Tue 28 Nov 2006
Audio Applications Like cdparanoia, the cdrecord utility is a very flexible program and as such has a large number of parameters. The parameters you need vary according to the type of CD format you are writing (for example, whether you’re creating an audio CD or a data CD). For a full list of parameters, you can check the website or type the application’s name at the command line: $ cdrecord … Options: -version dev-target print version information and exitSCSI target to use as CD/DVD-Recorder … The example command below records an audio CD by writing the .wav files created by using the cdparanoia utility: $ cdrecord -v dev=2,0 -dao *.wav This example assumes that the .wav files are located in the current directory, and that a blank CD-R or CD-RW is in the drive. Here’s how the parameters used here affect the application’s behavior: Parameter Meaning -v Indicates that progress is displayed via the verbose switch -dev Indicates the SCSI target for the device identified. Each SCSI device is assigned an ID; in this case it’s 2,0. -dao Indicates that a single session is to be written to the CD and closed when finished *.wav Indicates that all files matching this specification should be written to the CD Note You can also use the dvdrecord utility to record information on writable DVD drives such as DVD-RAM. There’s more information on this at http://www.nongnu.org/dvdnools/. tHE FEATURES PROVIDED BY mOZILLA ( GnomeToaster If you find all this command line stuff too daunting, you could use the GnomeToaster application. GnomeToaster is a graphical CD recording utility written for the GNOME environment. You can start this application by selecting Main Menu | System Tools | More System Tools | CD Writer, or by typing gtoaster at the command line: 153
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