I’ve been using linux for more than a decade at this point, but in all that time I’ve rarely had a disk drive. The fact that this command exists and is just, one of the core utils included with your distro along with su and kill and mount and more is just… so beautiful. 10 years amore with this OS and I’m still learning things that the elders in the audience are snickering at me for only learning 5 minutes ago while they were popping their disk trays open with a single command back when disk drives were a non optional component.
tilts head
plugs in USB optical drive
eject
pop
hehe
push tray back in
eject
pop
hehehe
There is a whole world of obsolete stuff nobody will ever do with a linux system anymore. Terminal servers with lots of serial terminals or modems for a BBS. Making a fax server, IVR, digital answering machine for analog land lines. Using removable optical or magnetic media. Recording broadcast tv. SCSI, Firewire. It is interesting to imagine what from today will be obsolete in a few years.
Those are discs not disks kiddo
I was wondering about OP’s soft-eject floppy drive. Seems quite retrofuturistic.
Sorry, my what ? Are you talking about relics of the past ? ;D
woa what the frick!! that actually scared me it’s like 2001 space odyssey type of stuff
This command was very useful for quickly finding a server in a row of hundreds of identical servers. No need to read the labels or look up which rack it’s in. Just log in remotely, just use ‘eject’, and then walk down the row to the server that has its tray out.
I was wondering why they still sold servers with disk drives
For deploying your sick playlist to production, obviously!
No not mine, thermal performance always goes haywire 😔
I haven’t worked in a data center in years, so I don’t know the current norm for server hardware.
VPS providers hate this one trick
Modern problems require modern solution.
Some CD trays will auto-close though.
The Dell servers we had at the time all had slim laptop style CD trays, so no auto-close to worry about.
I still have a disk drive but
eject
doesn’t seem to affect it since for some reason I don’t have a/dev/cdrom
. I just checked with the physical eject button on the drive and it is at least still physically working—the tray ejects! I don’t have any optical media to test if the drive still works to read CDs thoughTry
eject /dev/sr0
, that should be your disk drive if it is attached via SATA or USB./dev/cdrom
is usually just a symlink.Afraid I don’t have a
/dev/sr0
. Tbh I built this PC yonks ago, I don’t remember how I plugged in my optical drive. I assume SATA would be the sensible and most likely option.I’m on Artix Linux with runit if that matters at all?
I mean, it doesn’t matter to me whether or not I can eject my optical drive with a command, but at this point I’m just curious as to where the drive is on the filesystem lol
Edit: I tried loading
sr_mod
withmodprobe sr_mod
(which wasn’t loaded for me) but still not seeing anysr*
orcdrom
in/dev
. Again, not too bothered about this, but I’m kinda curious.Connected power but not SATA maybe?
Maybe? I remember I have used it to read optical discs before (on Linux too) and I don’t think I’ve unplugged anything
Very helpful command it was for those, whose modem had to be rebooted daily back in the day: Have a cron-job open the tray, which in turn was placed strategically so that it would hit the reset button of the modem, then close the tray. And voilà; automatic reboot of the modem. Robotics at its finest!
In the early 2000s, only my rich friends had cell phones. My roommate and I both had accounts on each other’s machines so we could telnet into them on the same local network.
We used to do this all the time to each other. It was funny to us 25 years ago. It’s still funny now.
That is fantastic.
Back in networking classes we used to have entire rooms of replicated machines, all with contiguous addresses and same logins. We wrote a script to ssh into every computer of the room and eject and retract all the disk drives at the same time, it was wonderful ✨
You could’ve made music out of ejecting/retracting those all at different times!
Would’ve actually been fantastic distributed systems practice, synchronizing all of those to tight tolerances of music across a network connection…
I need to go put my DVD drive back in my tower to try this!
lemme guess… and
inject
would close it again?eject -t
There’s also
eject -T
which is a toggle.
don’t use it if you’re flying a plane, though!
You mean the cup holder?
The finger guillotine.
Bologna storage.
Ah, the good old days of sshing into a family member’s computer and trolling them by constantly opening and closing the drive.
It it to wait 30 mins then do it every 10, and pop it in startup, those were the days.
The other was Free_Cupholder.EXE. I miss disk drives for this reason more than for actual use.
i envy you. lol