3. Burning Your CD
There are many programs to create CDs from WAV files. I use cdrecord for
command-line burning and XCDROAST for gui. For cdrecord,
you have to know
what SCSI device your CD-writer is. If you're using ATAPI writer, with older kernel, use SCSI
emulation (kernel module ide-scsi). As of kernel 2.6, you can use ATAPI directly, without SCSI emulation, by prepending ATAPI: to the device specification. Let's assume, that your ATAPI cdwriter
is on the second IDE bus as a master. Thus, it will have /dev/hdc device
file. To instruct the kernel that you want to treat it as a SCSI device, add
the following line to /etc/lilo.conf:
Also, if your kernel doesn't automatically load ide-scsi module, add
insmod ide-scsi into your rc.local
(or equivalent) file. Once you have our CD-writer recognized as a
SCSI device, run cdrecord --scanbus to
find out what's the "dev" parameter to cdrecord. On my system, the
output looks like the following:
scsibus1:
1,0,0 100) 'IOMEGA ' 'ZIP 250 ' '51.G' Removable Disk
1,1,0 101) 'HP ' 'CD-Writer+ 7100 ' '3.01' Removable CD-ROM |
So, the cdrecord command line will contain dev=1,1,0 to specify the
device. Here is the complete command on my system:
cdrecord dev=1,1,0 -eject speed=2 -pad -audio *.wav |
And, with kernel 2.6:
cdrecord dev=ATAPI:1,1,0 -eject speed=2 -pad -audio *.wav |
 | NOTE |
---|
| The -pad argument is neccessary,
because all audio tracks on the CD must be adjusted for the proper
data length, which is not always the case with mp3 files. Another way, would be to convert WAV files with sox into CDR format before burning: |