it take to correct it. Your help is greatly
appreciated
With Mandrake, /dev/cdrom is a HARD link not a SYMlink.
Look into /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit there is some code that
On Wed, 21 Jul 1999, Darryl White wrote:
Good People
I've install Mandrake 6.0 on a machine with two CDROMS. hdb is a CD-R
and hdc is a standard CD drive. Right now the CD-R (hdb) is considered
the default CD drive (/dev/cdrom). How do I switch the two CD drives
such that hdc is