On Sun, 2003-09-28 at 13:11, Alex Munro wrote: > Emmanuel Gravel suggested: > > If you look in > > /etc/fstab (do a cat on it) you should find which > > device > > is being used to access the cdrom. Mine looks like > > this: > > /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom iso9660 noauto,owner,ro 0 > > My fstab line is: > /dev/cdrom /cdrom . iso9660 ro,owner,noauto 0. 0 > > > If I look at what /dev/cdrom is (I did an 'ls -l' on > > it)here's what I get: > > lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 8 Oct 9 2001 /dev/cdrom -> > > /dev/hdc > > My /dev/cdrom lists: > lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 3 Sep 11 07:37 /dev/cdrom -> > hdc So you do have a /dev/cdrom (just not a /dev/CDROM) that mounts to /cdrom. Can you do "ls -l" on /dev/hdc and send it back? Also, could you grep /etc/group for your username? Actually, try this. As root, add your username to the disk group (if /dev/hdc is in the disk group, like on my RH system) and see if xmms can use your cdrom when you're logged in as your user. It should read something like this: disk:x:6:root,username where username is, of course, your username. Let me know! Emmanuel