Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Thu, 07 Feb 2008 20:22:12 +0000
From:      Chris Whitehouse <cwhiteh@onetel.com>
To:        stevefranks@ieee.org
Cc:        User Questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: brand-new DVD drives less reliable than crappy old player - fix?
Message-ID:  <47AB6874.5000707@onetel.com>
In-Reply-To: <539c60b90802071054q7307d3f3h46681cc4da1490b0@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <539c60b90802071054q7307d3f3h46681cc4da1490b0@mail.gmail.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Steve Franks wrote:
> I have a bunch of disks that will play fine in my laptop and TV, but
> not in my freebsd system with a new-ish NEC drive.  Figured it was the
> drive, so I got a new pioneer, same issue - scratch somewhere that
> causes no hiccup on other players makes it tank.  I can't even cp or
> rsync data off them, and these are only minor scratches.  Is there
> anything tunable, or ways  to keep rsync or cp going after an error?
> I get 100MB of the last GB file.  Most annoying.  I know you usually
> want cp to fail if there's read errors, but this is one instance where
> you'd like it to skip and keep going - I assume that's what my dvd
> player does.  These are not commercial disks, so I can't just go out
> and buy a new one, and I was too stupid to make backups, so I have a
> vested interest in a workaround.
> 
> Thanks,
> Steve
> _______________________________________________
> freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
> http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
> To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
> 
It could still be hardware. I had similar symptoms with a recent new 
laptop. I had the DVD writer replaced under warranty with the same model 
and the engineer commented that it was a not uncommon problem, usually 
fixed by swapping the hardware.

Chris



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?47AB6874.5000707>