If you are using a CD-RW -- make sure you have blanked it first by
cdio blank
Also, if you're using the first drive, i.e. cd0, you don't have
to specify the device, you can just type
cdio tao image.iso
On Fri, 11 Nov 2011 23:07:41 +1100 John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:
# cdio -f cd0c
I did, I have actually solved the problem now.
On Sat, Nov 12, 2011 at 11:11 PM, Norman Golisz li...@zcat.de wrote:
Hi John,
On Fri Nov 11 2011 16:44, Norman Golisz wrote:
On Fri Nov 11 2011 23:07, John Tate wrote:
# cdio -f cd0c tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
cdio: The
On Sat, 12 Nov 2011 16:19:31 +1100, John Tate wrote:
Recap...
cdio...
# cdio tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
cdio: The media can't be written in TAO mode
Well, I don't know if you have media that will take 788MB images.
Who is silly enough to make those ISOs that big?
Or are you
Hi John,
On Fri Nov 11 2011 16:44, Norman Golisz wrote:
On Fri Nov 11 2011 23:07, John Tate wrote:
# cdio -f cd0c tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
cdio: The media can't be written in TAO mode
What am I doing wrong?
You don't read manuals.
cdio(1):
-f device
On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 6:07 AM, John Tate j...@johntate.org wrote:
# cdio -f cd0c tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
cdio: The media can't be written in TAO mode
What am I doing wrong?
I'm guessing the full device path is needed (i.e., /dev/cd0c).
However, consider the faq (
On Fri Nov 11 2011 23:07, John Tate wrote:
# cdio -f cd0c tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
cdio: The media can't be written in TAO mode
What am I doing wrong?
You don't read manuals.
cdio(1):
-f device
Specifies the name of the CD device, such as /dev/rcd0c. Both
Recap...
cdio...
# cdio tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
cdio: The media can't be written in TAO mode
I'm guessing I get that one because ISO distribution has deviated a
long way from formally defined standards towards spontaneously defined
ones.
cdrecord...# cdrecord -vv -dao
7 matches
Mail list logo