From: Weston M. Price [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 18 Sep 2002 00:43:01 +
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Excellentmusic cd's work fine. My confusion on the subject sorry. Thanks
for the help everyone
But nobody actually gave the complete answer, so some people will
continue to have
went all
right to begin with
After this I made sure to check everything to make sure all my system
functionality remained intactagain, there appeared to be no problems.
This evening I went to mount one of my cdrom drives and the machine kept
giving me a problem saying
cd9660: /dev/acd0c
cdrom drives and the machine kept
giving me a problem saying
cd9660: /dev/acd0c : Invalid Argument
Try mounting /dev/acd0a. I ran into this problem a while ago.
I checked /etc/fstab and the entry for both /cdrom and /cdrom1 remained the
same as before, they are as follows:
/dev/acd0c
Well, mount /dev/acd0a does not work. Howerver, I did put in a data disk and
it mounted fine with the command mount /cdrom. However, a music CD will not
work. Is there some sort of special setting(s) I need to configure to mount
music CD's?
Thanks again.
Weston
On Wednesday 18 September
sure everything went
all right to begin with
After this I made sure to check everything to make sure all my system
functionality remained intactagain, there appeared to be no problems.
This evening I went to mount one of my cdrom drives and the machine kept
giving me a problem saying
everything to make sure all my
system functionality remained intactagain, there appeared to
be no problems.
This evening I went to mount one of my cdrom drives and the
machine kept giving me a problem saying
cd9660: /dev/acd0c : Invalid Argument
Maybe something you changed had
to
be no problems.
This evening I went to mount one of my cdrom drives and the
machine kept giving me a problem saying
cd9660: /dev/acd0c : Invalid Argument
Maybe something you changed had an effect on your device definitions.
Try
cd /dev
sh ./MAKEDEV all
to rebuild all
. For the cdrom,
the letter c refers to the whole disk.
Your initial confusion seems to be due to the fact that you were trying
to mount a music cd. This is not what you do, you play music cd's.
You can use a variety of things to do this, from the basic,
cdcontrol (see the man page), to the graphical
, ad1 etc in dmesg, although in
/etc/fstab they are listed by partition as /dev/ad0s1a etc when
they are being mounted.
The additional letter refers to the partition. For the cdrom,
the letter c refers to the whole disk.
Your initial confusion seems to be due to the fact that you were trying
On Thursday 18 July 2002 02:54 pm, Steve Mazerski wrote:
| On Thursday 18 July 2002 20:09, Daniel Bye wrote:
| On Thu, Jul 18, 2002 at 07:15:10AM -0700, Balaji, Pavan wrote:
| By default, cdrom is /dev/acd0c is only mountable by root in FreeBSD.
| You can make it mountable by normal users
By default, cdrom is /dev/acd0c is only mountable by root in FreeBSD. You
can make it mountable by normal users by changing the /etc/fstab entry to
users,ro,noauto
/dev/acd0c /cdrom cd9660 users,ro,noauto 0 0
Pavan Balaji,
Intel Corporation
Only the Paranoid
On Thursday 18 July 2002 20:09, Daniel Bye wrote:
On Thu, Jul 18, 2002 at 07:15:10AM -0700, Balaji, Pavan wrote:
By default, cdrom is /dev/acd0c is only mountable by root in FreeBSD. You
can make it mountable by normal users by changing the /etc/fstab entry to
users,ro,noauto
/dev
there is no such parameter passable to mount called users. it needs to
be removed. if you can mount it from the command line, you should make
the fstab line agree with it, and i see no reason why it wouldn't then
work.
keep in mind that in your fstab, you are attempting to mount the CDROM
onto
that in your fstab, you are attempting to mount the CDROM
onto /cdrom. on the command-line, you mounted it onto ~/cdrom. does
localuser have permissions on /cdrom? what are those permissions right
now?
As posted in the prior mail:
localuser@localhost ls -ld /cdrom
drwxrwxr-x 2 root wheel
the command line, you should make
the fstab line agree with it, and i see no reason why it wouldn't then
work.
keep in mind that in your fstab, you are attempting to mount the CDROM
onto /cdrom. on the command-line, you mounted it onto ~/cdrom. does
localuser have permissions on /cdrom
18:15 /dev/acd0c
If I am missing something fundemental here, please say.
Setting /dev/acd0c to a+rw didn't make any difference.
vfs.usermount is set to 1, the CD-ROM works and I can
mount it in a directory _owned_ by localuser. I can
mount it on /cdrom if I chown it to localuser.
S.Mazerski
Is it the done thing in FreeBSD for normal users to mount CD-ROMs
in a local directory rather than /cdrom?
As a normal user all I get is this:
localuser mount /cdrom
cd9660: /dev/acd0c: Operation not permitted
despite changing the permissions on both the CD-ROM device and /cdrom
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