Hi!
> dd if=/dev/cdrom1 of=/dev/stdout bs=1048576|cdrecord dev= speed=?? -v
> -xa2 /dev/stdin
An straight:
cat /dev/cdrom1 | cdrecord ... -
Will work. :)
cu!
-- p.
Wow! I'm surprised two people already jumped forward to tell you that you can't
do
this when in fact you can. All you need is:
cdrecord dev=5,0 speed=4 -isosize /dev/hdc
of course you'll have to suitable replace the devices, speeds, etc. This works
just
fine and dandy. Man am I amazed other peo
On Tue, Apr 13, 1999 at 02:51:16PM -0400, Dan Brosemer wrote:
> Haven't tried this one, but:
>
> dd if=/dev/cdrom1 of=/dev/stdout bs=1048576|cdrecord dev= speed=?? -v
> -xa2 /dev/stdin
>
> (try it with the -dummy flag first as I've never done this!)
It won't work because cdrecord has to know
On Tue, Apr 13, 1999 at 01:34:50PM -0500, Matt Garman wrote:
>
> What is the best way to do CD-to-CD copying under Linux?
> Specifically, I have a copy of the "official" debian 2.1 (slink) CD
> of which I want to burn an identical copy.
>
> Is it necessary to make an ISO9660 image from the curren
On Tue, 13 Apr 1999, Matt Garman wrote:
> What is the best way to do CD-to-CD copying under Linux?
> Specifically, I have a copy of the "official" debian 2.1 (slink) CD
> of which I want to burn an identical copy.
>
> Is it necessary to make an ISO9660 image from the current CD and then
> burn?
What is the best way to do CD-to-CD copying under Linux?
Specifically, I have a copy of the "official" debian 2.1 (slink) CD
of which I want to burn an identical copy.
Is it necessary to make an ISO9660 image from the current CD and then
burn? Surely there is an easier way to get around this.
T
6 matches
Mail list logo