[CentOS] Natulius CD burner does not accept my 700Mb CD-R disks

William L. Maltby CentOS4Bill at triad.rr.com
Wed Dec 26 15:57:37 UTC 2007


On Wed, 2007-12-26 at 10:03 -0500, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> William L. Maltby wrote:
> > On Wed, 2007-12-26 at 09:19 -0500, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> >   
> >> William L. Maltby wrote:
> >>     
> >>> On Wed, 2007-12-26 at 08:09 -0500, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> >>>   
> >>>       
> >>>> William L. Maltby wrote:
> >>>>     
> >>>>         
> >>>>> On Tue, 2007-12-25 at 21:59 -0500, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> >>>>> <snip>
> >>>>>           
> >
> >   
> >>>>> Do an lsmod and see if you see sg, maybe sd_mod, scsi_mod, ide_cd.
> >>>>> Look at /etc/modules.conf (I think that's it - thngs changed in the last
> >>>>> decade or so).
> >>>>>   
> >>>>>       
> >>>>>           
> >>>> scsi_mod              133069  4 sr_mod,sg,libata,usb_storage
> >>>> ide_cd                 40033  0
> >>>> cdrom                  36705  2 sr_mod,ide_cd
> >>>>
> >>>> (also a plain-old cdrom installed via IDE (internal) on this server).
> >>>>         
> >
> > I didn't notice this before. the entries on the right specify who uses
> > that module. Are they compiled in on your system? Custom kernel? I'd
> > have thought those would show up in lsmod too.
> >   
> Everything on this system came from the Centos 5/5.1 repos (5.1 are 
> local mirrors).
> > My 5.1 has scsi_mod, sg, sd_mnod, libata and some chipset-specific
> > modules.
> >
> > It also has, in modprobe.conf alias scsi_hostadapter sata_via. The last
> > is chipset-specific. I don't know if this line is needed at all on your
> > system.
> >   
> Well how do I find out?

Geez Louise! I haven't worked on this stuff professionally since 12/01.
And Over the decades I developed an excellent short-term memory.

... thinking ...

In the past I always made everything loadable modules because the target
hardware was constantly changing. So I always had something like this in
the modules.conf (at that time).

I really can't tell you how to find out. But in

    /lib/modules/<your kernel>

there's a bunch of module* files. Man modules.dep and depmod is at least
a starting point.

Now, you mention a local repo. Does your /lib/modules have an entry for
the latest kernel? If not, maybe you just need a "depmod -a" run? If the
dates aren't already matching when you transitioned to 5.1, same?

My sata_via appears in modules.{alias|pcimap|dep} and shows a dependency
on it by sg_mod (a necessary module AFAIK). Since yours is usb based, I
would expect that a similar line ending with something that says either
usb* or *_<your chipset here (replace * with real values) would be
needed.

<snip>

-- 
Bill




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