I’m having an issue trying to burn a music CD for use in my (very old, I know I know) car. I’m running FedoraKDE (40) and Brasero, a Liteon brand external optical DVDRW drive, CD-R (TDK brand), and a Framework 16.
The issue I’m having seems to be that the blank disks(maybe?) aren’t recognized automatically by Fedora, when I pop a full commercially released CD in it’ll play/rip, but with a blank disk nothing happens, and I don’t know where to “save” the “image” of this album I’m creating in Brasero to get it on the disk.
Someone on a random linux forum told some other guy to run cdrecord -checkdrive
which says my drive is at /dev/sr0 with a blank disk, but that’s as far as I’ve gotten. Do I choose sr0 as the place to save it? It says “something something overwrite” when I try which makes me wary, it seems it wants to overwrite “sr0” itself and either bork my drive or install, but maybe?
I’m positive it’s just something simple I’m missing, any help would be greatly appreciated and I can answer questions and run commands if needed (but I don’t actually have WIFI rn, so I’ll have to have the package for said command already.)
Thanks in advance.
hey, man. I’m sorry you felt like I was saying “just do it”. I’d be happy to help more, but I don’t have a CD ROM to test with. I just assumed the GUI would be more self explanatory. Like I said above, I’ve never had to burn a CD on Linux. Please remember that the Linux community is made of volunteers. Getting frustrated at them doesn’t really make them want to help, especially since I literally cannot help anymore than I have without a CD rom in my hands. If you want to ship one to me, I’d be happy to figure out Brasero and walk you through it. Since that is clearly unreasonable, remember that these forums are populated by well-intentioned people doing their best.
I mean it’s not your fault, that’s what the documentation for brasero says. It doesn’t tell me how to “select where to save it” or whatever their exact verbiage is however, and the hard part is even getting people to understand what my issue is. You may not have been able to answer my main question but you helped me work around it, sorta, and for that I am grateful. I just wish the documentation and every comment helping didn’t just say “download brasero” (which I clearly have already done as per my question) or “use this link which says ‘brasero: just do it.’”
Tbf I’m sure most people don’t bother to try and solve things themselves before posting, but I’ve already seen the brasero instructions that were linked because I did, and it still doesn’t tell me what I need to select to get the files on the disk, it just tells me that I need to select something. Again I think selecting /dev/sr0 will replace and overwrite sr0 as per the warning, so I do not think it is the correct answer, and so far nobody has given any alternatives as to what the answer might be, instead offering suggestions on how to download brasero or that darn link again.
And as to reinventing the wheel:
Now I’m trying to get my script to run
cdrecord -checkdrive
and pipe that answer into my script, the damn thing is now on /dev/sr1!oh! I’m more of a debian guy than a fedora guy which is why this is a bit out of my depth, but /dev/sr1 is just the equivalent of the E:// drive (that is, for whatever reason, you OS mounted it as a new disk). Perhaps this means it burned successfully?
Unfortunately, yeah, not all documentation can cover the entirety of Linux design from the bottom up and back in this era, Linux was used almost exclusively by academics at universities. As such, the documentation was never written for a general user. It has come a very long way since then, but back when cd roms were common, it was a thousand times worse. Also, YouTube didnt work on Linux at all, so you had to be really committed to fuck around with it.
Yeah I was able to burn a few successfully but not with brasero, found a reddit post where someone was just using cdrecord and I’ve now wrote a script to just call
cdburner
(my script) and just burn all the files in the directory to a disk.Now I just need to figure out how to take the output of
cdrecord -checkdisk
which givesAnd take the
Detected CD-ROM Drive: /dev/sr1
part, or rather just the/dev/sr1
part of that in particular, and use that as a variable called $cdrom or something, and pipe that back intocdrecord -v speed=8 dev=$cdrom -audio -pad -nofix *.cdr
that does the burning. At the moment I have to edit the /dev/sd[X] part of the script before I call it.