Stop Microsoft
Operating Systems => Not Quite Mainstream OSes => Topic started by: MrX on 18 January 2005, 08:52
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http://www.computing.net/hardware/wwwboard/forum/32145.html (http://www.computing.net/hardware/wwwboard/forum/32145.html)
and 'experts' means that i am having that word in Dr Evil type quotes, which is implying that if you can give a reasonable answer, the quotes will be hearby removed from the venerable full star rating Mr X.
[ January 18, 2005: Message edited by: Tux ]
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quote:
Originally posted by MrX:
http://www.computing.net/hardware/wwwboard/forum/32145.html (http://www.computing.net/hardware/wwwboard/forum/32145.html)
and 'experts' means that i am having that word in Dr Evil type quotes, which is implying that if you can give a reasonable answer, the quotes will be hearby removed from the venerable full star rating Mr X.
Right...
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cat myfile.iso > /dev/hdb
Or, do you mean emulating that an iso is a CD, and not actually waste a hard drive as a cd? In which case, remove /dev/cdrom, copy the iso to /dev/cdrom, and then mount the iso. Applications usually look at /dev/cdrom as one of the common places for a cdrom (which is usually a symlink to /dev/hdc, or some other drive).
When finished, move /dev/cdrom to the original file, and make /dev/cdrom go to the cdrom drive again (ln -s /dev/hdc /dev/cdrom)
[ January 18, 2005: Message edited by: Stryker ]
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Sorry, I thought this was a BeOS question!
Can the relevant moderator move this to GNU/Linux please?
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And to view the contents of an iso file on Linux, the easiest way I find is:
mount -o loop /path/to/stuff.iso /mnt/cdrom
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thaose are some good ideas. but the reply posted by Stryker is not making sence to me. any recommended reading?
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Read:
mount command (http://voidmain.is-a-geek.net/man/?parameter=mount&mode=man)
The Linux CD-ROM HOWTO (http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/CDROM-HOWTO/)
Win -> Linux HOWTO (http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/DOS-Win-to-Linux-HOWTO-6.html)
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When did this go from linux to beos? Eh...
linux:
i dont understand what u are trying to do. Do you want an application to think the iso is a cdrom drive? If so, you can do this as root:
rm -f /dev/cdrom
mv /home/me/myfile.iso /dev/cdrom
mount -o loop /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom
and to undo it:
umount /mnt/cdrom
mv /dev/cdrom /home/me/myfile.iso
ln -s /dev/hdc /dev/cdrom
This way, applications get the actual cd, not just the files inside it (some verify data in other areas, like some windows games do for verification).
Is this what you meant?
[ January 18, 2005: Message edited by: Stryker ]
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Just out of curiosity, why is it easier to use a hard drive than just a regular cd?
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quote:
Originally posted by M51DPS:
Just out of curiosity, why is it easier to use a hard drive than just a regular cd?
Because you don't have to search for disks all the time and it's faster from the hard disk.
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ok, either i am stupid or there are two things that are still not clear here:
1) is this for BeOS, Linux or something else? the question says BeOS in it, and all the answers seem to be for *IX systems, is BeOS one of them? i thought not. Please clarify.
2) What are you actually trying to do, Mr X? the URL you quote doesn't appear to work, and the phrase "write ISO file to hdd" does not, in my opinion, describe the action required sufficiently to provide an answer. It's not even a properly formed question, or in fact a sentence of any kind.
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quote:
Originally posted by Calum is NOT a moderator:
ok, either i am stupid or there are two things that are still not clear here:
1) is this for BeOS, Linux or something else? the question says BeOS in it, and all the answers seem to be for *IX systems, is BeOS one of them? i thought not. Please clarify.
2) What are you actually trying to do, Mr X? the URL you quote doesn't appear to work, and the phrase "write ISO file to hdd" does not, in my opinion, describe the action required sufficiently to provide an answer. It's not even a properly formed question, or in fact a sentence of any kind.
Well put. I'd be careful with item 2, though, lest ye invoke the return and subsequent wrath of Solaris.