subscribe
ar syntax to cdrecord, dvdrtools has it--but it's
non-free so make of that what you will. Since you're new to Debian, I
don't know if you know how to enable 'non-free' (or 'contrib'), to do so
edit '/etc/apt/sources.list' and append 'contrib non-
x27;menu' and 'menu-xdg' package installed? menu creates
the menu, and IIRC menu-xdg is required for it to work under Gnome (but
I haven't used Gnome in a time, so I may be wrong).
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lright, let's grease up for a marginally on-topic flamewar!
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Disease can be cured; fate is incurable.
-- Chinese proverb
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can mess around all you want, and then when you're done unmount and
> watch Linux throw it all on!
You also minimize writes to the device with async--which can be an issue
in the lifespan of some older/cheaper drives I've heard.
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I'll talk about the 'lp
' issue. To use lp correctly, you have to install the 'cupsys-bsd'
package, it installs the lpr compatability. Makes it much easier to
print from things like xpdf
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lly question, especially since you've successfully
created a Suse boot cd, but are you sure you're burning them as images
and not as files? Do they boot in a different computer?
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es firefox say when you first try to visit google? If I set my
start-up page to google, it goes there as normal.
> I assume that google has the high technology to
> anti-censor its customers, which is very good. Is my
> point right?
I know nothing about that, but it would be hard to
nal, not the virtual terminal). The
> old ones work fine.
What exactly do the messages say? And what do you mean do misbehave?
It sounds like more a ssh or gnome-terminal issue. Have you tried at a
virtual terminal? Do similar things happen there?
t and couldn't get myself to
learn aptitude, so I guess I would say dselect's easier to use ;)
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Anybody want a binary telemetry frame editor written in Perl?
-- Larry Wall in
tandard debian
testing/unstable installs, udev has absorbed and conflicts with hotplug
so the best I can tell you is to try and install udev and set up udev
rules for it--with the caveat that I have no idea in what horrible ways
that may break a Ubuntu install!!
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text. Either way, I'd check for bug reports on the
subject and potential work-arounds.
http://packages.debian.org/stable/text/aspell
is a good place to start.
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invocation of 'lilo' (don't remember the
specifics of that one). Make sure to install grub or lilo to the MBR of
both drives in case one fails (I assume that's why you're creating the
RAID in the first place) and configure it to use root=/dev/md[whatever]
as a kernel option
ave changed, all you should need to do is an
'adduser camera' and then refresh permissions (I usually
log out then back in, but I think there's more elegant ways). Try if
that works, if not come back.
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way to do it is to not select 'desktop', log in at the
console, fire up your favorite text-mode package manager, and install
kde + addons you want. I doubt you can convince the d-i team one way or
the other--it used to give you a choice, I'm sure there's a reason it
doesn&
n threading, new mail checks) but since it's generally
> once once per install it's a minor inconvenience at best. At least it does
> inherit a lot of settings from the account itself which puts it head and
> shoulders above mutt.
At least when I change such a setting in mutt it assu
oncerned.
That works. The vim 7.0-017+4 changelog mentioned changes to the
alternatives handling, saying it should only be removed on removes, not
upgrades.
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---
I'm continually AMAZED
e source code and compile it to make it working, but does Debian
> or apt-get provide any way to sovle this kind of error?
Note that apache2 depends on apache2-mpm-something--I can't recall which
provides the conffiles, so try this:
apt-get -d --rei
lly a long one..
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Take your work seriously but never take yourself seriously; and do not
take what happens either to yourself or your work seriously.
-- Booth Tarkington
--
ither I couldn't use the package
management easily, or they broke on install--so I'm not objective ;)
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ould net him an error message probably.
Your method, of course, works regardless of what it may say in the
footer ;)
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llable' instead of 'is not going to be installed', then try that
one and see if it depends on something not available, etc. The info
will be in the apt-get output. Then check the bug reports, and if you
still think there's a (new) bug, file it with the 'reportbug'
tool
On Mon, May 29, 2006 at 03:25:17PM +0200, Francesco Pietra wrote:
[snip info from kde stuff]
I don't know if this has been suggested on the debian-kde list, but have
you done an 'update-alternatives --config x-window-manager' and set it
to something other than kde?
--
Chr
rioritize. Look at what's in Debian Important,
Standard, Optional, and Extra. Debian devels invest a lot of time into
each field, and Debian can be made to do (almost) anything--but the
distinctions aren't there for no reason. Look at what Ub
nstall from boot floppies, if you network card is supported on
the net-drivers disk. Then you can look into getting/compiling a kernel
with support for your drive in it after the system is up and running and
network-connected.
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Reality is just a crutch for people who can't handle science fiction.
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mail address -> subscribe. I don't think
there's an archive for the digest (would that be useful?). Or, easier,
if you know you want it would be:
'mail -s "subscribe" [EMAIL PROTECTED] \
; outer space,
>
> Because obviously you were inside the ship.
I'm absolutely certain I've upgraded X and my WM while logged into X,
with no ill effects. The only thing that dies on me when I upgrade is
firefox--hardly a catastrophe. Maybe you could provide us with some
output nex
was mentioned earlier that parted can
recover data on partitions (I've not used it, so don't ask me how) --
and if you have an Ubuntu CD you can issue 'apt-get install parted' and
then do a 'man parted' and read docs in '/usr/share/doc/parted' to
figure ou
on the exact details. Like, how were the machines
connected? Is just yours moving, or are they all? With the info I
have, all I can suggest is looking at VPN.
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TAILFINS!! ... click
ich I've never looked at.
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It is the quality rather than the quantity that matters.
-- Lucius Annaeus Seneca (4 B.C. - A.D. 65)
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her as a module or built-in? what does 'modprobe -v
snd-' give you?
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er (I don't think + or - matters). If you just have
regular CD's try the CD images. If you have a fast net connection, I
would grab the one labelled 'netinst' and do a network install. Or the
'businesscard' one if you have a spiffy mini-CD ;)
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.. it should have nice
> wallpaper on the background and control panel etc.is it possible on
> Debian ?
Yes. Once you log in as root and enter 'dselect' -- find and install
'x-window-system' and an WM ('gnome' or 'kde' are popular).
--
Christopher Nelson
XF86Config[-4] for sarge) say?
Any of those lines have the resolution you want? If so, do they all?
--
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---
The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose fro
On Wed, May 31, 2006 at 06:41:21PM -0700, lmyho wrote:
>
> --- Christopher Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > On Wed, May 31, 2006 at 05:30:30PM -0700, lmyho wrote:
> > >
> > > I just installed debian on an older computer yesterday, but the scree
e end the states contain people and
> according to your sick and twisted logic *you* owe the individuals. But of
> course, you forget that when it's most convenient for you.
Politics is one thing--but now you're attacking economics? Now that'
nd in
the package 'alsa-utils'. Perhaps this is what you need?
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---
Bizoos, n.: The millions of tiny individual bumps that make up a basketball.
-- Rich Hall, &q
;Monitor "Monitor genérico"
> (**) | |-->Device "Tarjeta de vídeo genérica"
>
> ---
Is that all that's in te X logs? What does ~/.xsession-errors contain?
Have you tried moving your .xsession and .xinitrc out of the way and
trying
ackage is installed", this in the case I choose
> in tasksel not to install the desktop packages too.
So what exactly happens? Does it hard-freeze? Is there an 'ok' box on
the screen? What can and/or can't you do from there? It sounds like
other debian users.
If you don't like debian as a desktop distro, don't use it--but don't
try and tell others that it's not suitable.
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---
Somewhere on this globe, every
tc/init.d/dm stop &&
/etc/init.d/dm start' or just a '/etc/init.d/dm restart'?
I've found that the restart doesn't always work, but stopping, waiting
for all the processes to die (or forcibly killing them), then starting
has nearly always w
system. it also may give you more info on the
problem? (haven't had a problem ripping w/ it, so I don't know it's
error output)
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The Beatles:
Paul McCartn
er-hook . 'set mbox=+mbox'"
"folder-hook debian-user 'set mbox=+debian-user-old'" "folder-hook .
'set move='" "folder-hook debian-user 'set move=yes'"
all in your .muttrc
complicated
ich no longer
in installed and therefore they should be removed. While it would be
possible to mark all the metapackage etc. as manually installed, that is
a lot more work than using apt-get/already learned tool--may or may not
be worth it, but it is more work.
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s all masquerading as "intel wireless
PRO" -- what is the output of 'lspci |grep Ethernet'?
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ror: "Printer not connected".
When you set up the printer under KDE, did you use a '/dev/*' URI?
Those don't work for some arcane reason with the new CUPS system. With
the printer plugged in and turned on, do you get a weird-looking
'hp:' URI? I think that'
o login dialogue.
What happens when you recycle ?dm? (Cntl-Alt-Backspace or
'/etc/init.d/?dm restart) Any error messages in the logfiles?
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---
Ambiguity:
Telling the trut
ble main contrib non-free
How long did the problem start? I just did an update using the same
mirror with no problems.
> I might be wrong but I think non-free is not needed anymore, also try a
> different mirror. Or just wait I bet the error will go away.
I believe you're confusing
ly and
scroll to where it says 'i810'.
> I'm saying these with absolutely no experience with that graphic controller,
> or it's set up. Maybe some other steps are recommended... But it is a good
> start I think :)
I've also never used that card, so I don't
rallel history? It seems over here
that dselect is alive and well...
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nstaller will recognise your sarge install--there should be a
screen that says something to the effect of "Are all your other
operating systems listed below? // Debian Sarge (on hda2)". If you see
that, it should be safe to overwrite your MBR.
--
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On Sun, Jun 25, 2006 at 08:34:40PM -0700, Michael M. wrote:
> Christopher Nelson wrote:
> >something to the effect of "Are all your other
> >operating systems listed below? // Debian Sarge (on hda2)". If you see
> >that, it should be safe to overwrite your MBR.
&
gt; >>is this possible to do with apt-get or some other tool as well?
> >>
> >>- martin
> >
> >dpkg -l | grep
> >
> Better:
>
> dpkg -l
Don't forget about using expressions with that, eg.: 'dpkg -l *latex*'
Most of you probab
t upgrades them, and any
dependencies needed. aptitude can be safely removed from your system,
if you desire--all that'll break is tasksel (which will be automagically
removed anyway).
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---
t-howto (will download all
languages--may want -en or other) and check it out.
[1] It would cause more trouble if they had different names, so I don't
consider that a problem, but a feature
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-
mething xmgrace depends on has changed
recently, and that's causing the problem--especially for a 'many years'
old version of an application. If that's indeed the problem, any
sufficiently advanced distribution has/will soon have the same issue.
It might be worth checking to see if t
c6'?
I couldn't find that package mentioned on pacakges.debian.org ... odd.
What uri is your stable line(s) pointing to?
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Weinberg's First Law:
Progress is on
you tried re-installing and then removing?
apt-get install --reinstall gnome-panel-data
apt-get remove [--purge] gnome-panel-data
--
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---
My idea of roughing it turning the air conditioner too
format this partition, but we
> will use it" IIRC. HTH
They're both on the same partition--I was under the impression the the
thunder was bootable--but I don't have a install disk to test my
hypothesis.
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---
t; http://www.debian.org/mirror/list
My suggestion would be to install jigdo-lite and follow the directions
at (if this is a debian box, grap it via your favorite apt tool):
http://www.debian.org/CD/jigdo-cd/
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the rest of them on www.debian.org.
Not quite exactly, an amd64 processor will work with the i386. If the
OP wants top performance (and why not?) then the amd64 is the right one,
of course.
--
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--
doesn't work on my unstable box
either ;) Have you diff'ed the .vimrc on the two systems? Might point
to a configuration difference.
--
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---
Why did the Lord give us so much quic
have it verifiably failing? Have
you considered filing a bug?
I don't see the package xmgrace listed at all, nor anything in
'apt-cache search xmgrace' -- maybe you can contact the xmgrace
community and find if there's the usual suspects (a new version, an
On Wed, Jul 12, 2006 at 01:17:29PM -0600, Art Edwards wrote:
> Thanks for the resonse. See below.
> On Sat, Jul 08, 2006 at 09:36:25AM -0700, Christopher Nelson wrote:
> >
> > I don't see any bug reports with greater severity than normal on
> > http://bugs.debian.org/
ta. What is the problem?
gimp 2.2.12-1 hasn't made it into the i386 port of unstable yet, but
gimp-data has. I'd think it's just a couple days.
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---
For my birthday I got a
d do an "aptitude update."
One example would be:
deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian stable main contrib non-free
Of course you'll get better performance picking a closer mirror...
www.debian.org/mirror/list
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a pure stable
environment..have you issued a `apt-get update` recently? If the
problem persists, try installing each package listed as 'uninstallable'
until you get to the one(s) which are actually holding it up.
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7; and search google for
'building kernel debian way'
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rt`
If it doesn't start, take note of the error messages and search on
those.
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When in doubt, have a man come through the door with a gun in his hand.
-- Raymond
bt es
> hier jemand, der Sie eine andere Adresse geben kann. Leider
> kann ich nicht.
Es ist: debian-user-german@lists.debian.org
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Money is a powerful aphrodisiac. But flowers work a
On Fri, Jul 21, 2006 at 10:10:33AM +0200, Matthias Pfeifer wrote:
> Thanks for the friendly hints. How should i proceed with my message in
> this group? Delete it?
Don't worry about it--it's already been mailed out to list members.
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hard drive in
the boot order--I think it would have worked the other way for the first
OS installed on the computer, as there was nothing to boot on the drive.
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No, that's wrong t
be) if it's not been reported yet.
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with a subject of
p you
up-to-date with the kernel too (I say for now, as I don't know the
status of 2.4.x support in etch). All you'll have to do is reboot after
the install.
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---
Blessed are th
On Mon, Jul 31, 2006 at 05:36:18PM -0700, Christopher Nelson wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 31, 2006 at 09:05:49PM +1000, Robert S wrote:
> > I am running debian with kernel 2.4.27. I see that the kernel-source
> > package
> > is listed in the security vulnerabilities (DSA-1097). I
from the X.org
project. In etch, Debian is switching to X.org IIRC due to liscense
changes (but I don't know the details). They conflict because they're
from two different implementations of X
--
Christopher N
's
not the same as what I have so I can't swear it works, but it likekly
does. If you're installing from an rpm-based system, the .rpm's
mentioned in the manual at debian.org are from 2004, so you'll need to
use, eg, alien to convert
)
How up-to-date is the kernel? udev should be the right tool, and if it
complains about the kernel version, a new kernel might be in order. The
debian one in unstable should work with the udev in unstable, as should
(as I use) a sufficiently recent 2.6 kernel.org one.
--
Christopher Nelson --
e made to use aptitude in the future!
The deborphan man page or README doesn't mention it being deprecated. I
would be sad if it went away, though, as it's quite useful to, for
example, `dpkg --purge $(deborphan)` (of course after checking the
output of deborphan on
ar too many to show here, but the server does not like Vesa I
> can tell you that!
Just to clarify, you are using "vesa" and not "Vesa" to test this?
--
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-
dow manager such as fluxbox?
> I want to install xterm too.
aptitude install fluxbox xorg xterm
you might also want to install one of xdm, gdm, kdm, or wdm (or any
other I'm forgetting)
--
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--
r to jump into. But the module will taint the kernel.
And, if you're using unstable, the driver will require you to mess with
holds of x.org and/or use a (further) illegal hack. Look through the
debian-user archives if that applies to you.
--
Christopher Nelson -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, Jun 05, 2007 at 09:55:50PM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> Christopher Nelson writes:
> > But the module will taint the kernel. And, if you're using unstable, the
> > driver will require you to mess with holds of x.org and/or use a
> > (further) illegal hack
On Tue, Jun 05, 2007 at 08:42:32PM -0700, chris wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 05, 2007 at 09:55:50PM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> > Christopher Nelson writes:
> > > But the module will taint the kernel. And, if you're using unstable, the
> > > driver will require you to mes
tall`?
Also--I think your openoffice issue is a separate one. What is it
doing? Do you get a splashscreen, then it quits? Does it appear to do
nothing? if you run it from a terminal emulator, do you see any errors?
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---
(ssh, apache, etc) and/or any ports
open? I would consider re-evaluation of firewall rules, etc, after the
re-install whether or not you've been attacked.
--
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---
Nearly all
Can anyone suggest me on how
> to get a working .config file ? I just want a
> simple/plain working .config file? Any suggestion ?
> Any document or outline steps? Please help.
If you borrowed a debian config, you'll need an:
make-kpkg --initrd kernel_image
rather than a
ckports?highlight=%28backport%29
Or check backports.org where someone has done the work for you ;) The
ntfs-3g package is currently listed there.
But, as they say, knowledge is power, so I would still recommend a
perusal of the documentation on building for yourself.
--
Christopher Nelson
didn't see it
>
> also you can always do: dpkg --purge
The problem with this solution being that you have to work out
dependancy chains by yourself, where an apt-get/aptitude purge will work
them out for you.
To see for yourself, try it on any "-data" package.
--
Christopher
o this
> > fail with the same messages, of course.
> In the future, you may want to do a 'dpkg --purge' when trying to completely
> remove all traces of packages...
IIRC, you can also do an 'apt-get remove --purge' if you also want to
purge dependa
d specify 'dev=/dev/hdc' and it works (though it
complains that the support for this is unintentional and unsupported).
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---
It is necessary to have purpose.
-- A
isn't an official debian mirror. There are directions on
how to get the key recognized by apt on the page here:
http://ftp.nerim.net/debian-marillat/faq.html
--
Christopher Nelson -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
QOTD:
&qu
t if, as soon
as I plug the ipod in, I open gtkpod and click 'read' it works. Give it
some time, too--I've thought it was crashed when it was still working.
Especially if it's not on an USB 2 port.
> any help directions appreciated
Hope that gave you an idea.
--
;s working.
> whether
> your system has wep? How do you handle it?
Just as shown above.
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In real love you want the other person's good. In romantic love you
want the othe
ippet of my /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf:
network={
ssid="example"
bssid=XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX
scan_ssid=0
key_mgmt=NONE
auth_alg=SHARED
wep_key0=
wep_tx_keyidx=0
}
If you're using unstable's, there's more that's i
ings that tripped me up when
I tried Ubuntu.
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All diplomacy is a continuation of war by other means.
-- Chou En Lai
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with a
On Tue, Apr 04, 2006 at 12:53:15PM -0700, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
> On 4/3/06, Christopher Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > try making that wpa_conf a wpa-conf instead and try again. At least,
> > that's how I have it in my /etc/networking/interfaces
>
> >
On Tue, Apr 04, 2006 at 04:33:59PM -0700, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
> On 4/4/06, Christopher Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Just out of curiosity, have you connected to an open access point? Or
> > at tried? That part looks like it whould work. The only differen
what if I want to use a text string
> instead of hex?
If I understand correctly, to use a text string, you enclose it in
double-quotes ("). I don't have control over my wireless setup or I'd
give it a shot for you.
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--
,4,0 4) *
> 0,5,0 5) *
> 0,6,0 6) *
> 0,7,0 7) *
>
> Entry 0,0,0 is the SATA drive. Where is the CDrom drive? I can mount it
> and look at things on the CD.
>
> Anybody with udev know the answer?
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