Or use a find statement, `find mp3/* -printf "%p %TY%Tm%TH%TM%TS\n"`
On 06/02/03 01pm, Dave Wyatt wrote: > It didn't quite come out correct, but this gets me in > the right direction. A little tweaking and all should > be good... Thanks. > > Dave > > --- Ralph Zeller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Maybe try something like: > > > > $x=0; for i in mp3/*; do let x=$x+1; echo "$i > > $x">>sortlist; done; > > $less sortlist #does it look sorted right? > > $mkisofs -r -J --sort sortlist -o mymp3s.img mp3/* > > > > On 06/02/03 10am, Dave Wyatt wrote: > > > I have created a single MP3 music CD of a multi-CD > > > set. I have tried everything I can think of to get > > the > > > MP3 files to burn on an unsorted way. Even using > > a > > > -path-list file with the MP3 files in the order I > > want > > > them to be burnt does not work, the files are > > still > > > sorted by filename in the mkisofs image. > > According to > > > man there is a -sort option for mkisofs but I > > don't > > > understand how it works. > > > > > > Can someone help me with that option or have a > > > suggestion how to get the files burnt in the order > > I > > > want (which is by creation date if it makes a > > > difference)? > > > > > > Dave > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > EuG-LUG mailing list > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug > > _______________________________________________ EuG-LUG mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug