2706 lines
103 KiB
Plaintext
2706 lines
103 KiB
Plaintext
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
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@c %**start of header
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@setfilename xorrisofs.info
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@settitle GNU xorrisofs 1.4.3
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@c %**end of header
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@c
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@c man-ignore-lines begin
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@dircategory Archiving
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@direntry
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* Xorrisofs: (xorrisofs). Emulates ISO 9660 program mkisofs
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@end direntry
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@c man-ignore-lines end
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@c
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@c Notes about embedded man page:
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@c This texinfo code contains the necessary info to produce a man page
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@c which resembles much the version of xorriso.1 from which this code
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@c was originally derived in march 2010.
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@c One can produce the man page by applying the following rules:
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@c The first line gets discarded.
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@c Line start "@c man " will become "", the remainder is put out unaltered.
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@c Lines "@*" will be converted to ".br"
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@c "@c man-ignore-lines N" will discard N following lines.
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@c "@c man-ignore-lines begin" discards all following lines
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@c up to "@c man-ignore-lines end".
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@c Line blocks of "@menu" "@end menu" will be discarded.
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@c "@item word words" becomes "\fBword\fR words".
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@c @b{...}, @command{...}, @dfn{...}, @emph{...}, @strong{...}
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@c get mapped to \fB...\fR .
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@c @abbr{...}, @code{...}, @file{...}, @i{...}, @option{...}, @r{...},
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@c @ref{...}, @samp{...},@var{...}, get mapped to ... .
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@c @ref{...}, @xref{...} get mapped to empty text.
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@c @email{...} gets mapped to <...> .
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@c Mapped {...} content is subject to the rules except {...} mapping.
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@c @minus{} will become "-".
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@c @@ , @{, @} will get stripped of their first @.
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@c Other lines which begin by "@" will be discarded.
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@c In lines not stemming from "@c man", "\" becomes "\\"
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@c "-" which are not preceded by an uneven number of "\" will get
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@c prepended one "\".
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@c
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@c
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@c man .\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*-
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@c man .\"
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@c man .\" IMPORTANT NOTE:
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@c man .\"
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@c man .\" The original of this file is kept in xorriso/xorrisofs.texi
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@c man .\" This here was generated by program xorriso/make_xorriso_1
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@c man .\"
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@c man .\"
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@c man .\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps
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@c man .\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection
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@c man .\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1)
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@c man .TH XORRISOFS 1 "Version 1.4.3, Jan 26, 2016"
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@c man .\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage.
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@c man .\"
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@c man .\" Some roff macros, for reference:
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@c man .\" .nh disable hyphenation
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@c man .\" .hy enable hyphenation
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@c man .\" .ad l left justify
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@c man .\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins
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@c man .\" .nf disable filling
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@c man .\" .fi enable filling
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@c man .\" .br insert line break
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@c man .\" .sp <n> insert n+1 empty lines
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@c man .\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7)
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@c man .nh
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@c man-ignore-lines begin
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@copying
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xorrisofs - Emulation of ISO 9660 program mkisofs by program xorriso
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Copyright @copyright{} 2011 - 2016 Thomas Schmitt
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@quotation
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Permission is granted to distrubute this text freely.
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@end quotation
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@end copying
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@c man-ignore-lines end
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@titlepage
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@title Manual of GNU xorriso personality xorrisofs 1.4.3
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@author Thomas Schmitt
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@page
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@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
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@insertcopying
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@end titlepage
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@contents
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@ifnottex
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@node Top
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@top xorrisofs 1.4.3
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@c man-ignore-lines 1
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@c man .SH NAME
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xorrisofs - Emulation of ISO 9660 program mkisofs by program xorriso
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@end ifnottex
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@menu
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* Overview:: Overview
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* Standards:: ISO 9660, Rock Ridge, Joliet
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* Insert:: Inserting files into the ISO image
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* Xorriso:: Relation to program xorriso
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* Options:: Options
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* Examples:: Examples
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* Files:: Files
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* Seealso:: See also
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* Bugreport:: Reporting bugs
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* Legal:: Author, Copyright, Credits
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* CommandIdx:: Alphabetic Command List
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* ConceptIdx:: Alphabetic List of Concepts and Objects
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@end menu
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@node Overview, Standards, Top, Top
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@chapter Overview
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@c man .SH SYNOPSIS
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@c man .B xorrisofs
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@c man [ options ] [-o filename ] pathspec [pathspecs ...]
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@c man .br
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@c man .SH DESCRIPTION
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@c man .PP
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@command{xorrisofs}
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produces Rock Ridge enhanced ISO 9660 filesystems and add-on sessions to
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such filesystems. Optionally it can produce Joliet directory trees too.
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@*
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@sp 1
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@c man .PP
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@command{xorrisofs} understands options of program mkisofs from cdrtools by
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Joerg Schilling.
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Its implementation is part of program xorriso which shares no source
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code with cdrtools.
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@c man .SS
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@node Standards, Insert, Overview, Top
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@chapter ISO 9660, Rock Ridge, Joliet, HFS+
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@c man \fBISO 9660, Rock Ridge, Joliet, HFS+:\fR
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@c man .br
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@cindex ISO 9660, _definition
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@cindex ECMA-119, _definition
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@strong{ISO 9660}
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(aka @strong{ECMA-119}) is a read-only filesystem that is mainly used for
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optical media CD, DVD, BD, but may also reside on other storage devices like
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disk files, USB sticks or disk partitions. It is widely readable by many
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operating systems and by boot facilities of personal computers.
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@*
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ISO 9660 describes directories and data files by
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very restricted filenames with no distinction of upper case and lower case.
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Its metadata do not comply to fundamental POSIX specifications.
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@*
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@cindex Rock Ridge, _definition
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@strong{Rock Ridge}
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is the name of a set of additional information which enhance
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an ISO 9660 filesystem so that it can represent a POSIX compliant filesystem
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with ownership, access permissions, symbolic links, and other attributes.
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Rock Ridge allows filenames of up to 255 bytes and paths of up to
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1024 bytes.
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@*
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xorrisofs produces Rock Ridge information by default. It is strongly
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discouraged to disable this feature.
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@*
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@cindex Joliet, _definition
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@strong{Joliet}
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is the name of an additional directory tree which provides
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filenames up to 64 characters encoded as UTF-16.
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A Joliet tree is mainly interesting for reading the ISO image by
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operating systems of Microsoft Corporation.
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Production of this directory tree may be enabled by option -J.
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@*
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@cindex ISO 9660:1999, _definition
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@strong{ISO 9660:1999}
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is the name of an additional directory tree which provides longer
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filenames. It allows single file names to have up to 207 characters.
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It might be of use with some older computer system boot
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facilities which read neither Rock Ridge nor Joliet but
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need longer filenames nevertheless.
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Production of this directory tree may be enabled by option -iso-level 4.
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@*
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@cindex HFS+, _definition
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@strong{HFS+}
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is the name of a filesystem which is normally used for writing and reading
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on hard disks and similar devices. It is possible to embed a HFS+ partition
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into the emerging ISO 9660 image and to mark it by Apple Partition Map
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entries. This interferes with options which copy data into the first 32 KiB
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of the ISO image, like -G or -isohybrid-mbr. See option -hfsplus.
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@*
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The main purpose for having an embedded HFS+ partition is booting of
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certain models of Apple computers.
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@c man .SS
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@sp 1
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@c man .B Inserting files into the ISO image:
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@node Insert, Xorriso, Standards, Top
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@chapter Inserting files into the ISO image
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@c man .PP
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@command{xorrisofs} deals with two kinds of file addresses:
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@*
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@cindex disk_path, _definition
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@strong{disk_path}
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is a path to an object in the local filesystem tree.
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@*
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@cindex iso_rr_path, _definition
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@strong{iso_rr_path}
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is the Rock Ridge address of a file object in the ISO image.
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If no Rock Ridge information shall be stored in an emerging ISO, then the
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names will get mapped to ISO 9660 names of limited length and character set.
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@cindex pathspec, _definition
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@*
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@sp 1
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@c man .PP
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A program argument is handled as a @strong{pathspec}, if it is not
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recognized as original mkisofs option or additional @command{xorrisofs} option.
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A pathspec depicts an input file object by a disk_path.
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If option -graft-points is not present, then the behavior depends on the
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file type of disk_path. Directories get merged with the /-directory of the
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ISO image. Files of other types get copied into the /-directory.
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@*
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If -graft-points is present then each pathspec gets split at the first
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occurence of the =-character.
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The part before the = is taken as @strong{target}, i.e. the iso_rr_path for
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the file object in the ISO image. The part after the first = is taken
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as @strong{source}, i.e. the disk_path of the input object.
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@*
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It is possible to make =-characters part of the iso_rr_path by preceding
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them with a \-character. The same must be done for \-characters which
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shall be part of the iso_rr_path.
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@*
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@sp 1
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@c man .PP
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If the source part of the pathspec leads to a directory, then all files
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underneath this directory get inserted into the image, too.
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It is possible to exclude particular files from being inserted
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by help of option -m.
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@*
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In case that target already exists, the following rules apply:
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Directories and other files may overwrite existing non-directories.
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Directories get merged with existing directories.
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Non-directories may not overwrite existing directories.
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@c man .SS
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@node Xorriso, Options, Insert, Top
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@chapter Relation to program xorriso
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@c man \fBRelation to program xorriso:\fR
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@c man .br
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@cindex xorriso, mkisofs emulation
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@command{xorrisofs} is actually a command mode of program @strong{xorriso},
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which gets entered either by xorriso command "-as mkisofs" or by
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starting the program by one of the names "xorrisofs", "mkisofs",
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"genisoimage", or "genisofs".
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@*
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This command mode can be left by argument "@minus{}@minus{}" which leads
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to generic xorriso command mode. See @strong{man xorriso} for its description.
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@*
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@sp 1
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@c man .PP
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xorriso performs image reading and writing by help of libburn, which is
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mainly intended for optical drives, but also operates on all POSIX
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file types except directories.
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@*
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The program messages call any image file a "drive". File types which are not
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supported for reading are reported as "blank". The reported free media
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space may be quite fictional.
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@*
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Nevertheless @command{xorrisofs} does not operate directly on optical drives,
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but rather forces libburn to regard them as general device files.
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So for writing of sequential optical media (CD, DVD-R, DVD+R, BD-R)
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one will have to use a burn program. E.g the cdrecord emulation of xorriso.
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|
See EXAMPLES.
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|
@c man .SS
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|
@node Options, Examples, Xorriso, Top
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|
@chapter Options
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@cindex xorriso, options
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@c man .br
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|
@c man .SH OPTIONS
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@c man .br
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|
@menu
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|
* Loading:: Image loading
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* SetInsert:: Settings for file insertion
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* SetProduct:: Settings for image production
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|
* SetCompl:: Settings for standards compliance
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|
* SetExtras:: Settings for standards extensions
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|
* SetHide:: Settings for file hiding
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|
* ImageId:: ISO image ID strings
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|
* Bootable:: El Torito Bootable ISO images
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|
* SystemArea:: System Area, MBR, GPT, APM, other boot blocks
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|
* Charset:: Character sets
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|
* Jigdo:: Jigdo Template Extraction
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|
* Miscellaneous:: Miscellaneous options
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|
@end menu
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|
@c man .PP
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|
@c man .TP
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|
@c man .B Image loading:
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@node Loading, SetInsert, Options, Options
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|
@section Influencing the behavior of image loading
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@c man .PP
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|
The following options control loading of an existing ISO image for the purpose
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of preparing a suitable add-on session.
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|
If they are missing then a new image is composed from scratch.
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|
@table @asis
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@sp 1
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@c man .TP
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@item -M disk_path
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@kindex -M set path for loading existing ISO image
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@cindex Session, select path, -M, -prev-session, -dev
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Set the path from which to load the existing ISO image directory tree
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on which to base the upcomming directory tree as add-on session.
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The path must lead to a random-access readable file object.
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On GNU/Linux: regular data files or block device files.
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@*
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A special kind of pseudo disk_path has the form "/dev/fd/"number.
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|
It depicts the open file descriptor with the given number, regardless whether
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the operating system supports this feature by file nodes in /dev/fd or not.
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|
E.g. /dev/fd/3 is file descriptor 3 which was opened by the program that
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later started xorriso.
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@c man .TP
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@item -prev-session disk_path
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@kindex -prev-session set path for loading existing ISO image
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Alias of -M.
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@c man .TP
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@item -dev disk_path
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@kindex -dev set path for loading existing ISO image
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Alias of -M.
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@c man .TP
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@item -C last_session_start,next_writeable_address
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@kindex -C set load address and write address offset
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@cindex Session, set load and write address, -C, -cdrecord-params
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|
Set the 2 KiB block address last_session_start from where to read the
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ISO image out of the file given by option -M.
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@*
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Separated by a comma, set the next_writeable_address to which the
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add-on session will finally be written. Decisive is actually the block
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|
address which the intended readers will have to use as superblock address
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on the intended medium.
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@*
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Both values can be inquired from optical media by help of burn programs
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and cdrecord option -msinfo. xorriso itself can obtain it in its
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cdrecord emulation. Do not let it load the drive, but rather do this manually
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or by a program like dd which reads a few bytes. Only then it is sure that
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the device driver knows the true readable size of the medium.
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@*
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@sp 1
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dd if=/dev/... count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
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@*
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values=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/... -msinfo)
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@*
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echo $values
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@*
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@sp 1
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Option -C may be used without option -M to create an ISO image from
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scratch and prepare it for being finally written to a block address
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|
other than 0. Parameter last_session_start must then be set to 0.
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|
@c man .TP
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|
@item -cdrecord-params last_session_start,next_writeable_address
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@kindex -cdrecord-params set load address and write address offset
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Alias of -C.
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|
@end table
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@c man .TP
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|
@c man .B Settings for file insertion:
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|
@node SetInsert, SetProduct, Loading, Options
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|
@section Settings for file insertion
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|
@table @asis
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|
@sp 1
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@c man .TP
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|
@item -path-list disk_path
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|
@kindex -path-list read pathspecs from disk file
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|
@cindex pathspec, read list of, -path-list
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|
Read pathspecs line-by-line from disk_file and insert the depicted file
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|
objects into the ISO image. If disk_path is "-" then read the pathspecs
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|
from standard input.
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|
@c man .TP
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|
@item @minus{}@minus{}quoted_path_list disk_path
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|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}quoted_path_list read pathspecs from disk file
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|
@cindex pathspec, read list of, @minus{}@minus{}quoted_path_list
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|
Like option -path-list but reading quoted words rather than plain lines.
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|
Whitespace outside of quotes will be discarded. On the other hand it is
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|
possible to represent pathspecs which contain newline characters.
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|
@*
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|
The double quotation mark " and the single quotation mark ' can be used to
|
|
enclose whitespace and make it part of pathspecs. Each mark
|
|
type can enclose the marks of the other type. A trailing backslash \ outside
|
|
quotations or an open quotation cause the next input line to be appended.
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|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -f
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|
@kindex -f follow symbolic links on disk
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|
@cindex Links, follow on disk, -f, -follow-links
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|
@*
|
|
Resolve symbolic links on disk rather than storing them as symbolic
|
|
links in the ISO image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -follow-links
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|
@kindex -follow-links follow symbolic links on disk
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|
Alias of -f.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -graft-points
|
|
@kindex -graft-points enable target=source pathspecs
|
|
@cindex pathspec, enable target=source, -graft-points
|
|
Enable interpretation of input file pathspecs as combination of iso_rr_path
|
|
and disk_path, separated by a =-character.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -m disk_pattern
|
|
@kindex -m exclude disk files from inserting
|
|
@cindex Disk files, exclude, -m, -exclude, -x, -old-exclude
|
|
Exclude files from being inserted into the image. Silently ignored are
|
|
those files of which the disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
|
|
If no /-character is part of the pattern, then it gets matched against
|
|
the leaf name of the disk file.
|
|
@*
|
|
It is possible to give more than one -m option.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -exclude
|
|
@kindex -exclude exclude disk files from inserting
|
|
Alias of -m.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -x
|
|
@kindex -x exclude disk files from inserting
|
|
@*
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|
Alias of -m.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -old-exclude
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|
@kindex -old-exclude exclude disk files from inserting
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|
Alias of -m.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -exclude-list disk_path
|
|
@kindex -exclude-list exclude disk files from inserting
|
|
@cindex Disk files, exclude, -hide-list
|
|
Perform -m using each line out of file disk_path as argument disk_pattern.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -z
|
|
@kindex -z enable recognition of zisofs files
|
|
@cindex zisofs file, enable recognition, -z, -transparent-compression
|
|
@*
|
|
Enable recognition and proper processing of zisofs compressed files
|
|
as produced by program mkzftree. These files will get equipped with the
|
|
necessary meta data so that a Linux kernel will recognize them and
|
|
deliver their content in uncompressed form.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -transparent-compression
|
|
@kindex -transparent-compression enable recognition of zisofs files
|
|
Alias of -z.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -root iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -root redirect ISO root directory
|
|
@cindex ISO root directory, redirect, -root
|
|
Insert all files under the given iso_rr_path. If option -graft-points is given,
|
|
then iso_rr_path is prepended to each target part of a pathspec.
|
|
@*
|
|
The default for -root is "/".
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -old-root iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -old-root enable incremental insertion
|
|
@cindex Incremental insertion, enable, -old-root
|
|
Enable incremental insertion of files into the loaded image.
|
|
The effective target and source addresses of given pathspecs get compared
|
|
whether the target already exists in the ISO image and is still identical
|
|
to the source on disk. Metadata in the ISO image will get adjusted, if they
|
|
differ from those on disk.
|
|
New files and files with changed content will get newly added.
|
|
Target files which do not exist in any of the according pathspec sources
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|
will get removed from the ISO directory tree.
|
|
@*
|
|
If the effective setting of -root differs from the iso_rr_path given
|
|
with -old-root, then the files underneath the -old-root directory get cloned
|
|
underneath the -root directory. Cloning happens before file comparison.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-ino
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-ino disable disk ino with -old-root
|
|
@cindex Incremental insertion, disable disk ino, @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-ino
|
|
Disable recording and use of disk inode numbers.
|
|
If no disk inode numbers are recorded, then option -old-root will have
|
|
to read disk file content and compare it with the MD5 checksum that is
|
|
recorded in the ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
With recorded disk inode numbers and with credible ctime and mtime,
|
|
it is possible to detect potential changes in the content without actually
|
|
reading it.
|
|
A loophole remains if multiple different filesystems may get mounted
|
|
at the same directory, like it is habit with /mnt.
|
|
In this case one has to use option @minus{}@minus{}old-root-devno
|
|
or disable the inode number shortcut by @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-ino.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}old-root-devno
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}old-root-devno enable disk idevno with -old-root
|
|
@cindex Incremental insertion, enable disk devno, @minus{}@minus{}old-root-devno
|
|
Enable comparison of recorded device numbers together with recorded
|
|
inode numbers. This works only with good old stable device numbers which
|
|
get out of fashion, regrettably. If the hard disk has a different
|
|
device number after each reboot, then this comparison will see all
|
|
files as changed and thus prevent any incremental size saving.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-md5
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-md5 disable MD5 with -old-root
|
|
@cindex Incremental insertion, disable MD5, @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-md5
|
|
Disable recording and use of MD5 checksums for data file content.
|
|
If neither checksums and nor disk inode numbers are recorded, then
|
|
option -old-root will have to read ISO image file content when comparing
|
|
it with disk file content.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Settings for image production:
|
|
@node SetProduct, SetCompl, SetInsert, Options
|
|
@section Settings for image production
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -o disk_path
|
|
@kindex -o set output file address
|
|
@cindex Output file, set address, -o, -output
|
|
Set the output file address for the emerging ISO image.
|
|
If the address exists as regular file, it will be truncated to length 0
|
|
when image production begins. It may not already exist as directory.
|
|
If it does not exist yet then its parent directory must exist and
|
|
a regular file will get created.
|
|
@*
|
|
A special kind of pseudo disk_path has the form "/dev/fd/"number.
|
|
It depicts the open file descriptor with the given number, regardless whether
|
|
the operating system supports this feature by file nodes in /dev/fd or not.
|
|
E.g. /dev/fd/4 is file descriptor 4 which was opened by the program that
|
|
later started xorriso.
|
|
@*
|
|
Default is standard output (/dev/fd/1) which may also be set by disk_path "-".
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -output disk_path
|
|
@kindex -output set output file address
|
|
Alias of -o.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}stdio_sync "on"|"off"|"end"|number
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}stdio_sync control forced output to disk files
|
|
@cindex Forced output, control, @minus{}@minus{}stdio_sync
|
|
Set the number of bytes after which to force output to disk
|
|
in order to keep the memory from being clogged with lots of
|
|
pending data for slow devices. "on" is the same as "16m".
|
|
Forced output can be disabled by "off", or be delayed by "end" until all
|
|
data are produced. If a number is chosen, then it must be at least 64k.
|
|
@*
|
|
The default with xorriso mkisofs emulation is @minus{}@minus{}stdio_sync "off".
|
|
@*
|
|
xorriso uses an inner fifo buffer with default size 4 MiB. So forcing
|
|
the operating system i/o cache to disk does not necessarily block the
|
|
simultaneous production of more image content.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}emul-toc
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}emul-toc enable table-of-content emulation
|
|
@cindex Table-of-content, emulation, @minus{}@minus{}emul-toc
|
|
Write a second superblock with the first session into random-access
|
|
files. If further sessions get appended and the first superblock gets updated,
|
|
then the second superblock will not be overwritten. So it is still possible to
|
|
mount the first session and to find the start blocks of the further sessions.
|
|
@*
|
|
The price is 64 KiB extra space consumption. If -partition_offset is non-zero,
|
|
then it is 128 KiB plus twice the partition setup.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}no-emul-toc
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}no-emul-toc no table-of-content emulation
|
|
@cindex Table-of-content, emulation off, @minus{}@minus{}no-emul-toc
|
|
Do not write a second superblock with the first session into random-access
|
|
files.
|
|
@*
|
|
This is the default.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight weight_number iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight set block address sorting weight
|
|
@cindex Block address, set sorting weight, @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight
|
|
Attribute a LBA weight number to regular files. If iso_rr_path leads
|
|
to a directory then all regular files underneath will get the weight_number.
|
|
@*
|
|
The weight_number may range from -2147483648 to 2147483647.
|
|
The higher it is, the lower will be the block address of the file data
|
|
in the emerging ISO image.
|
|
Currently the El Torito boot catalog has a hardcoded weight of 1 billion.
|
|
Normally it should occupy the block with the lowest possible address.
|
|
Data files get added or loaded with initial weight 0. Boot image files
|
|
have a default weight of 2.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-list disk_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-list set block address sorting weight
|
|
@cindex Block address, set sorting weight, @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-list
|
|
Read pairs of weight number and iso_rr_path from a file of the
|
|
local filesystem. Apply each pair like with @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight.
|
|
@*
|
|
Only the last @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-list or
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-patterns of a xorrisofs run gets into effect.
|
|
@*
|
|
The weight number is read from the start of the line.
|
|
The iso_rr_path part of an input line begins immediately after the first blank
|
|
or tab character of the line.
|
|
@*
|
|
Notes for the case that this feature is used within a sequence of generic
|
|
xorriso commands (not an issue with a pure mkisofs emulation run):
|
|
@*
|
|
The addressed files must already be in the ISO image model when you execute
|
|
@*
|
|
-as mkisofs @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-list disk_path @minus{}@minus{}
|
|
@*
|
|
Several such commands may be used to apply more than one weight file.
|
|
@*
|
|
Data files which are loaded by -indev or -dev get a weight between 1 and
|
|
2 exp 28 = 268,435,456, depending on their block address. This shall keep
|
|
them roughly in the same order if the write method of modifying is applied.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-patterns disk_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-patterns set block address sorting weight
|
|
@cindex Block address, set sorting weight, @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-patterns
|
|
Like @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight-list , but expanding the iso_rr_paths as
|
|
shell parser patterns and applying @minus{}@minus{}sort-weight to each
|
|
matching file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -dir-mode mode
|
|
@kindex -dir-mode permissions for all directories
|
|
@cindex Permissions, for all directories, -dir-mode
|
|
Set the access permissions for all directories in the image to the given
|
|
mode which is either an octal number beginning with "0" or a comma separated
|
|
list of statements of the form [ugoa]*[+-=][rwxst]* . E.g. ug=rx,a-rwx
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -file-mode mode
|
|
@kindex -file-mode permissions for all data files
|
|
@cindex Permissions, for all data files, -file-mode
|
|
Like -dir-mode but for all regular data files in the image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -pad
|
|
@kindex -pad add 300 KiB of zeros to ISO tree
|
|
@cindex Padding, 300 KiB, -pad
|
|
@*
|
|
Add 300 KiB to the end of the produced ISO image. This circumvents possible
|
|
read errors from ISO images which have been written to CD media in TAO mode.
|
|
The additional bytes are claimed as part of the ISO image if not --emul-toc
|
|
is given.
|
|
@*
|
|
Option -pad is the default.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -no-pad
|
|
@kindex -no-pad do not add zeros to ISO tree
|
|
@cindex Padding, disable, -no-pad
|
|
Disable padding of 300 KiB to the end of the produced ISO image.
|
|
This is safe if the image is not meant to be written on CD or if it
|
|
gets written to CD as only track in write mode SAO.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}old-empty
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}old-empty old block addresses for empty files
|
|
@cindex Padding, disable, @minus{}@minus{}old-empty
|
|
Use the old way of of giving block addresses in the range
|
|
of [0,31] to files with no own data content. The new way is to have
|
|
a dedicated block to which all such files will point.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Settings for standards compliance:
|
|
@node SetCompl, SetExtras, SetProduct, Options
|
|
@section Settings for standards compliance
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@kindex -iso-level define ISO 9660 limitations
|
|
@cindex ISO level, specify, -iso-level
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -iso-level number
|
|
@kindex -iso-level define ISO 9660 limitations
|
|
@cindex ISO level, specify, -iso-level
|
|
Specify the ISO 9660 version which defines the limitations of file naming
|
|
and data file size. The naming restrictions do not apply to the
|
|
Rock Ridge names but only to the low-level ISO 9660 names.
|
|
There are three conformance levels:
|
|
@*
|
|
Level 1 allows ISO names of the form 8.3 and file size up to 4 GiB - 1.
|
|
@*
|
|
Level 2 allows ISO names with up to 32 characters
|
|
and file size up to 4 GiB - 1.
|
|
@*
|
|
Level 3 allows ISO names with up to 32 characters
|
|
and file size of up to 400 GiB - 200 KiB. (This size limitation is
|
|
set by the xorriso implementation and not by ISO 9660 which would
|
|
allow nearly 8 TiB.)
|
|
@*
|
|
Pseudo-level 4 enables production of an additional ISO 9660:1999
|
|
directory tree.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -disallow_dir_id_ext
|
|
@kindex -disallow_dir_id_ext enforce ISO level 1 directory names
|
|
@cindex ISO level 1, enforce directory names, -disallow_dir_id_ext
|
|
Do not follow a bad habit of mkisofs which allows dots in the ISO names
|
|
of directories. On the other hand, some bootable GNU/Linux images depend on
|
|
this bad habit.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -U
|
|
@kindex -U very relaxed filename rules
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, very relaxed rules, -U, -untranslated-filenames
|
|
@*
|
|
This option allows ISO file names without dot and up to 37 characters,
|
|
ISO file paths longer than 255 characters, and all ASCII characters in file
|
|
names. Further it omits the semicolon and the version numbers at the end
|
|
of ISO names.
|
|
@*
|
|
This all violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -untranslated-filenames
|
|
@kindex -untranslated-filenames very relaxed filename rules
|
|
Alias of -U.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -untranslated_name_len number
|
|
@kindex -untranslated_name_len untranslated file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, untranslated, -untranslated_name_len
|
|
Allow ISO file names up to the given number of characters
|
|
without any character conversion. The maximum number is 96.
|
|
If a file name has more characters, then image production will
|
|
fail deliberately.
|
|
@*
|
|
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -allow-lowercase
|
|
@kindex -allow-lowercase lowercase in ISO file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, allow lowercase, -allow-lowercase
|
|
Allow lowercase character in ISO file names.
|
|
@*
|
|
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -relaxed-filenames
|
|
@kindex -relaxed-filenames 7-bit special characters in ISO file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, 7-bit special characters, -relaxed-filenames
|
|
Allow nearly all 7-bit characters in ISO file names.
|
|
Not allowed are 0x0 and '/'. If not option -allow-lowercase is given,
|
|
then lowercase letters get converted to uppercase.
|
|
@*
|
|
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -d
|
|
@kindex -d omit trailing dot in ISO file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, omit trailing dot, -d, -omit-period
|
|
@*
|
|
Do not add trailing dot to ISO file names without dot.
|
|
@*
|
|
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -omit-period
|
|
@kindex -omit-period omit trailing dot in ISO file names
|
|
Alias of -d.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -l
|
|
@kindex -l allow 31 characters in ISO file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, allow 31 characters, -l, -full-iso9660-filenames
|
|
@*
|
|
Allow up to 31 characters in ISO file names.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -full-iso9660-filenames
|
|
@kindex -full-iso9660-filenames allow 31 characters in ISO file names
|
|
Alias of -l.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -max-iso9660-filenames
|
|
@kindex -max-iso9660-filenames allow 37 characters in ISO file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, allow 37 characters, -max-iso9660-filenames
|
|
Allow up to 37 characters in ISO file names.
|
|
@*
|
|
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -N
|
|
@kindex -N omit version number in ISO file names
|
|
@cindex ISO file names, omit version number, -N, -omit-version-number
|
|
@*
|
|
Omit the semicolon and the version numbers at the end of ISO names.
|
|
@*
|
|
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -omit-version-number
|
|
@kindex -omit-version-number omit version number in ISO file names
|
|
Alias of -N.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Settings for standards extensions:
|
|
@node SetExtras, SetHide, SetCompl, Options
|
|
@section Settings for standards extensions
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -R
|
|
@kindex -R Rock Ridge (is enabled by default)
|
|
@cindex Rock Ridge, (enabled by default), -R, -rock
|
|
@*
|
|
With mkisofs this option enables Rock Ridge extensions. @command{xorrisofs}
|
|
produces them by default. It is strongly discouraged to disable them
|
|
by option @minus{}@minus{}norock.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -rock
|
|
@kindex -rock Rock Ridge (is enabled by default)
|
|
@*
|
|
Alias of -R.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -r
|
|
@kindex -r Rock Ridge with altered owner and permission
|
|
@cindex Rock Ridge, altered owner and permission, -r, -rational-rock
|
|
@*
|
|
Set Rock Ridge user and group id of all files in the ISO image to 0.
|
|
Grant r-permissions to all. Deny all w-permissions.
|
|
If any x-permission is set, grant x-permission to all.
|
|
Remove s-bit and t-bit.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -rational-rock
|
|
@kindex -rational-rock Rock Ridge with altered owner and permission
|
|
Alias of -r.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}norock
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}norock disable Rock Ridge production
|
|
@cindex Rock Ridge, disable production, @minus{}@minus{}norock
|
|
@*
|
|
This option disables the production of Rock Ridge extensions for the
|
|
ISO 9660 file objects. The multi-session capabilities of @command{xorrisofs}
|
|
depend much on the naming fidelity of Rock Ridge. So it is strongly
|
|
discouraged to disable it by this option.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -file_name_limit number
|
|
@kindex -file_name_limit curbs length of file names
|
|
@cindex File names, curb length, -file_name_limit
|
|
Set the maximum permissible length for file names in the range of 64 to 255.
|
|
Path components which are longer than the given number will get truncated
|
|
and have their last 33 bytes overwritten by a colon ':' and the
|
|
hex representation of the MD5 of the first 4095 bytes of the whole
|
|
oversized name. Potential incomplete UTF-8 characters will get their
|
|
leading bytes replaced by '_'.
|
|
@*
|
|
Linux kernels up to at least 4.1 misrepresent names of length 254 and 255.
|
|
If you expect such names in or under disk_paths and plan to mount the ISO
|
|
by such Linux kernels, consider to set -file_name_limit 253.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -D
|
|
@kindex -D allow deep directory hierachies
|
|
@cindex Deep directories, allow, -D, -disable-deep-relocation
|
|
The standard ECMA-119 demands that no path in the image shall have more
|
|
than 8 name components or 255 characters. Therefore it would be necessary
|
|
to move deeper directory trees to a higher directory. Rock Ridge offers an
|
|
opportunity to let these relocated directories appear at their orginal
|
|
deep position, but this feature might not be implemented properly by
|
|
operating systems which mount the image.
|
|
@*
|
|
Option -D disables this deep directory relocation, and thus violates
|
|
ISO 9660 specs.
|
|
@*
|
|
xorrisofs has -D set by default. If given explicitly then it overrides
|
|
the options -rr_reloc_dir and -hide-rr-moved.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -disable-deep-relocation
|
|
@kindex -disable-deep-relocation allow deep directory hierachies
|
|
Alias of -D.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -rr_reloc_dir name
|
|
@kindex -rr_reloc_dir set deep directory relocation target
|
|
@cindex Deep directories, relocation target, -rr_reloc_dir
|
|
Enable the relocation of deep directories and thus avoid ECMA-119 file paths
|
|
of more than 8 name components or 255 characters. Directories which lead to
|
|
such file paths will get moved to a directory in the root directory of the
|
|
image. Its name gets set by this option.
|
|
It is permissible to use the root directory itself.
|
|
@*
|
|
The overall directory tree will appear originally deep when interpreted as
|
|
Rock Ridge tree. It will appear as re-arranged if only ECMA-119 information
|
|
is considered.
|
|
@*
|
|
If the given relocation target directory does not already exist when image
|
|
production begins, then it will get created and marked for Rock Ridge as
|
|
relocation artefact. At least on GNU/Linux it will not be displayed in
|
|
mounted Rock Ridge images.
|
|
@*
|
|
The name must not contain a '/' character after its first character and it
|
|
must not be longer than 255 bytes.
|
|
@*
|
|
This option has no effect if option -D is present.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide-rr-moved
|
|
@kindex -hide-rr-moved set deep directory relocation target
|
|
@cindex Deep directories, relocation target, -hide-rr-moved
|
|
Alias of -rr_reloc_dir "/.rr_moved"
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}for_backup
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}for_backup Enable backup fidelity
|
|
@cindex Backup, enable fidelity, @minus{}@minus{}for_backup
|
|
Enable options which improve backup fidelity:
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}acl, @minus{}@minus{}xattr, @minus{}@minus{}md5,
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}hardlinks.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}acl
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}acl Recording of ACLs
|
|
@cindex ACL, record and load, @minus{}@minus{}acl
|
|
@*
|
|
Enable recording and loading of ACLs from GNU/Linux or FreeBSD
|
|
(see man getfacl, man acl).
|
|
They will not be in effect with mounted ISO images. But xorriso can
|
|
restore them on the same systems when extracting files from the ISO image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}xattr
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}xattr Recording of xattr
|
|
@cindex xattr, record and load, @minus{}@minus{}xattr
|
|
@*
|
|
Enable recording and loading of GNU/Linux or FreeBSD extended attributes in
|
|
user namespace (see man getfattr and man attr,
|
|
man getextattr and man 9 extattr, respectively).
|
|
They will not be in effect with mounted ISO images. But xorriso can
|
|
restore them on the same systems when extracting files from the ISO image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}md5
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}md5 Recording of MD5 checksums
|
|
@cindex MD5, record and load, @minus{}@minus{}md5
|
|
@*
|
|
Enable recording of MD5 checksums for the overall ISO image and for each
|
|
single data file in the image. xorriso can check the content of an ISO
|
|
image with these sums and raise alert on mismatch.
|
|
See man xorriso, options -check_media, check_md5_r.
|
|
xorriso can print recorded MD5 checksums. E.g. by:
|
|
@*
|
|
-find / -exec get_md5
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}hardlinks
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}hardlinks Recording of hardlink relations
|
|
@cindex Links, record and load hard links, @minus{}@minus{}hardlinks
|
|
Enable loading and recording of hardlink relations.
|
|
Search for families of iso_rr files which stem from the same disk file,
|
|
have identical content filtering and have identical properties.
|
|
The members of each family get the same inode number in the ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
Whether these numbers are respected at mount time depends on the operating
|
|
system. xorriso can create hardlink families when extracting files from
|
|
the ISO image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}scdbackup_tag disk_path record_name
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}scdbackup_tag Recording of MD5 checksum
|
|
@cindex scdbackup, record checksum tag, @minus{}@minus{}scdbackup_tag
|
|
Append a scdbackup checksum record to the image. This works only if the
|
|
parameter next_writeable_address of option -C is 0.
|
|
If disk_path is not an empty string, then append a scdbackup checksum record
|
|
to the end of this file. record_name is a word that gets part of tag
|
|
and record.
|
|
@*
|
|
Program scdbackup_verify will recognize and verify tag and file record.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -J
|
|
@kindex -J enable production of Joliet directory tree
|
|
@cindex Joliet, enable, -J, -joliet
|
|
@*
|
|
Enable the production of an additional Joliet directory tree along
|
|
with the ISO 9660 Rock Ridge tree.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -joliet
|
|
@kindex -joliet enable production of Joliet directory tree
|
|
Alias of -J.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -joliet-long
|
|
@kindex -joliet-long allow longer Joliet names
|
|
@cindex Joliet, allows longer names, -joliet-long
|
|
Allow 103 characters in Joliet file names rather than 64 as is prescribed
|
|
by the specification. Allow Joliet paths longer than the prescribed limit of
|
|
240 characters.
|
|
@*
|
|
Oversized names get truncated. Without this option, oversized paths get
|
|
excluded from the Joliet tree.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -joliet-utf16
|
|
@kindex -joliet-utf16 use UTF-16 with Joliet names
|
|
@cindex UTF-16, for Joliet paths, -joliet-utf16
|
|
Encode Joliet file names in UTF-16BE rather than UCS-2.
|
|
The difference is with characters which are not present
|
|
in UCS-2 and get encoded in UTF-16 by 2 words of 16 bit each.
|
|
Both words then stem from a reserved subset of UCS-2.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hfsplus
|
|
@kindex -hfsplus enable production of HFS+ partition
|
|
@cindex HFS+, enables production
|
|
Enable the production of an additional HFS+ filesystem inside the ISO 9660
|
|
image and mark it by Apple Partition Map (APM) entries in the System Area,
|
|
the first 32 KiB of the image.
|
|
@*
|
|
This may collide with options like -G or -isohybrid-mbr which submit user data
|
|
for inclusion in the same address range.
|
|
The first 8 bytes of the System Area get overwritten by
|
|
@{ 0x45, 0x52, 0x08 0x00, 0xeb, 0x02, 0xff, 0xff @}
|
|
which can be executed as x86 machine code without negative effects.
|
|
So if an MBR gets combined with this feature, then its first 8 bytes
|
|
should contain no essential commands.
|
|
@*
|
|
The next blocks of 2 KiB in the System Area will be occupied by APM entries.
|
|
The first one covers the part of the ISO image before the HFS+ filesystem
|
|
metadata. The second one marks the range from HFS+ metadata to the end
|
|
of file content data. If more ISO image data follow, then a third partition
|
|
entry gets produced. Other features of xorriso might cause the need for
|
|
more APM entries.
|
|
@*
|
|
Be aware that HFS+ is case-insensitive although it can record file names
|
|
with upper-case and lower-case letters. Therefore, file names from the iso_rr
|
|
name tree may collide in the HFS+ name tree. In this case they get changed
|
|
by adding underscore characters and counting numbers. In case of very long
|
|
names, it might be necessary to map them to "MANGLED_...".
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hfsplus-serial-no
|
|
@kindex -hfsplus-serial-no set HFS+ serial number
|
|
@cindex HFS+, set serial number
|
|
Set a string of 16 digits "0" to "9"
|
|
and letters "a" to "f", which will be used as unique serial number of
|
|
an emerging HFS+ filesystem.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hfsplus-block-size number
|
|
@kindex -hfsplus-block-size set HFS+ allocation block size
|
|
@cindex HFS+, set allocation block size
|
|
Set the allocation block size to
|
|
be used when producing HFS+ filesystems. Permissible are 512, 2048, or 0.
|
|
The latter lets the program decide.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -apm-block-size number
|
|
@kindex -hfsplus-block-size set APM block size
|
|
@cindex HFS+, set APM block size
|
|
Set the block size to be used when
|
|
describing partitions by an Apple Partition Map. Permissible are 512, 2048,
|
|
or 0. The latter lets the program decide.
|
|
@*
|
|
Note that size 512 is not compatible with production of GPT, and that
|
|
size 2048 will not be mountable -t hfsplus at least by older Linux kernels.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hfsplus-file-creator-type creator type iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -hfsplus-file-creator-type HFS+ creator-type attribute
|
|
@cindex HFS+, set creator and type of file, -hfsplus-file-creator-type
|
|
Set the HFS+ creator and type attributes of a file in the emerging image.
|
|
These are two codes of 4 characters each.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hfs-bless-by blessing iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -hfs-bless-by HFS+ blessing
|
|
@cindex HFS+, issue blessing, -hfs-bless-by
|
|
Issue a HFS+ blessing. They are roles which can be attributed to
|
|
up to four directories and a data file:
|
|
@*
|
|
"ppc_bootdir", "intel_bootfile", "show_folder", "os9_folder", "osx_folder".
|
|
@*
|
|
They may be abbreviated as "p", "i", "s", "9", and "x".
|
|
@*
|
|
Each such role can be attributed to at most one file object. "intel_bootfile"
|
|
is the one that would apply to a data file. All others apply to directories.
|
|
No file object can bear more than one blessing.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hfs-bless disk_path
|
|
@kindex -hfs-bless HFS+ blessing ppc_bootdir
|
|
@cindex HFS+, issue blessing ppc_bootdir, -hfs-bless
|
|
Issue HFS+ blessing "ppc_bootdir" to the directory which stems from the
|
|
directory disk_path in the local filesystem tree.
|
|
@*
|
|
This works only if there is at least one data file underneath the directory.
|
|
disk_path can become ambigous if files from different local filesystem
|
|
sub-trees are put into the same sub-tree of the ISO image.
|
|
Consider to use -hfs-bless-by "p" for unambigous addressing via iso_rr_path.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Settings for file hiding:
|
|
@node SetHide, ImageId, SetExtras, Options
|
|
@section Settings for file hiding
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide disk_path_pattern
|
|
@kindex -hide keep matching files invisible in ISO tree
|
|
@cindex Hiding, from ISO and Rock Ridge, -hide
|
|
Make files invisible in the directory tree of ISO 9660 and Rock Ridge,
|
|
if their disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
|
|
The data content of such hidden files will be included in the
|
|
resulting image, even if they do not show up in any directory.
|
|
But you will need own means to find nameless data in the image.
|
|
@*
|
|
This command does not apply to the boot catalog.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide-list disk_path
|
|
@kindex -hide-list keep matching files invisible in ISO tree
|
|
@cindex Hiding, from ISO and Rock Ridge, -hide-list
|
|
Perform -hide using each line out of file disk_path as argument
|
|
disk_path_pattern.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide-joliet disk_path_pattern
|
|
@kindex -hide-joliet keep matching files invisible in Joliet tree
|
|
@cindex Hiding, from Joliet, -hide-joliet
|
|
Like option -hide but making files invisible in the directory tree of Joliet,
|
|
if their disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide-joliet-list disk_path
|
|
@kindex -hide-joliet-list keep matching files invisible in Joliet tree
|
|
@cindex Hiding, from Joliet, -hide-joliet-list
|
|
Perform -hide-joliet using each line out of file disk_path as argument
|
|
disk_path_pattern.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide-hfsplus disk_path_pattern
|
|
@kindex -hide-hfsplus keep matching files invisible in HFS+ tree
|
|
@cindex Hiding, from HFS+, -hide-hfsplus
|
|
Like option -hide but making files invisible in the directory tree of HFS+,
|
|
if their disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hide-hfsplus-list disk_path
|
|
@kindex -hide-hfsplus-list keep matching files invisible in HFS+ tree
|
|
@cindex Hiding, from HFS+, -hide-hfsplus-list
|
|
Perform -hide-hfsplus using each line out of file disk_path as argument
|
|
disk_path_pattern.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B ISO image ID strings:
|
|
@node ImageId, Bootable, SetHide, Options
|
|
@section ISO image ID strings
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
The following strings and file addresses get stored in the Primary Volume
|
|
Descriptor of the ISO9660 image. The file addresses are ISO 9660
|
|
paths. These files should have iso_rr_paths which consist only of
|
|
the characters [A-Z0-9_] and exactly one dot which separates
|
|
at most 8 characters from at most 3 characters.
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -V text
|
|
@kindex -V set Volume Id
|
|
@cindex Volume Id, set, -V, -volid
|
|
Set the Volume Id of the ISO image.
|
|
xorriso accepts any text up to 32 characters,
|
|
but according to rarely obeyed specs stricter rules apply:
|
|
@*
|
|
Conformant are ASCII characters out of [A-Z0-9_]. Like: "IMAGE_23"
|
|
@*
|
|
Joliet allows 16 UCS-2 characters. Like: "Windows name"
|
|
@*
|
|
Be aware that the volume id might get used automatically as name of the
|
|
mount point when the medium is inserted into a playful computer system.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -volid text
|
|
@kindex -volid set Volume Id
|
|
Alias of -V.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -volset text
|
|
@kindex -volset set Volume Set Id
|
|
@cindex Volume Set Id, set, -volset
|
|
Set the Volume Set Id of the ISO image.
|
|
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -P text
|
|
@kindex -P set Publisher Id
|
|
@cindex Publisher Id, set, -P, -publisher
|
|
Set the Publisher Id of the ISO image. This may identify the person or
|
|
organisation who specified what shall be recorded.
|
|
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -publisher text
|
|
@kindex -publisher set Publisher Id
|
|
Alias of -P.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -A text
|
|
@kindex -A set Application Id
|
|
@cindex Application Id, set, -A, -appid
|
|
Set the Application Id of the ISO image.
|
|
This may identify the specification of how the data are recorded.
|
|
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
|
|
@*
|
|
The special text "@@xorriso@@" gets converted to the id string of xorriso
|
|
which is normally written as Preparer Id. It is a wrong tradition to write
|
|
the program id as Application Id.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -appid text
|
|
@kindex -appid set Application Id
|
|
Alias of -A.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -sysid text
|
|
@kindex -sysid set System Id
|
|
@cindex System Id, set, -sysid
|
|
Set the System Id of the ISO image. This may
|
|
identify the system which can recognize and act upon the content of the
|
|
System Area in image blocks 0 to 15.
|
|
Permissible are up to 32 characters.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -p text
|
|
@kindex -p set Preparer Id
|
|
@cindex Preparer Id, set, -p
|
|
Set the Preparer Id of the ISO image. This may
|
|
identify the person or other entity which controls the preparation of the data
|
|
which shall be recorded. Normally this should be the id of xorriso and not
|
|
of the person or program which operates xorriso. Please avoid to change it.
|
|
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
|
|
@*
|
|
The special text "@@xorriso@@" gets converted to the id string of xorriso
|
|
which is default at program startup.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -preparer text
|
|
@kindex -preparer set Preparer Id
|
|
Alias of -p.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -abstract iso_path
|
|
@kindex -abstract set Abstract File path
|
|
@cindex Abstract File, set path, -abstract
|
|
Set the address of the Abstract File of the ISO image. This should
|
|
be the ISO 9660 path of a file in the image which contains an abstract
|
|
statement about the image content.
|
|
Permissible are up to 37 characters.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -biblio iso_path
|
|
@kindex -biblio set Biblio File path
|
|
@cindex Biblio File, set path, -biblio
|
|
Set the address of the Biblio File of the ISO image. This should
|
|
be the ISO 9660 path of a file in the image which contains bibliographic
|
|
records.
|
|
Permissible are up to 37 characters.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -copyright iso_path
|
|
@kindex -copyright set Copyright File path
|
|
@cindex Copyright File, set path, -copyright
|
|
Set the address of the Copyright File of the ISO image. This should
|
|
be the ISO 9660 path of a file in the image which contains a copyright
|
|
statement.
|
|
Permissible are up to 37 characters.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}modification-date=YYYYMMDDhhmmsscc
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}modification-date set ISO image timestamps
|
|
@cindex ISO image, set timestamps, @minus{}@minus{}modification-date=
|
|
Set a timestring that overrides ISO image creation and modification timestamps
|
|
literally.
|
|
It must consist of 16 decimal digits which form YYYYMMDDhhmmsscc, with
|
|
YYYY between 1970 and 2999. Time zone is GMT.
|
|
It is supposed to match this GRUB line:
|
|
@*
|
|
search @minus{}@minus{}fs-uuid @minus{}@minus{}set YYYY-MM-DD-hh-mm-ss-cc
|
|
@*
|
|
E.g. 2010040711405800 is 7 Apr 2010 11:40:58 (+0 centiseconds).
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}application_use character|0xXY|disk_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}application_use set Application Use field
|
|
@cindex ISO image, set Application Use field, @minus{}@minus{}application_use
|
|
Specify the content of the Application Use field which can take at most
|
|
512 bytes.
|
|
@*
|
|
If the parameter of this command is empty, then the field is filled
|
|
with 512 0-bytes. If it is a single character, then it gets repeated 512 times.
|
|
If it begins by "0x" followed by two hex digits [0-9a-fA-F], then the digits
|
|
are read as byte value which gets repeated 512 times.
|
|
@*
|
|
Any other parameter text is used as disk_path to open a data file and to
|
|
read up to 512 bytes from it. If the file is smaller than 512 bytes, then the
|
|
remaining bytes in the field get set to binary 0.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B El Torito Bootable ISO images:
|
|
@node Bootable, SystemArea, ImageId, Options
|
|
@section El Torito Bootable ISO images
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
The precondition for a bootable ISO image is to have in the ISO image
|
|
the files of a boot loader. The boot facilities of computers get
|
|
directed to such files, which usually execute further program files
|
|
from the ISO image.
|
|
@command{xorrisofs} can produce several kinds of boot block or boot record,
|
|
which become part of the ISO image, and get interpreted by the according
|
|
boot facility.
|
|
@*
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@cindex El Torito, _definition
|
|
An @strong{El Torito}
|
|
boot record points the bootstrapping facility to a boot catalog
|
|
with one or more boot images, which are binary program files stored in
|
|
the ISO image.
|
|
The content of the boot image files is not in the scope of El Torito.
|
|
@*
|
|
xorriso composes the boot catalog according to the boot image
|
|
files given and structured by options -b, -e, -el-torito-alt-boot,
|
|
and @minus{}@minus{}efi-boot. Often it contains only one entry.
|
|
@*
|
|
El Torito gets interpreted by boot facilities PC-BIOS and EFI.
|
|
Most bootable GNU/Linux CDs are equipped with ISOLINUX or GRUB boot images
|
|
for PC-BIOS.
|
|
@*
|
|
@command{xorrisofs} supports the example options out of the ISOLINUX wiki,
|
|
the options used in GRUB script grub-mkrescue, and the example in the
|
|
FreeBSD AvgLiveCD wiki.
|
|
@*
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
For CD booting via boot facilities other than PC-BIOS and EFI, and
|
|
for booting from USB sticks or hard disks, see the next section
|
|
about the System Area.
|
|
@*
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -b iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -b El Torito PC-BIOS boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -b, -eltorito-boot
|
|
Specify the boot image file which shall be mentioned in the current
|
|
entry of the El Torito boot catalog. It will be marked as suitable for
|
|
PC-BIOS.
|
|
@*
|
|
With boot images from ISOLINUX and GRUB this option should be accompanied by
|
|
options -c , -no-emul-boot , -boot-load-size 4 , -boot-info-table.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -eltorito-boot iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -eltorito-boot El Torito PC-BIOS boot image
|
|
Alias of -b.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -eltorito-alt-boot
|
|
@kindex -eltorito-alt-boot begin next boot catalog entry
|
|
@cindex Bootability, next entry, -eltorito-alt-boot
|
|
Finalize the current El Torito boot catalog entry and begin a new one.
|
|
A boot image file and all its necessary options shall be specified before
|
|
option -eltorito-alt-boot.
|
|
All further El Torito boot options apply to the new catalog
|
|
entry. Up to 32 catalog entries are possible.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -e iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -e El Torito EFI boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -e
|
|
Specify the boot image file which shall be mentioned in the current
|
|
entry of the El Torito boot catalog. It will be marked as suitable for EFI.
|
|
@*
|
|
Option -e should be followed by option -no-emul-boot and no other El Torito
|
|
options before an eventual -eltorito-alt-boot.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}efi-boot iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}efi-boot El Torito EFI boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, @minus{}@minus{}efi-boot
|
|
Perform -eltorito-alt-boot, option -e with the given
|
|
iso_rr_path, -no-emul-boot, and again -eltorito-alt-boot. This gesture is
|
|
used for achieving EFI-bootability of the GRUB2 rescue CD.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -boot-load-size number
|
|
@kindex -boot-load-size El Torito boot image load size
|
|
@cindex Bootability, boot image load size, -boot-load-size
|
|
Set the number of 512-byte blocks to be loaded at boot time
|
|
from the boot image in the current catalog entry.
|
|
Non-emulating BIOS bootimages usually need a load size of 4.
|
|
EFI boot images usually get set the number of blocks occupied
|
|
by the boot image file.
|
|
@*
|
|
El Torito cannot represent load sizes higher than 65535.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hard-disk-boot
|
|
@kindex -hard-disk-boot El Torito boot image emulation
|
|
@cindex Bootability, boot image emulation, -hard-disk-boot
|
|
Mark the boot image in the current catalog entry as emulated hard disk.
|
|
(Not suitable for any known boot loader.)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -no-emul-boot
|
|
@kindex -no-emul-boot El Torito boot image emulation
|
|
@cindex Bootability, no boot image emulation, -no-emul-boot
|
|
Mark the boot image in the current catalog entry as not emulating
|
|
floppy or hard disk. (This is to be used with all known boot loaders.)
|
|
@*
|
|
If neither -hard-disk-boot nor -no-emul-boot is given, then the
|
|
boot image will be marked as emulating a floppy.
|
|
(Not suitable for any known boot loader.)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -eltorito-id text|56_hexdigits
|
|
@kindex -eltorito-id El Torito boot section id string
|
|
@cindex Bootability, El Torito section id string, -eltorito-id
|
|
Define the ID string of the boot catalog
|
|
section where the boot image will be listed. If the value consists of 56
|
|
characters [0-9A-Fa-f] then it is converted into 28 bytes, else the first
|
|
28 characters become the ID string.
|
|
The ID string of the first boot image becomes the overall catalog ID.
|
|
It is limited to 24 characters. Other id_strings become section IDs.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -eltorito-selcrit hexdigits
|
|
@kindex -eltorito-selcrit El Torito boot selection criteria
|
|
@cindex Bootability, El Torito selection criteria, -eltorito-selcrit
|
|
Define the Selection Criteria of the boot image.
|
|
Up to 20 bytes get read from the given characters [0-9A-Fa-f].
|
|
They get attributed to the boot image entry in the catalog.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -boot-info-table
|
|
@kindex -boot-info-table Patch El Torito boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, boot image patching, -boot-info-table
|
|
Overwrite bytes 8 to 63 in the current boot image. The information will be
|
|
supplied by xorriso in the course of image production: Block address of
|
|
the Primary Volume Descriptor, block address of the boot image file,
|
|
size of the boot image file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}grub2-boot-info
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}grub2-boot-info Patch El Torito boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, boot image patching, @minus{}@minus{}grub2-boot-info
|
|
Overwrite bytes 2548 to 2555 in the current boot image by the address
|
|
of that boot image.
|
|
The address is written as 64 bit little-endian number. It is the
|
|
2KB block address of the boot image content, multiplied by 4,
|
|
and then incremented by 5.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -c iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -c El Torito boot catalog name
|
|
@cindex Bootability, boot catalog name, -c, -eltorito-catalog
|
|
Set the address of the El Torito boot catalog file within the image.
|
|
This file address is not significant for the booting PC-BIOS or EFI,
|
|
but it may later be read by other programs in order to learn about
|
|
the available boot images.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -eltorito-catalog iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -eltorito-catalog El Torito boot catalog name
|
|
Alias of -c.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}boot-catalog-hide
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}boot-catalog-hide Hide El Torito boot catalog
|
|
@cindex Bootability, boot catalog hidden, @minus{}@minus{}boot-catalog-hide
|
|
Prevent the El Torito boot catalog from appearing as file
|
|
in the directory trees of the image.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B System Area, MBR, GPT, APM, other boot blocks:
|
|
@node SystemArea, Charset, Bootable, Options
|
|
@section System Area, MBR, GPT, APM, other boot blocks
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
@cindex System Area, _definition
|
|
The first 16 blocks of an ISO image are the System Area.
|
|
It is reserved for system dependent boot software. This may be the
|
|
boot facilities and partition tables of various hardware architectures.
|
|
@*
|
|
@cindex MBR, _definition
|
|
A @strong{MBR} (Master Boot Record) contains boot code and a partition table.
|
|
It is read by PC-BIOS when booting from USB stick or hard disk,
|
|
and by PowerPC CHRP or PReP when booting.
|
|
An MBR partiton with type 0xee indicates the presence of GPT.
|
|
@*
|
|
@cindex GPT, _definition
|
|
A @strong{GPT} (GUID Partition Table) marks partitions in a more modern way.
|
|
It is read by EFI when booting from USB stick or hard disk, and may be used
|
|
for finding and mounting a HFS+ partition inside the ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
@cindex APM, _definition
|
|
An @strong{APM} (Apple Partition Map) marks the HFS+ partition.
|
|
It is read by Macs for booting and for mounting.
|
|
@*
|
|
MBR, GPT and APM are combinable. APM occupies the first 8 bytes of
|
|
MBR boot code. All three do not hamper El Torito booting from CDROM.
|
|
@*
|
|
@command{xorrisofs} supports further boot facilities:
|
|
MIPS Big Endian (SGI), MIPS Little Endian (DEC), SUN SPARC, HP-PA, DEC Alpha.
|
|
Those are mutually not combinable and also not combinable with MBR, GPT,
|
|
or APM.
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@cindex Interval reader for system area and partitions
|
|
Several of the following options expect disk paths as input but also accept
|
|
description strings for the libisofs interval reader, which is able to cut
|
|
out data from disk files or -indev and to zeroize parts of the content:
|
|
-G, -generic-boot, @minus{}@minus{}embedded-boot, @minus{}@minus{}grub2-mbr,
|
|
-isohybrid-mbr, -efi-boot-part, -prep-boot-part, -B, -sparc-boot,
|
|
-append_partition.
|
|
@*
|
|
The description string consists
|
|
of the following components, separated by colon ':'
|
|
@*
|
|
"@minus{}@minus{}interval:"Flags":"Interval":"Zeroizers":"Source
|
|
@*
|
|
The component "@minus{}@minus{}interval" states that this is not
|
|
a plain disk path but rather a interval reader description string.
|
|
@*
|
|
The component Flags modifies the further interpretation:
|
|
@*
|
|
"local_fs" demands to read from a file depicted by the path in Source.
|
|
@*
|
|
"imported_iso" demands to read from the -indev. This works only if -outdev
|
|
is not the same as -indev. The Source component is ignored.
|
|
@*
|
|
The component Interval consists of two byte address numbers separated by a "-" character. E.g. "0-429" means to read bytes 0 to 429.
|
|
@*
|
|
The component Zeroizers consists of zero or more comma separated strings.
|
|
They define which part of the read data to zeroize. Byte number 0 means
|
|
the byte read from the Interval start address.
|
|
Each string may be one of:
|
|
@*
|
|
"zero_mbrpt" demands to zeroize the MBR partition table if
|
|
bytes 510 and 511 bear the MBR signature 0x55 0xaa.
|
|
@*
|
|
"zero_gpt" demands to check for a GPT header in bytes 512 to 1023,
|
|
to zeroize it and its partition table blocks.
|
|
@*
|
|
"zero_apm" demands to check for an APM block 0 and to zeroize
|
|
its partition table blocks.
|
|
@*
|
|
Start_byte"-"End_byte demands to zeroize the read-in bytes beginning
|
|
with number Start_byte and ending after End_byte.
|
|
@*
|
|
The component Source is the file path with flag "local_fs", and ignored with
|
|
flag "imported_iso".
|
|
@*
|
|
Byte numbers may be scaled by a suffix out of @{k,m,g,t,s,d@} meaning
|
|
multiplication by @{1024, 1024k, 1024m, 1024g, 2048, 512@}. A scaled value
|
|
end number depicts the last byte of the scaled range.
|
|
@*
|
|
E.g. "0d-0d" is "0-511".
|
|
@*
|
|
Examples:
|
|
@*
|
|
"local_fs:0-32767:zero_mbrpt,zero_gpt,440-443:/tmp/template.iso"
|
|
@*
|
|
"imported_iso:45056d-47103d::"
|
|
@*
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -G disk_path
|
|
@kindex -G Fill System Area e.g. by MBR
|
|
@cindex Bootability, fill System Area e.g. by MBR, -G, @minus{}@minus{}embedded-boot, -generic-boot
|
|
Copy at most 32768 bytes from the given disk file to the very start of
|
|
the ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
Other than a El Torito boot image, the file disk_path needs not to be added
|
|
to the ISO image. It will not show up as file in the directory trees.
|
|
@*
|
|
In multi-session situations, the special disk_path "." prevents reading of
|
|
a disk file but nevertheless causes the adjustments in the
|
|
existing MBR, which were ordered by other options.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -generic-boot disk_path
|
|
@kindex -generic-boot Fill System Area e.g. by MBR
|
|
Alias of -G.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}embedded-boot disk_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}embedded-boot Fill System Area e.g. by MBR
|
|
Alias of -G.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}grub2-mbr disk_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}grub2-mbr Install modern GRUB2 MBR
|
|
@cindex Bootability, install modern GRUB2 MBR, @minus{}@minus{}grub2-mbr
|
|
Install disk_path in the System Area and treat it as modern GRUB2 MBR.
|
|
The content start address of the first boot
|
|
image is converted to a count of 512 byte blocks, and an offset of 4 is added.
|
|
The result is written as 64 bit little-endian number to byte address 0x1b0.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -isohybrid-mbr disk_path
|
|
@kindex -isohybrid-mbr Install ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR
|
|
@cindex Bootability, install ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR, -isohybrid-mbr
|
|
Install disk_path as ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR which makes the boot image
|
|
given by option -b bootable from USB sticks and hard disks via PC-BIOS.
|
|
This preparation is normally done by ISOLINUX program isohybrid
|
|
on the already produced ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
The disk path should lead to one of the Syslinux files isohdp[fp]x*.bin .
|
|
The MBR gets patched according to isohybrid needs. The first partition
|
|
describes the range of the ISO image. Its start is at block 0 by default,
|
|
but may be set to 64 disk blocks by option -partition_offset 16.
|
|
@*
|
|
For the meaning of special disk_path "." see option -G.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -isohybrid-gpt-basdat
|
|
@kindex -isohybrid-gpt-basdat Mark boot image in GPT
|
|
@cindex Bootability, mark boot image in GPT, -isohybrid-gpt-basdat
|
|
Mark the current El Torito boot image (see options -b and -e) in GPT as
|
|
partition of type Basic Data. This works only with -isohybrid-mbr and
|
|
has the same impact on the system area as -efi-boot-part. It cannot be
|
|
combined with -efi-boot-part or -hfsplus.
|
|
@*
|
|
The first three boot images which are marked by GPT will also show up
|
|
as partition entries of type 0xef in MBR.
|
|
The MBR partition for PC-BIOS gets type 0x00 rather than 0x17 in this case.
|
|
Often the further MBR entries are the ones which actually get used by EFI.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -isohybrid-gpt-hfsplus
|
|
@kindex -isohybrid-gpt-hfsplus Mark boot image in GPT
|
|
@cindex Bootability, mark boot image in GPT, -isohybrid-gpt-hfsplus
|
|
Mark the current El Torito boot image (see options -b and -e) in GPT as
|
|
partition of type HFS+.
|
|
Impact and restrictions are like with -isohybrid-gpt-basdat.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -isohybrid-apm-hfsplus
|
|
@kindex -isohybrid-apm-hfsplus Mark boot image in APM
|
|
@cindex Bootability, mark boot image in APM, -isohybrid-apm-hfsplus
|
|
Mark the current El Torito boot image (see options -b and -e) in Apple
|
|
Partition Map as partition of type HFS+. This works only with -isohybrid-mbr
|
|
and has a similar impact on the system area as -hfsplus. It cannot be
|
|
combined with -efi-boot-part or -hfsplus.
|
|
@*
|
|
The ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR file must begin by a known pattern of
|
|
32 bytes of x86 machine code which essentially does nothing. It will get
|
|
overwritten by 32 bytes of APM header mock-up.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -part_like_isohybrid
|
|
@kindex -part_like_isohybrid Mark partitions like with isohybrid
|
|
@cindex Bootability, partitions like with isohybrid, -part_like_isohybrid
|
|
Control whether -isohybrid-gpt-basdat, -isohybrid-gpt-hfsplus, and
|
|
-isohybrid-apm-hfsplus apply even if not -isohybrid-mbr is present.
|
|
No MBR partition of type 0xee emerges, even if GPT gets produced.
|
|
Gaps between GPT and APM partitions will not be filled by more partitions.
|
|
Appended partitions get mentioned in APM if other APM partitions emerge.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}protective-msdos-label
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}protective-msdos-label Patch System Area partition table
|
|
@cindex Bootability, patch System Area partition table, @minus{}@minus{}protective-msdos-label
|
|
Patch the System Area by a simple PC-DOS partition table where partition 1
|
|
claims the range of the ISO image but leaves the first block unclaimed.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}mbr-force-bootable
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}mbr-force-bootable Enforce MBR bootable/active flag
|
|
@cindex Bootability, bootable MBR partition, @minus{}@minus{}mbr-force-bootable
|
|
Enforce an MBR partition with "bootable/active" flag if options like
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}protective-msdos-label or @minus{}@minus{}grub2-mbr are given.
|
|
These options normally cause the flag to be set if there is an
|
|
MBR partition of type other than 0xee or 0xef.
|
|
If no such partition exists, then no bootflag is set, unless
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}mbr-force-bootable forces creation of a dummy partition
|
|
of type 0x00 which covers only the first block of the ISO image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -partition_offset 2kb_block_adr
|
|
@kindex -partition_offset Make mountable by partition 1
|
|
@cindex Mountability, by non-trivial partition 1, -partition_offset
|
|
Cause a partition table with a single partition that begins at the
|
|
given block address. This is counted in 2048 byte
|
|
blocks, not in 512 byte blocks. If the block address is non-zero then it must
|
|
be at least 16. Values larger than 16 are hardly of use.
|
|
A non-zero partition offset causes two superblocks to be
|
|
generated and two sets of directory trees. The image is then mountable from its
|
|
absolute start as well as from the partition start.
|
|
@*
|
|
The offset value of an ISO image gets preserved when a new session is added
|
|
to a loaded image.
|
|
So the value defined here is only in effect if a new ISO image gets written.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -partition_hd_cyl number
|
|
@kindex -partition_hd_cyl MBR heads per cylinder
|
|
@cindex MBR, sectors per head, -partition_sec_hd
|
|
Set the number of heads per cylinder for the MBR partition table.
|
|
0 chooses a default value. Maximum is 255.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -partition_sec_hd number
|
|
@kindex -partition_sec_hd MBR sectors per head
|
|
@cindex MBR, sectors per head, -partition_sec_hd
|
|
Set the number of sectors per head for the MBR partition table.
|
|
0 chooses a default value. Maximum is 63.
|
|
@*
|
|
The product partition_sec_hd * partition_hd_cyl * 512 is the cylinder size.
|
|
It should be divisible by 2048 in order to make exact alignment possible.
|
|
With appended partitions and -appended_part_as_gpt there is no limit for
|
|
the number of cylinders. Else there may be at most 1024 of them.
|
|
If the cylinder size is too small to stay below the limit,
|
|
then appropriate values of partition_hd_cyl are chosen with
|
|
partition_sec_hd 32 or 63. If the image is larger than 8,422,686,720 bytes,
|
|
then the cylinder size constraints cannot be fulfilled for MBR.
|
|
They seem not overly important anyway.
|
|
Flat block addresses in partition tables are good for 1 TiB.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -partition_cyl_align mode
|
|
@kindex -partition_cyl_align Image size alignment
|
|
@cindex Image size, alignment, -partition_cyl_align
|
|
Control image size alignment to an integer number of cylinders.
|
|
It is prescribed by isohybrid specs and it seems to please program fdisk.
|
|
Cylinder size must be divisible by 2048.
|
|
Images larger than 8,323,596,288 bytes cannot be aligned in MBR partition
|
|
table.
|
|
@*
|
|
Mode "auto" is default. Alignment by padding happens only if
|
|
option -isohybrid-mbr is given.
|
|
@*
|
|
Mode "on" causes alignment by padding with option
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}protective-msdos-label too.
|
|
Mode "all" is like "on" but also pads up partitions from -append_partition
|
|
to an aligned size.
|
|
@*
|
|
Mode "off" disables alignment unconditionally.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -append_partition partition_number type_code disk_path
|
|
@kindex -append_partition Append MBR or GPT partition after image
|
|
@cindex MBR, GPT, append partition, -append_partition
|
|
Cause a prepared filesystem image to be appended to the ISO image and to be
|
|
described by a partition table entry in a boot block at the start of the
|
|
emerging ISO image. The partition entry will bear the size of the submitted
|
|
file rounded up to the next multiple of 2048 bytes or to the next multiple
|
|
of the cylinder size.
|
|
@*
|
|
Beware of subsequent multi-session runs. The appended partition will get
|
|
overwritten.
|
|
@*
|
|
partition_number may be 1 to 4. Number 1 will put the whole ISO image into
|
|
the unclaimed space before partition 1. So together with most xorriso MBR
|
|
or GPT features, number 2 would be the most natural choice.
|
|
@*
|
|
The type_code may be "FAT12", "FAT16", "Linux",
|
|
or a hexadecimal number between 0x00 and 0xff. Not all those numbers will
|
|
yield usable results. For a list of codes search the Internet for
|
|
"Partition Types" or run fdisk command "L".
|
|
This code matters only with MBR, not with GPT.
|
|
@*
|
|
If some other command causes the production of GPT, then the appended
|
|
partitions will be mentioned there too, even if not -appended_part_as_gpt
|
|
is given.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -appended_part_as_gpt
|
|
@kindex -appended_part_as_gpt Appended partitions in GPT
|
|
@cindex GPT, mark appended partitions, -appended_part_as_gpt
|
|
Marks partitions from -append_partition in GPT rather than in MBR.
|
|
In this case the MBR shows a single partition
|
|
of type 0xee which covers the whole output data.
|
|
@*
|
|
By default, appended partitions get marked in GPT only if GPT is produced
|
|
because of other options.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -appended_part_as_apm
|
|
@kindex -appended_part_as_apm Appended partitions in APM
|
|
@cindex APM, mark appended partitions, -appended_part_as_apm
|
|
Marks partitions from -append_partition in Apple Partition Map, too.
|
|
@*
|
|
By default, appended partitions get marked in APM only if APM is produced
|
|
because of other options and -part_like_isohybrid is enabled.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -efi-boot-part disk_path
|
|
@kindex -efi-boot-part EFI boot partition
|
|
@cindex Bootability, for EFI, -efi-boot-part
|
|
Copy a file from disk into the emerging ISO image and mark it by a GPT entry as
|
|
EFI System Partition. EFI boot firmware is supposed to use a FAT filesystem
|
|
image in such a partition for booting from USB stick or hard disk.
|
|
@*
|
|
Instead of a disk_path, the word @minus{}@minus{}efi-boot-image may be given.
|
|
It exposes in GPT the content of the first El Torito EFI boot image as
|
|
EFI system partition. EFI boot images are introduced by options -e or
|
|
@minus{}@minus{}efi-boot.
|
|
The affected EFI boot image cannot show up in HFS+ because it is stored
|
|
outside the HFS+ partition.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -chrp-boot-part
|
|
@kindex -chrp-boot-part CHRP partition
|
|
@cindex Bootability, for CHRP, -chrp-boot-part
|
|
Mark the block range of the whole emerging ISO image as MBR partition of type
|
|
0x96. This is not compatible with any other feature that produces MBR
|
|
partition entries. It makes GPT unrecognizable.
|
|
@*
|
|
CHRP is often used in conjunction with HFS. It is not yet tested whether HFS+
|
|
filesystems produced with option -hfsplus would boot on any
|
|
CHRP capable machine which does not boot pure ISO 9660 as well.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -chrp-boot
|
|
@kindex -chrp-boot CHRP partition
|
|
Alias of -chrp-boot-part.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -prep-boot-part disk_path
|
|
@kindex -prep-boot-part PReP partition
|
|
@cindex Bootability, for PReP, -prep-boot-part
|
|
Copy a file from disk into the emerging ISO image and mark it by a MBR
|
|
partition entry of type 0x41. PReP boot firmware is supposed to read
|
|
the content of the partition as single ELF executable file.
|
|
This option is compatible with other MBR partitions and with GPT.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -mips-boot iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -mips-boot MIPS Big Endian boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -mips-boot
|
|
Declare a data file in the image to be a
|
|
MIPS Big Endian boot file and cause production of a MIPS Big Endian Volume
|
|
Header. This is mutually exclusive with production of other boot blocks
|
|
like MBR.
|
|
It will overwrite the first 512 bytes of any data provided by -G.
|
|
Up to 15 boot files can be declared by multiple -mips-boot options.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -mipsel-boot iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -mipsel-boot MIPS Little Endian boot image
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -mipsel-boot
|
|
Declare a data file in the image to be the
|
|
MIPS Little Endian boot file. This is mutually exclusive with other boot
|
|
blocks.
|
|
It will overwrite the first 512 bytes of any data provided by -G.
|
|
Only a single boot file can be declared by -mipsel-boot.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -B disk_path[,disk_path ...]
|
|
@kindex -B SUN SPARC boot images
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -B, -sparc-boot
|
|
Cause one or more data files on disk to be written after the end of the
|
|
ISO image. A SUN Disk Label will be written into the first 512 bytes of the
|
|
ISO image which lists this image as partition 1 and the given disk_paths as
|
|
partition 2 up to 8.
|
|
@*
|
|
The disk files should contain suitable boot images for SUN SPARC systems.
|
|
@*
|
|
The pseudo disk_path "..." causes that all empty partition entries become
|
|
copies of the last non-empty entry. If no other disk_path is given before
|
|
"..." then all partitions describe the ISO image. In this case, the boot
|
|
loader code has to be imported by option -G.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -sparc-boot disk_path[,disk_path ...]
|
|
@kindex -sparc-boot SUN SPARC boot images
|
|
Alias of -B.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -sparc-label text
|
|
@kindex -sparc-label SUN Disk Label text
|
|
@cindex Bootability, SUN Disk Label text, -sparc-label
|
|
Set the ASCII label text of a SUN Disk Label.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}grub2-sparc-core iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}grub2-sparc-core SUN SPARC core file
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, @minus{}@minus{}grub2-sparc-core
|
|
Cause the content address and size of the given data file in the image
|
|
to be written after the SUN Disk Label. Both numbers are counted in bytes.
|
|
The address is written as 64 bit big-endian number to byte 0x228.
|
|
The size is written as 32 bit big-endian number to byte 0x230.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hppa-cmdline text
|
|
@kindex -hppa-cmdline HP-PA PALO command line
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -hppa-cmdline
|
|
Set the PALO command line for HP-PA. Up to 1023 characters are permitted
|
|
by default. With -hppa-hdrversion 4 the limit is 127.
|
|
@*
|
|
Note that the first five -hppa options are mandatory, if any of the -hppa
|
|
options is given. Only option -hppa-hdrversion is allowed to be missing.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hppa-bootloader iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -hppa-bootloader HP-PA bootloader file
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -hppa-bootloader
|
|
Designate the given path as HP-PA bootloader file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hppa-kernel-32 iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -hppa-kernel_32 HP-PA kernel_32 file
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -hppa-kernel_32
|
|
Designate the given path as HP-PA 32 bit kernel file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hppa-kernel-64 iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -hppa-kernel_64 HP-PA kernel_64 file
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -hppa-kernel_64
|
|
Designate the given path as HP-PA 64 bit kernel file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hppa-ramdisk iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -hppa-ramdisk HP-PA ramdisk file
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -hppa-ramdisk
|
|
Designate the given path as HP-PA RAM disk file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -hppa-hdrversion number
|
|
@kindex -hppa-hdrversion HP-PA PALO header version
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -hppa-hdrversion
|
|
Choose between PALO header version 5 (default) and version 4.
|
|
For the appropriate value see in PALO source code: PALOHDRVERSION.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -alpha-boot iso_rr_path
|
|
@kindex -alpha-boot DEC Alpha SRM bootloader
|
|
@cindex Bootability, control, -alpha-boot
|
|
Declare a data file in the image to be the DEC Alpha SRM Secondary Bootstrap
|
|
Loader and cause production of a boot sector which points to it.
|
|
This is mutually exclusive with production of other boot blocks like MBR.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Character sets:
|
|
@node Charset, Jigdo, SystemArea, Options
|
|
@section Character sets
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
@cindex Character sets, _definition
|
|
Character sets should not matter as long as only english alphanumeric
|
|
characters are used for file names or as long as all writers and readers
|
|
of the medium use the same character set.
|
|
Outside these constraints it may be necessary to let xorriso convert byte
|
|
codes.
|
|
@*
|
|
A conversion from input character set to the output character set is
|
|
performed when an ISO image gets written.
|
|
Vice versa there is a conversion from output character set to the
|
|
input character set when an ISO image gets loaded.
|
|
The sets can be defined by options -input-charset and -output-charset,
|
|
if needed.
|
|
@*
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -input-charset character_set_name
|
|
@kindex -input-charset set character set of disk file names
|
|
@cindex Character Set, for disk file names, -input-charset
|
|
Set the character set from which to convert disk file names when
|
|
inserting them into the ISO image.
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -output-charset character_set_name
|
|
@kindex -output-charset set character set of ISO file names
|
|
@cindex Character Set, for ISO file names, -output-charset
|
|
Set the character set from which to convert names of loaded ISO images
|
|
and to which to convert names when writing ISO images.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Jigdo Template Extraction:
|
|
@node Jigdo, Miscellaneous, Charset, Options
|
|
@section Jigdo Template Extraction
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, _definition
|
|
From man genisoimage:
|
|
"Jigdo is a tool to help in the distribution of large files like CD and
|
|
DVD images; see http://atterer.net/jigdo/ for more details. Debian CDs
|
|
and DVD ISO images are published on the web in jigdo format to allow
|
|
end users to download them more efficiently."
|
|
@*
|
|
If the use of libjte was enabled at compile time of xorriso, then
|
|
@command{xorrisofs} can produce a .jigdo and a .template file together with a
|
|
single-session ISO image. If not, then Jigdo options will cause a
|
|
FAILURE event, which normally leads to program abort.
|
|
@*
|
|
One may determine the ability for Jigdo by:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs -version 2>&1 | grep '^libjte' && echo YES
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
The .jigdo file contains checksums and symbolic file addresses.
|
|
The .template file contains the compressed ISO image with reference tags
|
|
instead of the content bytes of the listed files.
|
|
@*
|
|
Input for this process are the normal arguments for a @command{xorrisofs}
|
|
session
|
|
with no image loaded, and a .md5 file which lists those data files which may be
|
|
listed in the .jigdo file and externally referenced in the .template file.
|
|
Each designated file is represented in the .md5 file by a single text line:
|
|
@*
|
|
MD5 as 32 hex digits, 2 blanks, size as 12 decimal digits or blanks, 2 blanks,
|
|
symbolic file address
|
|
@*
|
|
The file address in an .md5 line has to bear the same basename as the
|
|
disk_path of the file which it shall match. The directory path of
|
|
the file address is decisive for To=From mapping, not for file recognition.
|
|
After To=From mapping, the file address gets written into the .jigdo
|
|
file. Jigdo restore tools will convert these addresses into really
|
|
reachable data source addresses from which they can read.
|
|
@*
|
|
If the list of jigdo parameters is not empty, then padding will be
|
|
counted as part of the ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-jigdo disk_path
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-jigdo set name of .jigdo file
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-jigdo
|
|
Set the disk_path for the .jigdo file with the checksums
|
|
and download addresses for filling the holes in .template.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-template disk_path
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-template set name of .template file
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-template
|
|
Set the disk_path for the .template file with the
|
|
holed and compressed ISO image copy.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-min-file-size size
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-min-file-size set minimum extract size
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-min-file-size
|
|
Set the minimum size for a data file to be listed
|
|
in the .jigdo file and being a hole in the .template file.
|
|
size may be a plain number counting bytes, or a number with appended
|
|
letter "k", "m", "g" to count KiB (1024 bytes), MiB (1024 KiB), or
|
|
GiB (1024 MiB).
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-force-md5 disk_path_pattern
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-force-md5 add check pattern for .md5
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-force-md5
|
|
adds a regular expression pattern which will get compared
|
|
with the absolute disk_path of any data file that was not found in the .md5
|
|
list. A match causes a MISHAP event, which normally does not abort the
|
|
program run but finally causes a non-zero exit value of the program.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-exclude disk_path_pattern
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-exclude add exclusion pattern for .md5
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-exclude
|
|
Add a regular expression pattern which will get compared
|
|
with the absolute disk_path of any data file. A match causes the file to
|
|
stay in .template in any case.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-map To=From
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-map add address translation for .jigdo
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-map
|
|
Add a string pair of the form To=From to the parameter list.
|
|
If a data file gets listed in the .jigdo file, then it is referred by the
|
|
file address from its line in the .md5 file. This file address gets checked
|
|
whether it begins with the From string. If so, then this string will be
|
|
replaced by the To string and a ':' character, before it goes into the .jigdo
|
|
file. The From string should end by a '/' character.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -md5-list disk_path
|
|
@kindex -md5-list set path of readable .md5
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -md5-list
|
|
Set the disk_path where to find the .md5 input file.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -jigdo-template-compress "gzip"|"bzip2"
|
|
@kindex -jigdo-template-compress choose compression algorithm
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -jigdo-template-compress
|
|
Choose one of "bzip2" or "gzip" for the compression of
|
|
the template file. The jigdo file is put out uncompressed.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -checksum_algorithm_iso list_of_names
|
|
@kindex -checksum_algorithm_iso choose .jigdo checksums
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -checksum_algorithm_iso
|
|
Choose one or more of "md5", "sha1", "sha256", "sha512"
|
|
for the auxiliary "# Image Hex" checksums in the .jigdo file. The list_of_names
|
|
may e.g. look like "md5,sha1,sha512". Value "all" chooses all available
|
|
algorithms.
|
|
Note that MD5 stays always enabled.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -checksum_algorithm_template list_of_names
|
|
@kindex -checksum_algorithm_template choose .template checksums
|
|
@cindex Jigdo Template Extraction, -checksum_algorithm_template
|
|
Choose the algorithms for the "# Template Hex" checksums in the .jigdo file.
|
|
The rules for list_of_names are the same as with -checksum_algorithm_iso.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man .B Miscellaneous options:
|
|
@node Miscellaneous, ExSimple, Jigdo, Options
|
|
@section Miscellaneous options
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -print-size
|
|
@kindex -print-size predict ISO image size
|
|
@cindex ISO image size, predict, -print-size
|
|
Print to stdandard output the foreseeable number of 2048 byte blocks in
|
|
the emerging ISO image. Do not produce this image.
|
|
@*
|
|
The result depends on several settings.
|
|
@*
|
|
If option --emul-toc is given, then padding (see -pad) is not
|
|
counted as part of the image size. In this case either use -no-pad or
|
|
add 150 (= 300 KiB) to the resulting number.
|
|
@*
|
|
If mkisofs emulation ends after option -print-size, then the properties of
|
|
the most recently specified boot image file cannot be edited by subsequent
|
|
xorriso commands.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}no_rc
|
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}no_rc do not execute startup files
|
|
@cindex Startup files, suppress, @minus{}@minus{}no_rc
|
|
Only if used as first argument this option
|
|
prevents reading and interpretation of startup files. See section FILES below.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -help
|
|
@kindex -help list supported options
|
|
@cindex Options, list, -help
|
|
@*
|
|
List supported options to stderr. Original mkisofs options bear their
|
|
original mkisofs description texts.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -quiet
|
|
@kindex -quiet suppress most messages
|
|
@cindex Message output, suppress, -quiet
|
|
@*
|
|
Suppress most messages of the program run, except those which indicate
|
|
problems or errors.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -gui
|
|
@kindex -gui increase frequency of pacifier messages
|
|
@cindex Message output, increase frequency, -gui
|
|
@*
|
|
Increase the frequency of pacifier messages while writing an ISO image.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -log-file disk_path
|
|
@kindex -log-file redirect stderr messages
|
|
@cindex Message output, redirect stderr, -log-file
|
|
@*
|
|
Truncate file disk_path to 0 size and redirect to it all messages which would
|
|
normally appear on stderr. -log-file with empty text as disk_path re-enables
|
|
output to stderr.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -v
|
|
@kindex -v enable verbous messages
|
|
@cindex Verbosity, high, -v, -verbose
|
|
@*
|
|
Enable the output of informational program messages.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -verbose
|
|
@kindex -verbose enable verbous messages
|
|
Alias of -v.
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@item -version
|
|
@kindex -version report program version
|
|
@cindex Program version, report, -version
|
|
Print to standard output a text that begins with
|
|
@*
|
|
"mkisofs 2.01-Emulation Copyright (C)"
|
|
@*
|
|
and to standard error the version information of xorriso.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@node Examples, Files, Options, Top
|
|
@chapter Examples
|
|
@c man .SH EXAMPLES
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Overview of examples:
|
|
@c man A simple image production run
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@c man Set ISO image paths by -graft-points
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@c man Perform multi-session runs
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@c man Let xorrisofs work underneath growisofs
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@c man Incremental backup of a few directory trees
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@c man Incremental backup with accumulated trees
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@c man Create bootable images for PC-BIOS and EFI
|
|
@c man .br
|
|
@cindex Examples
|
|
@menu
|
|
* ExSimple:: A simple image production run
|
|
* ExGraft:: Set ISO image paths by -graft-points
|
|
* ExMkisofs:: Perform multi-session runs
|
|
* ExGrowisofs:: Let xorriso work underneath growisofs
|
|
* ExIncBackup:: Incremental backup of a few directory trees
|
|
* ExIncBckAcc:: Incremental backup with accumulated trees
|
|
* ExBootable:: Create bootable images for PC-BIOS and EFI
|
|
@end menu
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B A simple image production run
|
|
@node ExSimple, ExGraft, Miscellaneous, Examples
|
|
@section A simple image production run
|
|
A prepared file tree in directory ./for_iso gets copied into the root
|
|
directory of the ISO image. File permissions get set to read-only for
|
|
everybody.
|
|
Joliet attributes for Microsoft systems get added.
|
|
The resulting image gets written as data file ./image.iso on disk.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs -r -J -o ./image.iso ./for_iso
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Set ISO image paths by -graft-points
|
|
@node ExGraft, ExMkisofs, ExSimple, Examples
|
|
@section Set ISO image paths by -graft-points
|
|
Without option -graft-points each given disk file is copied into the root
|
|
directory of the ISO image, maintaining its name. If a directory is given,
|
|
then its files and sub-directories are copied into the root directory,
|
|
maintaining their names.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs ... /home/me/datafile /tmp/directory
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
yields in the ISO image root directory:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
/datafile
|
|
@*
|
|
/file_1_from_directory
|
|
@*
|
|
...
|
|
@*
|
|
/file_N_from_directory
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
With option -graft-points it is possible to put files and directories to
|
|
arbitrary paths in the ISO image.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs ... -graft-points /home/me/datafile /dir=/tmp/directory
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
yields in the ISO image root directory:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
/datafile
|
|
@*
|
|
/dir
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Eventually needed parent directories in
|
|
the image will be created automatically:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
/datafiles/file1=/home/me/datafile
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
yields in the ISO image:
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@*
|
|
/datafiles/file1
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
The attributes of directory /datafiles get copied from /home/me on disk.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
Normally one should avoid = and \ characters in the ISO part of a pathspec.
|
|
But if it must be, one may escape them:
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@*
|
|
/with_\=_and_\\/file=/tmp/directory/file
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
yields in the ISO image:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
/with_=_and_\/file
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Perform multi-session runs
|
|
@node ExMkisofs, ExGrowisofs, ExGraft, Examples
|
|
@section Perform multi-session runs
|
|
This example works for multi-session media only:
|
|
CD-R[W], DVD-R[W], DVD+R, BD-R.
|
|
Add cdrskin option @minus{}@minus{}grow_overwriteable_iso
|
|
to all -as cdrecord runs
|
|
in order to enable multi-session emulation on overwriteable media.
|
|
@*
|
|
The first session is written like this:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs -graft-points \
|
|
@*
|
|
/tree1=prepared_for_iso/tree1 \
|
|
@*
|
|
| xorriso -as cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=fast -multi -eject -
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Follow-up sessions are written like this:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
|
|
@*
|
|
$ m=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
|
|
@*
|
|
$ xorrisofs -M /dev/sr0 -C $m -graft-points \
|
|
@*
|
|
/tree2=prepared_for_iso/tree2 \
|
|
@*
|
|
| xorriso -as cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 -waiti -multi -eject -
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Always eject the drive tray between sessions. The old sessions
|
|
get read via /dev/sr0. Its device driver might not be aware
|
|
of the changed content before it loads the medium again.
|
|
In this case the previous session would not be loaded and the
|
|
new session would contain only the newly added files.
|
|
@*
|
|
For the same reason do not let xorriso -as cdrecord load the medium,
|
|
but rather do this manually or by a program that reads from /dev/sr0.
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Let xorrisofs work underneath growisofs
|
|
@node ExGrowisofs, ExIncBackup, ExMkisofs, Examples
|
|
@section Let xorriso work underneath growisofs
|
|
growisofs expects an ISO formatter program which understands options -C and
|
|
-M. A variable is defined to override the hardcoded default name.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ export MKISOFS="xorrisofs"
|
|
@*
|
|
$ growisofs -Z /dev/dvd /some/files
|
|
@*
|
|
$ growisofs -M /dev/dvd /more/files
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
If no "xorrisofs" is available on your system, then you will have to create
|
|
a link pointing to the xorriso binary and tell growisofs to use it. E.g. by:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ ln -s $(which xorriso) "$HOME/xorrisofs"
|
|
@*
|
|
$ export MKISOFS="$HOME/xorrisofs"
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
One may quit mkisofs emulation by argument "@minus{}@minus{}" and make
|
|
use of all xorriso commands. growisofs dislikes options which
|
|
start with "-o" but -outdev must be set to "-".
|
|
So use "outdev" instead:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ growisofs -Z /dev/dvd @minus{}@minus{}for_backup @minus{}@minus{} \
|
|
@*
|
|
outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
|
|
@*
|
|
$ growisofs -M /dev/dvd @minus{}@minus{}for_backup @minus{}@minus{} \
|
|
@*
|
|
outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
|
|
@*
|
|
Note that @minus{}@minus{}for_backup is given in the mkisofs emulation.
|
|
To preserve the recorded extra data it must already be in effect, when
|
|
the emulation loads the image.
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Incremental backup of a few directory trees
|
|
@node ExIncBackup, ExIncBckAcc, ExGrowisofs, Examples
|
|
@section Incremental backup of a few directory trees
|
|
This changes the directory trees /open_source_project and /personal_mail
|
|
in the ISO image so that they become exact copies of their disk counterparts.
|
|
ISO file objects get created, deleted or get their attributes adjusted
|
|
accordingly.
|
|
@*
|
|
ACL, xattr, hard links and MD5 checksums will be recorded.
|
|
It is expected that inode numbers in the disk filesystem are persistent
|
|
over cycles of mounting and booting.
|
|
Files with names matching *.o or *.swp get excluded explicitly.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
To be used several times on the same medium, whenever an update of
|
|
the two disk trees to the medium is desired. Begin with a blank medium and
|
|
update it until he run fails gracefully due to lack of remaining space on
|
|
the old one.
|
|
@*
|
|
Do not let xorriso -as cdrecord load the medium,
|
|
but rather do this manually or by a program that reads from /dev/sr0.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
|
|
@*
|
|
$ msinfo=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
|
|
@*
|
|
$ load_opts=
|
|
@*
|
|
$ test -n "$msinfo" && load_opts="-M /dev/sr0 -C $msinfo"
|
|
@*
|
|
$ xorrisofs $load_opts -o - @minus{}@minus{}for_backup -m '*.o' -m '*.swp' \
|
|
@*
|
|
-V PROJ_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" -graft-points \
|
|
@*
|
|
-old-root / \
|
|
@*
|
|
/projects=/home/thomas/projects \
|
|
@*
|
|
/personal_mail=/home/thomas/personal_mail \
|
|
@*
|
|
| xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v -multi -waiti -eject -
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
This makes sense if the full backup leaves substantial remaining capacity
|
|
on media and if the expected changes are much smaller than the full backup.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
@strong{Better do not use your youngest backup for -old-root}.
|
|
Have at least two media which you use alternatingly. So only older backups
|
|
get endangered by the new write operation, while the newest backup is
|
|
stored safely on a different medium.
|
|
@*
|
|
Always have a blank medium ready to perform a full backup in case the update
|
|
attempt fails due to insufficient remaining capacity. This failure will
|
|
not spoil the old medium, of course.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
If inode numbers on disk are not persistent, then use
|
|
option @minus{}@minus{}old-root-no-ino .
|
|
In this case an update run will compare recorded MD5
|
|
sums against the current file content on hard disk.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
With @strong{mount} option @strong{-o "sbsector="} on GNU/Linux
|
|
or @strong{-s} on FreeBSD or NetBSD
|
|
it is possible to access the session trees which represent the older backup
|
|
versions. With CD media, GNU/Linux mount accepts session numbers directly by
|
|
its option "session=".
|
|
@*
|
|
Multi-session media and most overwriteable media written by xorriso can tell
|
|
the sbsectors of their sessions by xorriso option -toc:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorriso -dev /dev/sr0 -toc
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
xorriso can print the matching mount command for a session number:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorriso -mount_cmd /dev/sr0 session 12 /mnt
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
or for a volume id that matches a search expression:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorriso -mount_cmd /dev/sr0 volid '*2008_12_05*' /mnt
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Both yield on standard output something like:
|
|
@*
|
|
mount -t iso9660 -o nodev,noexec,nosuid,ro,sbsector=1460256 '/dev/sr0' '/mnt'
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
The superuser may let xorriso execute the mount command directly:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
# osirrox -mount /dev/sr0 "volid" '*2008_12_05*' /mnt
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Incremental backup with accumulated trees
|
|
@node ExIncBckAcc, ExBootable, ExIncBackup, Examples
|
|
@section Incremental backup with accumulated trees
|
|
Solaris does not offer the option to mount older sessions.
|
|
In order to keep them accessible, one may map all files to a file tree under
|
|
a session directory and accumulate those directories from session to session.
|
|
The -root tree is cloned from the -old-root tree before it gets
|
|
compared with the appropriate trees on disk.
|
|
@*
|
|
This demands to know the previously used session directory name.
|
|
@*
|
|
With the first session:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs -root /session1 \
|
|
@*
|
|
-o - @minus{}@minus{}for_backup -m '*.o' -m '*.swp' \
|
|
@*
|
|
-V PROJ_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" -graft-points \
|
|
@*
|
|
/projects=/home/thomas/projects \
|
|
@*
|
|
/personal_mail=/home/thomas/personal_mail \
|
|
@*
|
|
| xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v blank=as_needed \
|
|
@*
|
|
-multi -waiti -eject -
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
With the second session, option -old-root refers to /session1 and the
|
|
new -root is /session2.
|
|
@*
|
|
Do not let xorriso -as cdrecord load the medium,
|
|
but rather do this manually or by a program that reads from /dev/sr0.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
|
|
@*
|
|
$ msinfo=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
|
|
@*
|
|
$ load_opts=
|
|
@*
|
|
$ test -n "$msinfo" && load_opts="-M /dev/sr0 -C $msinfo"
|
|
@*
|
|
$ xorrisofs $load_opts -root /session2 -old-root /session1 \
|
|
@*
|
|
-o - @minus{}@minus{}for_backup -m '*.o' -m '*.swp' \
|
|
@*
|
|
-V PROJ_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" -graft-points \
|
|
@*
|
|
/projects=/home/thomas/projects \
|
|
@*
|
|
/personal_mail=/home/thomas/personal_mail \
|
|
@*
|
|
| xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v -multi -waiti -eject -
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
With the third session, option -old-root refers to /session2.
|
|
The new -root is /session3. And so on.
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Create bootable images for PC-BIOS and EFI
|
|
@node ExBootable, , ExIncBckAcc, Examples
|
|
@section Create bootable images for PC-BIOS and EFI
|
|
The SYSLINUX/ISOLINUX boot loader suite is popular for booting PC-BIOS.
|
|
The ISOLINUX wiki prescribes to create on disk a directory ./CD_root and
|
|
to copy all desired files underneath that directory. Especially file
|
|
isolinux.bin shall be copied to ./CD_root/isolinux/isolinux.bin .
|
|
This is the boot image file.
|
|
@*
|
|
The prescribed mkisofs options can be used unchanged with @command{xorrisofs}:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs -o output.iso \
|
|
@*
|
|
-b isolinux/isolinux.bin -c isolinux/boot.cat \
|
|
@*
|
|
-no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table \
|
|
@*
|
|
./CD_root
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Put it on CD by a burn program. E.g.:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorriso -as cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=as_needed output.iso
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
The image from above example will boot from CD, DVD or BD, but not from
|
|
USB stick or other hard-disk-like devices. This can be done by help of an
|
|
isohybrid MBR. Syslinux provides matching template files
|
|
as isohdp[fp]x*.bin . E.g. /usr/lib/syslinux/isohdpfx.bin .
|
|
@*
|
|
If a few hundred KB of size do not matter, then option -partition_offset
|
|
can be used to create a partition table where partition 1 starts not
|
|
at block 0. This facilitates later manipulations of the USB stick by
|
|
tools for partitioning and formatting.
|
|
@*
|
|
The image from the following example will be prepared for booting via MBR
|
|
and its first partition will start at hard disk block 64.
|
|
@*
|
|
It will also boot from optical media.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorrisofs -o output.iso \
|
|
@*
|
|
-b isolinux/isolinux.bin -c isolinux/boot.cat \
|
|
@*
|
|
-no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table \
|
|
@*
|
|
-isohybrid-mbr /usr/lib/syslinux/isohdpfx.bin \
|
|
@*
|
|
-partition_offset 16 \
|
|
@*
|
|
./CD_root
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Become superuser and copy the image to the unpartitioned base device file
|
|
of the USB stick. On GNU/Linux this is e.g. /dev/sdb, not /dev/sdb1.
|
|
@*
|
|
CAUTION:
|
|
This will overwrite any partitioning on the USB stick and make
|
|
remaining data unaccessible.
|
|
@*
|
|
So first make sure you got the correct address of the intended device.
|
|
E.g. by reading 100 MiB data from it and watching it blinking:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
# dd bs=2K if=/dev/sdb count=50K >/dev/null
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Now copy the image onto it
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
# dd bs=2K if=output.iso of=/dev/sdb
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
Now for EFI:
|
|
@*
|
|
The boot image file has to be the image of an EFI System Partition,
|
|
i.e. a FAT filesystem with directory /EFI/BOOT and boot files with
|
|
EFI prescribed names: BOOTIA32.EFI for 32 bit x86,
|
|
BOOTx64.EFI for 64 bit AMD/x86 (in UEFI-2.4 there is indeed a lower case "x"),
|
|
BOOTAA64.EFI for 64 bit ARM. The software in the FAT filesystem should be
|
|
able to find and inspect the ISO filesystem for boot loader configuration and
|
|
start of operating system. GRUB2 program grub-mkimage can produce such a
|
|
FAT filesystem with suitable content, which then uses further GRUB2
|
|
software from the ISO filesystem.
|
|
@*
|
|
EFI boot equipment may be combined with above ISOLINUX isohybrid for PC-BIOS
|
|
in a not really UEFI-2.4 compliant way, which obviously works well. It yields
|
|
MBR and GPT partition tables, both with nested partitions.
|
|
Assumed the EFI System Partition image is ready as ./CD_root/boot/grub/efi.img,
|
|
add the following options before the directory address ./CD_root:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
-eltorito-alt-boot -e 'boot/grub/efi.img' -no-emul-boot \
|
|
@*
|
|
-isohybrid-gpt-basdat \
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
More compliant with UEFI-2.4 is to decide for either MBR or GPT and to
|
|
append a copy of the EFI System Partition in order to avoid overlap of
|
|
ISO partition and EFI partition. Here for MBR:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
-eltorito-alt-boot -e 'boot/grub/efi.img' -no-emul-boot \
|
|
-append_partition 2 0xef ./CD_root/boot/grub/efi.img \
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
The resulting ISOs are supposed to boot from optical media and USB stick.
|
|
One may omit option -eltorito-alt-boot if no option -b is used to make
|
|
the ISO bootable via PC-BIOS.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
For ISOs with pure GRUB2 boot equipment consider to use GRUB2 tool
|
|
grub-mkrescue as frontend to xorrisofs.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .sp 1
|
|
If you have a bootable ISO filesystem and want to know its equipment plus
|
|
a proposal how to reproduce it, try:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
$ xorriso -hfsplus on -indev IMAGE.iso \
|
|
-report_el_torito plain -report_system_area plain \
|
|
-print "" -print "======= Proposal for xorrisofs options:" \
|
|
-report_el_torito as_mkisofs
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
@c man .SH FILES
|
|
@node Files, Seealso, Examples, Top
|
|
@chapter Files
|
|
@c man .SS
|
|
@c man .B Startup files:
|
|
@section Startup Files
|
|
@*
|
|
If not --no_rc is given as the first argument then @command{xorrisofs}
|
|
attempts on startup to read and execute lines from the following files:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
/etc/default/xorriso
|
|
@*
|
|
/etc/opt/xorriso/rc
|
|
@*
|
|
/etc/xorriso/xorriso.conf
|
|
@*
|
|
$HOME/.xorrisorc
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
The files are read in the sequence given here, but none of them is required
|
|
to exist. The lines are not interpreted as @command{xorrisofs} options but
|
|
as generic xorriso commands. See man xorriso.
|
|
@c man .PP
|
|
After the xorriso startup files, the program tries one by one to open for
|
|
reading:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
./.mkisofsrc
|
|
@*
|
|
$MKISOFSRC
|
|
@*
|
|
$HOME/.mkisofsrc
|
|
@*
|
|
$(dirname $0)/.mkisofsrc
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
On success it interprets the file content and does not try further files.
|
|
The last address is used only if start argument 0 has a non-trivial dirname.
|
|
@*
|
|
The reader currently interprets the following NAME=VALUE pairs:
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
APPI default for -A
|
|
@*
|
|
PUBL default for -publisher
|
|
@*
|
|
SYSI default for -sysid
|
|
@*
|
|
VOLI default for -V
|
|
@*
|
|
VOLS default for -volset
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Any other lines will be silently ignored.
|
|
@*
|
|
@c man .SH SEE ALSO
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man For generic xorriso command mode
|
|
@c man .BR xorriso(1)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man For the cdrecord emulation of xorriso
|
|
@c man .BR xorrecord(1)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man For mounting xorriso generated ISO 9660 images (-t iso9660)
|
|
@c man .BR mount(8)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man Other programs which produce ISO 9660 images
|
|
@c man .BR mkisofs(8),
|
|
@c man .BR genisoimage(8)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man Programs which burn sessions to optical media
|
|
@c man .BR growisofs(1),
|
|
@c man .BR cdrecord(1),
|
|
@c man .BR wodim(1),
|
|
@c man .BR cdrskin(1),
|
|
@c man .BR xorriso(1)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man ACL and xattr
|
|
@c man .BR getfacl(1),
|
|
@c man .BR setfacl(1),
|
|
@c man .BR getfattr(1),
|
|
@c man .BR setfattr(1)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man MD5 checksums
|
|
@c man .BR md5sum(1)
|
|
@c man .TP
|
|
@c man On FreeBSD the commands for xattr and MD5 differ
|
|
@c man .BR getextattr(8),
|
|
@c man .BR setextattr(8),
|
|
@c man .BR md5(1)
|
|
@c man-ignore-lines begin
|
|
@node Seealso, Bugreport, Files, Top
|
|
@chapter See also
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@item For generic @command{xorriso} command mode
|
|
xorriso(1)
|
|
@item For the cdrecord emulation of @command{xorriso}
|
|
xorrecord(1)
|
|
@item For mounting xorriso generated ISO 9660 images (-t iso9660)
|
|
mount(8)
|
|
@item Other programs which produce ISO 9660 images
|
|
mkisofs(8),
|
|
genisoimage(8)
|
|
@item Programs which burn sessions to optical media
|
|
growisofs(1),
|
|
cdrecord(1),
|
|
wodim(1),
|
|
cdrskin(1),
|
|
xorriso(1)
|
|
@item ACL and xattr
|
|
getfacl(1),
|
|
setfacl(1),
|
|
getfattr(1),
|
|
setfattr(1)
|
|
@item MD5 checksums
|
|
md5sum(1)
|
|
@item On FreeBSD some commands differ:
|
|
getextattr(8),
|
|
setextattr(8),
|
|
md5(1)
|
|
@end table
|
|
@c man-ignore-lines end
|
|
@c man .SH BUGS
|
|
@node Bugreport, Legal, Seealso, Top
|
|
@chapter Reporting bugs
|
|
@cindex Bugs, reporting
|
|
@cindex Problems, reporting
|
|
To report bugs, request help, or suggest enhancements for @command{xorriso},
|
|
please send electronic mail to the public list @email{bug-xorriso@@gnu.org}.
|
|
If more privacy is desired, mail to @email{scdbackup@@gmx.net}.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Please describe what you expect @command{xorriso} to do,
|
|
the program arguments or dialog commands by which you tried to achieve it,
|
|
the messages of @command{xorriso}, and the undesirable outcome of your
|
|
program run.
|
|
@*
|
|
@sp 1
|
|
Expect to get asked more questions before solutions can be proposed.
|
|
@c man .SH AUTHOR
|
|
@node Legal, CommandIdx, Bugreport, Top
|
|
@chapter Author, Copyright, Credits
|
|
@section Author
|
|
Thomas Schmitt <scdbackup@@gmx.net>
|
|
@*
|
|
for libburnia-project.org
|
|
@c man .SH COPYRIGHT
|
|
@section Copyright
|
|
Copyright (c) 2011 - 2016 Thomas Schmitt
|
|
@*
|
|
Permission is granted to distribute this text freely. It shall only be
|
|
modified in sync with the technical properties of xorriso. If you make use
|
|
of the license to derive modified versions of xorriso then you are entitled
|
|
to modify this text under that same license.
|
|
@c man .SH CREDITS
|
|
@section Credits
|
|
@command{xorrisofs} is in part based on work by Vreixo Formoso who provides
|
|
libisofs together with Mario Danic who also leads the libburnia team.
|
|
Vladimir Serbinenko contributed the HFS+ filesystem code and related knowledge.
|
|
@*
|
|
Compliments towards Joerg Schilling whose cdrtools served me for ten years.
|
|
@c man-ignore-lines begin
|
|
|
|
@node CommandIdx, ConceptIdx, Legal, Top
|
|
@chapter Alphabetic Command List
|
|
@printindex ky
|
|
|
|
@node ConceptIdx,, CommandIdx, Top
|
|
@chapter Alphabetic List of Concepts and Objects
|
|
@printindex cp
|
|
|
|
@c man-ignore-lines end
|
|
@bye
|