Clearly you haven't used the ide-scsi emulation support before. There are 2 likely culprits here.
1. Check permissions on /dev/scd[01] AND on /dev/sg[01], are you allowed to write to them? If the perms are fine... 2. Did you compile in SCSI generic support? cd buring requires access to the scsi generic device (/dev/sg[01]) Cheers, Caleb On Thu, 2002-01-31 at 22:04, ben wrote: > On Thursday 31 January 2002 09:53 pm, Jeff wrote: > > Running Debian Sid. > > > > When I recompiled to 2.4.16, I put SCSI CDROM emulation in the kernel and > > took out IDE CDROM support.. I can mount my drives as /dev/scd0 and scd1.. > > However, when trying to use any cd writing programs (the burner is scd0), > > they say they cant scan the SCSI bus? No permission or SCSI emulation not > > enabled for IDE drives.. > > > > Thoughts? > > yeah. here's one. what are you talking about? scsi and ide are not > interchangable. they are different technologies. scsi emulation lets you > refer to something as if it were, but it's not. how are you going to emulate > scsi on an ide device that doesn't exist, as far as the kernel is concerned, > without support? what does your /etc/fstab look like? start hoping you > haven't fried a drive already. > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots
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