On 2009-12-30 23:50, Roland Smith wrote:
On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 11:23:40PM +0100, Rolf Nielsen wrote:
On 2009-12-30 23:08, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
Today I tried to burn an audio CD. This may actually be the first
time I ever did this.
I'm sure there are all kinds of GUIey tools, but I took the simple
route: expanded a few high-quality MP3s to raw PCM with mpg123,
then put a CD-R in the drive and burned it with
burncd -f /dev/acd0 -d audio *
That seemed to work. Afterwards, I tried to play the CD with XMMS.
That also worked fine.
Then I put the CD into my car CD player, which was the reason for
the whole exercise.
11 tracks (ok)... playing track 1... (nothing)... ERROR CD.
The player does not like the CD.
Is there anything obvious I missed?
I was about to suggest adding fixate to the command line, like so
burncd -f /dev/acd0 -d audio * fixate
but then I read in the man page that it's ignored if -d is given
(obviously now that I think about it, since DAO normally implies
fixating). However, it may be worth trying anyway.
You may also want to try sysutils/cdrtools-devel, which is a lot more
competent than burncd. However, as you have an ATAPI CD burner, you will
need atapicam in your kernel. Either add
device atapicam
to your kernel config, recompile, install and reboot or
kldload atapicam
as root in the console or an xterm.
To automate it, add
atapicam_load="YES"
to your /boot/loader.conf.
The user that runs cdrecord also requires write access to the /dev/xpt0 device
and the /dev/passN device! See devfs.conf(5) and devfs.rules(5) for making
device permissions permanent.
Roland
Roland:
Oh yes, I forgot about that. Thanks for adding it. :)
Christian:
Another thought occured to me. Though unlikely, it is possible that your
car CD player doesn't play CD-R's or that it has problems with the
particular brand CD-R's you used.
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