Thank you! After knowing it works perfect, no problems. I had actaully read the man page but maybe not carefully enough. Missunderstood the -D option as only for debugging, but after more carefull reading it vas clear :) /Ole On 17-Mar-2004 James Finnall wrote: > > On Tuesday 16 March 2004 15:06, Thomas Klausner wrote: > ...... >> >Description: >> >> When playing an audio cd via cdda2wav using the command: >> >> su root -c "cdda2wav -t2 --dev /dev/rcd0d -e " > > You can use the -N option to suppress the default file output. > The manpage in my Linux system describes both the -e (--echo) and > the -N (--no-write) options from cdrecord-2.00.3. > > >> >> It does not only play the 2nd tune from the Cd inserted in the cd >> drive, it also saves a "audio.wav" file in the current directory, >> this is not what I expected. I don't know if it is a bug or if it >> is a wanted feature of cdd2wav. Anyhow my disk was filled! >> >> >How-To-Repeat: >> >> repeat command: >> >> su root -c "cdda2wav -t2 --dev /dev/rcd0d -e " >> >> and notice how the "audio.wav" files in the current directory >> grows >> >> >Fix: >> >> making a "ln -sf /dev/null audio.wav" makes the data stream go >> down the drain. Myabe there is/are some better solotion?? >> >> >Release-Note: >> >Audit-Trail: >> >Unformatted: >> >> ----- End forwarded message -----
---------------------------------- E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: 17-Mar-2004 Time: 19:28:38 This message was sent by XFMail ----------------------------------

