On Monday 06 January 2003 01:24, Jason Greenwood wrote:
> [root@diggy jason]# copy-audio-cd
> bash: copy-audio-cd: command not found
> [root@diggy jason]#
> [root@diggy jason]# burn-audio-cd
> bash: burn-audio-cd: command not found
> [root@diggy jason]#
>
> ???
Sorry Jason, that's a "mi-computer-only" kind of thing.
Read my previous posts. It was an alias i made.
If you want it, here it is.
First, I ran cdrecord --scanbus to see where my burner is.
The output of cdrecord --scanbus gives me:
scsibus0:
0,0,0 0) *
0,1,0 1) *
0,2,0 2) *
0,3,0 3) 'SAMSUNG ' 'CD-R/RW SW-212B ' 'BS05' Removable CD-ROM
0,4,0 4) *
0,5,0 5) *
0,6,0 6) *
0,7,0 7) *
So i know that my burner is in 0,3,0
Then, I added this line at the end of /root/.bashrc
alias copy-audio-cd = "su; rm -rf /tmp/wavs; mkdir /tmp/wavs; cd /tmp/wavs;
cdparanoia -B; cdrecord -v -audio -eject speed=12 -dev=0,3,0 ./*.wav"
Of course, if you want this, you'll have to change the " -dev=0,3,0 " to fit
your burner location, and the " speed=12 " to any other burning speed
you might like.
Oh, and one last thing. If you are trying to copy a very old and
scratched CD, "cdparanoia -B" might get stuck trying to get a perfect
read from under a scratch. If you see that the ripping process is
taking too long, you can add a Y or even a Z to it. Like this:
cdparanoia -BY
(this will make for a faster and less perfect ripping from scratched
or old CD's)
cdparanoia -BZ
(this will disable ALL error checking, making for the fastest method,
but possibly resulting in clicky/jittered/choppy rips. Not recommended.)
Once this line is in your /root/.bashrc, just insert an audio CD in the reader
device, a blank CD in your burner, open up a console, type copy-audio-cd,
enter the root password when it asks for it, sit back and watch. :o)
Damian
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