Useful hints for dvdisaster =========================== Device access ------------- dvdisaster tries to read /dev/pass* to list available optical drives, so it will not detect any available drives if the user running dvdisaster does not have permissions to read /dev/pass*. The solution is to create the file /etc/devfs.rules, containing something like the following. [localrules=10] add path 'pass*' mode 0775 group mygroup You also need to add this line to /etc/rc.conf: devfs_system_ruleset="localrules" You can use anything you like for localrules, and the number does not have to be 10. See devfs.rules(5) for more details. If /etc/devfs.rules already exists, add the line starting add to the section for the ruleset mentioned in /etc/rc.conf. For this to take effect, either reboot, or issue the command: # service devfs restart as root. Missing optical drives ---------------------- The most common problem encountered is that dvdisaster does not detect optical drives on older versions of FreeBSD. FreeBSD 9.x does not pre-install a uniform CD-ROM driver for SCSI and ATAPI drives, thus it cannot use any ATAPI drives in an out-of-the-box FreeBSD 9.x installation. Normally, this can be fixed by loading a kernel module called atapicam. ### Loading the atapicam kernel module by hand To manually load the required kernel module, issue the command: # kldload atapicam To see if any optical drives are available: # camcontrol devlist at scbus1 target 0 lun 0 (pass0,cd0) ### Loading the atapicam kernel module permanently If the above step works, the module can be loaded automatically at boot time by adding the line: atapicam_load="YES" to the file /boot/loader.conf. ### Building the atapicam module If the atapicam kernel module is not available (check the contents of /boot/kernel) you will need to recompile the kernel with the following additional device line in the kernel configuration: device atapicam This will actually build the module into the kernel. To build it separately, see `make.conf(5)`. The devices ata, scbus, cd, and pass are also required, but are included by default in FreeBSD 6.0 and later.