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devfs + kernel 2.6.12.12 + CD burning 179Dances With Crows Thx for your answer. Automount was off already and this is my supermount config looks like: When does `write' return 180 Andrew Xue It is not silly. It depends on a coupla things. If you have... config SUPERMOUNT tristate "Supermount removable media support" help Supermount gives you the ability to access CD-ROMs and Floppies without mounting-unmounting them every time you want to access a different disk-floppy. Just eject the media, insert a new one and you are able to access it. Read Documentation-filesystems-supermount.txt for more information. If you want to compile the Supermount support as a module ( = code which can be inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), say M here and read Documentation-modules.txt. The module will be called supermount.o. Dialup connection 182 Snip... SuSE doesn't usevar-log-dmesg and the dmesg ring buffer has cycled all the original boot mesages out with the logflood from... If unsure, say N. config SUPERMOUNTDEBUG bool "Enable supermount debug code" depends on SUPERMOUNT help If you set this to Y, additional debug code will be compiled in. Debug output is controlled with debug=N mount option. Possible values are listed in Documentation-filesystems-supermount.txt. If unsure, say Y. I did it just to check out...since a couple of days I'm becoming suach a paranoic.
In these past days I think learned a lot of about devfs and udev stuff, not enough as I test. Anyway, the reason to use devfs instead udev it's just cuz udev don't recognize my pen drive at all but the prob it was the same under udev. I checked out rebooting once after a couple of switches made inetc-modules.conf and just to insert a CD into the device the system went down again. Googling I read something about an cdrecord overbuffer bug and just now I'm trying to recover that info. Regards ***Share what you know, learn what you don't*** When does `write' return 181 Andrew Xue Sorry. That was a DEC thing on their hard drives in the very late 1960s, at copy-on-write. Their disks had 512-byte sectors and UNIX at...
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