On Friday, December 29, 2000, John W wrote: > It seems the drive is recognized as a standard cdrom under /mnt. I tried to > create mount point /mnt/scd0 and recieved Mount: fs type, bad type, bad > superblock, on /mnt/cdrom,or too many mounted filesystems. What command are you using to try to mount it? If your mount point is /mnt/scd0 (it could be anything, even /mnt/foo if you wanted it to) and your CD-RW device is /dev/scd0, you should be able to mount the CD with a command resembling: mount -t iso9660 -o ro /dev/scd0 /mnt/scd0 If you are using a GUI feature in your window manager to mount the CD (or even if you're not), check /etc/fstab and make sure you've got a sane-looking entry. Mine looks like this: # grep cdrw /etc/fstab /dev/scd0 /mnt/cdrw iso9660 noauto,owner,ro 0 0 Also check the properties of whatever GUI tool you're using to make sure it is trying to access the right device, mount point, etc. > If I try to use xcdroast it sees the cdrw as /dev/scd0 and it will read the > tracks on an audio disc but if I try to access the cdrw to play an audio CD I > get dumped into konqueror and it does not show the disc in the drive. I believe that some (most?) CD players (e.g. kscd) use /dev/cdrom as the playback device by default. Make sure you either change this to whatever device you are really using (e.g. /dev/scd0) or change the /dev/cdrom symlink from whatever it's currently pointing to (probably /dev/hd?) to point at your CD-RW device (e.g. rm /dev/cdrom && ln -s /dev/scd0 /dev/cdrom). Also, don't forget to connect the audio cable from your CD-RW to your sound card. I did that once and it took me a while to figure out why no sound was coming out when I played a CD. > Fortunately no smoke however. Then you're doing something wrong. :) > I rebooted and recieved the same errors in the > boot messages regarding the cdrom drives. What are the error messages you're getting at boot? > I have tried cahnging trhe > permissions perhaps that is why I recieve the mount errors? Could be. Or it could be that something is already mounted on that mount point. Or it could be that mount was unable to automatically determine the fstype of your cdrw. > I will definitely read through the cdr howto again perhaps I missed > something there or have made some other errors along the way. > Lilo conf reads; > image=/boot/vmlinuz-secure > label=linux > root=/dev/hda7 > append=" hdb=ide-scsi ide1=autotune ide0=autotune" > read-only That looks right to me, but review the info in the CD-Writing HOWTO to be sure. Good luck, ~Jeff From Subba Rao Fri Dec 29 20:43:50 2000 From: Subba Rao (Subba Rao) Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2000 20:43:50 +0000 Subject: Video card for viewing cable In-Reply-To: ; from jzc@primenet.com on Wed, Dec 27, 2000 at 07:11:34PM -0700 References: <20001227164310.A14623@attglobal.net> Message-ID: <20001229204349.A24862@attglobal.net> On 0, Jonathan Claxton wrote: > On Wed, 27 Dec 2000, Subba Rao wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I am new to the Video on Linux area. Is there an FAQ for this field? > > My plans on Linux is to add the capability to view video(VCR) and TV/cable. > > Is there a recommended Video card that I should invest in? What are the video > > cards that I need to avoid? My current kernel is 2.2.16. > > > > I have a Hauppange TV card that I have been using for the last two or > three years and I watch TV/VCR on it all the time. BTW, I use my VCR to > watch TV since it can feed a stronger signal into the TV card since if I > feed a RF one, it seems that inside that PC, it drowns it out. :/ > > Basically any card with a BT 848 or 878 chip will work. There may be > others that can work just as well. > > Thank you for replying with this suggestion. I did find a Hauppange WinTV Go at the local Best Buy. Does it use the BT chipset? I could not find any info about the chipset on the box and at the Hauppange web site. Thank you once again and wish you all a Happy New Year. -- Subba Rao subb3@attglobal.net http://pws.prserv.net/truemax/