While /mnt/ and /media/ are common places to mount devices, the device location can be just about anywhere. /cdrom/ was probably chosen for either brevity or legacy support.
For me, it doesn't become a link until something is in /media/cdrom, and that's weird.
I'm sure there's a reason why this is done, most likely for "brevity or legacy support" but the linking/unlinking part is quite strange. In past versions of Ubuntu these folders were constantly linked (last I checked was Intrepid maybe)....
I'm presently trying to hunt down the script that does this black magic in order to discover it's dark secrets.
If you do a detailed listing of the root directory, you will see that
/cdrom
is just a link to/media/cdrom
- a shortcut for convenience.While
/mnt/
and/media/
are common places to mount devices, the device location can be just about anywhere./cdrom/
was probably chosen for either brevity or legacy support.For me, it doesn't become a link until something is in /media/cdrom, and that's weird.
I'm sure there's a reason why this is done, most likely for "brevity or legacy support" but the linking/unlinking part is quite strange. In past versions of Ubuntu these folders were constantly linked (last I checked was Intrepid maybe)....
I'm presently trying to hunt down the script that does this black magic in order to discover it's dark secrets.