this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2024
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Another user says that you're not going to brick the drive and that anything you do will probably be fixed by a reboot. If you want to be sure you're not writing to the main file system drive, the best method is to physically disconnect the device to see that the dev/srX disappears when you do so. At least, that's the method I've always used when burning SD cards for a raspberry pi.
I'll give it a shot when I'm back at it, thanks! I don't mean bricking my ssd though I mean bricking the liteon optical drive.
Look at the top level comment by the user, lurch. If I'm understating him correctly, a reboot should fix it in case that happens. Generally you need to run the
dd
command to brick stuff in the way you're imagining. It's short for either disk duplicator or disk destroyer (if you fuck up). I suspect thecdrecord
utility would prevent you from doing anything too stupid on accident.The dd command is exactly what scares me about it haha, I've bricked adapters before!
Cdrecord is going just fine with the command I'm using but the GUI for brasero is what is still confusing me. I got k3b though so once I'm back at that disk drive (likely tomorrow) I'll give that a shot, and try to just say "yes" to that overwrite of sr0 (or sr1 or whatever it is at the time) on brasero.
If in reading lurch's comment correctly, he says it's /dev/cdrom and not srX, but that the wrong thing won't break anything.
Well /dev/cdrom disappeared on me and hasn't come back, /dev/sr0 is the correct device (when using cdrecord) unless my charger is plugged in, then it's /dev/sr1.
But cool, as long as it won't break anything I'll try it!