Paul Smith wrote:
Dear All,
The problem has partially returned. In my case, I have
# ls /dev/cdrom*
/dev/cdrom1
#
And I do the following:
# cd /dev
# ln -s ./cdrom1 cdrom
that solves the problem until a new reboot. After a new reboot, I have
to apply the solution above explained; otherwise, I get
$ eject
eject: unable to find or open device for: `cdrom'
$
What can I do to make this solution permanent, i.e., not destroyed by a reboot?
Thanks in advance,
Paul
You may have to edit /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-cd.rules and
make sure that the rules for creating the cdrom and cdrom0 are
correct. In your case, I suspect that the rules for cdrom1 should be
for cdrom0. Depending on the drive, it may also have dvd and dvdrw
rules.
The fix is fairly simple - comment out, or delete the <devicd>0
rules, change the <device>1 rules to <device>0, and copy the first
of the old cdrom1 (new cdrom0) rules and change cdrom1 to cdrom in
the copied rule.
When you reboot, all should be fine.
Mikkel
--
Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons,
for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!