2619 lines
98 KiB
Groff
2619 lines
98 KiB
Groff
.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*-
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.\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps
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.\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection
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.\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1)
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.TH XORRISO 1 "Sep 05, 2008"
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.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage.
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.\"
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.\" Some roff macros, for reference:
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.\" .nh disable hyphenation
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.\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7)
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.nh
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.SH NAME
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xorriso - creates, loads, manipulates and writes ISO 9660 filesystem images
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with Rock Ridge extensions.
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B xorriso
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.RI [ settings | actions ]
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.br
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.PP
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.B xorriso
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is a program which maps file objects from POSIX compliant
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filesystems into Rock Ridge enhanced ISO 9660 filesystems and allows
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session-wise manipulation of such filesystems. It can load the management
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information of existing ISO images and it writes the session results to
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optical media or to filesystem objects.
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.br
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Vice versa xorriso is able to restore file objects from ISO 9660 filesystems.
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.PP
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A special property of xorriso is that it needs neither an external ISO 9660
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formatter program nor an external burn program for CD or DVD but rather
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incorporates the libraries of libburnia-project.org .
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.SS
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.B Overview of features:
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.br
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Operates on an existing ISO image or creates a new one.
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.br
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Copies files from filesystem into the ISO image.
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.br
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Renames or deletes file objects in the ISO image.
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.br
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Changes file properties in the ISO image.
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.br
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Updates ISO subtrees incrementally to match given disk subtrees.
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.br
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Writes result either as completely new image or as add-on session
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to optical media or filesystem objects.
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.br
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Can perform multi-session tasks as emulation of mkisofs and cdrecord.
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.br
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Can restore files from ISO image to disk filesystem (see osirrox).
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.br
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Can check media for damages and copy readable blocks to disk.
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.br
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Scans for optical drives, blanks re-useable optical media.
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.br
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Reads its instructions from command line arguments, dialog, and batch files.
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.br
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Provides navigation commands for interactive ISO image manipulation.
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.br
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Adjustable thresholds for abort, exit value, and problem reporting.
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.SS
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.B General information paragraphs:
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.br
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Session model
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.br
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Media types and states
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.br
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Creating, Growing, Modifying, Blind Growing
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.br
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Libburn drives
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.br
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Rock Ridge, POSIX, X/Open
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.br
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Command processing
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.br
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Dialog, Readline, Result pager
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.sp 1
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Maybe you first want to have a look at section EXAMPLES near the end of
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this text before reading the next few hundred lines of background information.
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.SS
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.B Session model:
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.br
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Unlike other filesystems, ISO 9660 is not intended for read-write operation but
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rather for being generated in a single sweep and being written to media as a
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.B session.
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.br
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The data content of the session is called filesystem
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.B image.
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.PP
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The written image in its session can then be mounted by the operating system
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for being used read-only. Linux is able to mount ISO images from block devices,
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which may represent optical media, other media or via a loop device even
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from regular disk files.
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.PP
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This session usage model has been extended on CD media by the concept of
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.B multi-session ,
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which allows to add information to the CD and gives the mount programs
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of the operating systems the addresses of the entry points of each
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session. The mount programs recognize block devices which represent
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CD media and will by default mount the image in the last session.
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.br
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This session usually contains an updated directory tree for the whole media
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which governs the data contents in all recorded sessions.
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So in the view of the mount program all sessions of a particular media
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together form a single filesystem image.
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.br
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Adding a session to an existing ISO image is in this text referred as
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\fBgrowing\fR.
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.br
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The multi-session model of the MMC standard does not apply to all media
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types. But program growisofs by Andy Polyakov showed how to extend this
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functionality to overwriteable media or disk files which carry valid ISO 9660
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filesystems. This expansion method is referred as emulated growing.
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.PP
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xorriso provides both ways of growing as well as an own method named
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\fBmodifying\fR which produces a completely new ISO image from the old
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one and the modifications.
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See paragraph Creating, Growing, Modifying, Blind Growing below.
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.PP
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xorriso adopts the concept of multi-session by loading an eventual image
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directory tree, allowing to manipulate it by several actions, and to write
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the new image to the target media.
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.br
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The first session of a xorriso run begins by the definition of the input
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drive with the eventual ISO image or by the definition of an output drive.
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The session ends by command -commit which triggers writing. A -commit is
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done automatically when the program ends regularly.
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.PP
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After -commit a new session begins with the freshly written one as input.
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A new input drive can only be chosen as long as the loaded ISO image was
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not altered. Pending alteration can be revoked by command -rollback.
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.PP
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Writing a session to the target is supposed to be very expensive in terms of
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time and of consumed space on appendable or write-once media. Therefore all
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intended manipulations of a particular ISO image should be done in a single
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session.
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.br
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In some special situations (e.g. in a file-to-file situation) it can be
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useful to store intermediate states and to continue with image manipulations.
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.SS
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.B Media types and states:
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There are two families of media in the MMC standard:
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.br
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\fBMulti-session media\fR are CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD+R, DVD+R/DL, and
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unformatted DVD-RW. These media provide a table of content which
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describes their existing sessions. See option \fB-toc\fR.
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.br
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\fBOverwriteable media\fR are DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, BD-RE, and formatted DVD-RW.
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They allow random write access but do not provide information about their
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session history. If they contain one or more ISO 9660 sessions and if the
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first session was written by xorriso, then a table of content can
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be emulated. Else only a single overall session will be visible.
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.br
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DVD-RW media can be formatted by -format full.
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They can be made unformatted by -blank deformat.
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.br
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Emulated drives are handled as overwriteable media if they are random
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read-write accessible. If they are only sequentially writeable then
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they are handled as blank multi-session media.
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.PP
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These media can assume several states in which they offer different
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capabilities.
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.br
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\fBBlank\fR media can be written from scratch. They contain no ISO image
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suitable for xorriso.
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.br
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Blank is the state of newly purchased optical media.
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With used CD-RW and DVD-RW it can be achieved by action -blank "as_needed".
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Overwriteable media are considered blank unless they contain an ISO image
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suitable for xorriso. Action -blank "as_needed" can be used to invalidate the
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image on overwriteable media, or to apply eventual mandatory formatting.
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.br
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\fBAppendable\fR media accept further sessions. Either they are MMC
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multi-session media in appendable state, or they are overwriteable media
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which contain an ISO image suitable for xorriso.
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.br
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Appendable is the state after writing a session with option -close off.
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.br
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\fBClosed\fR media cannot be written. They may contain an ISO image suitable
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for xorriso.
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.br
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Closed is the state of DVD-ROM media and of multi-session media which were
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written with option -close on. If the drive is read-only hardware then it will
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probably show any media as closed CD-ROM resp. DVD-ROM.
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.br
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Overwriteable media assume this state in such read-only drives or if they
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contain unrecognizable data in the first 32 data blocks.
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.br
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\fBRead-only\fR drives may or may not show session histories of multi-session
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media. Often only the first and the last session are visible. Sometimes
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not even that. Option -rom_toc_scan might or might not help in such cases.
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.SS
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.B Creating, Growing, Modifying, Blind Growing:
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.br
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A new empty ISO image gets \fBcreated\fR
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if there is no input drive with a valid
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ISO 9660 image plus Rock Ridge extensions when the first time an output drive
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is defined. This is achieved by option -dev on blank media or by option -outdev
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on media in any state.
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.br
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The new empty image can be populated with directories and files.
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Before it can be written, the media in the output drive must get into
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blank state if it was not blank already.
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.PP
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If there is a input drive with a valid ISO image, then this image gets loaded
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as foundation for manipulations and extension. The constellation of input
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and output drive determines which write method will be used.
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They have quite different capabilities and constraints.
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.PP
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The method of \fBgrowing\fR adds new data to the existing media. These
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data comprise of eventual new file content and they override the existing
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ISO 9660 + Rock Ridge directory tree. It is possible to hide files from
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previous sessions but they still exist on media and with many types of
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optical media it is quite easy to recover them by mounting older sessions.
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.br
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Growing is achieved by option -dev.
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.PP
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The write method of \fBmodifying\fR produces compact filesystem
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images with no outdated files or directory trees. Modifying can write its
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images to target media which are completely unsuitable for multi-session
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operations. E.g. DVD-RW which were treated with -blank deformat_quickest,
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named pipes, character devices, sockets.
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On the other hand modified sessions cannot be written to appendable media
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but to blank media only.
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.br
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|
So for this method one needs either two optical drives or has to work with
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filesystem objects as source and/or target media.
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.br
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Modifying takes place if input drive and output drive are not the same and
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if option -grow_blindly is set to its default "off".
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This is achieved by options -indev and -outdev.
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.PP
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If option -grow_blindly is set to a non-negative number and if -indev and
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-outdev are both set to different drives, then \fBblind growing\fR is
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performed. It produces an add-on session which is ready for being written
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to the given block address. This is the usage model of
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.br
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mkisofs -M $indev -C $msc1,$msc2 -o $outdev
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.br
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|
which gives much room for wrong parameter combinations and should thus only be
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employed if a strict distinction between ISO formatter xorriso and the burn
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program is desired. -C $msc1,$msc2 is equivalent to:
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.br
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-load sbsector $msc1 -grow_blindly $msc2
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.SS
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.B Libburn drives:
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.br
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|
Input drive, i.e. source of an existing or empty ISO image, can be any random
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access readable libburn drive: optical media with readable data,
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blank optical media, regular files, block devices.
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.br
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Rock Ridge info must be present in existing ISO images and it will be generated
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by the program unconditionally.
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.PP
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Output drive, i.e. target for writing, can be any libburn drive.
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Some drive types do not support the method of growing but only the methods
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of modifying and blind growing. They all are suitable for newly created images.
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.br
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All drive file objects have to offer rw-permission to the user of xorriso.
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Even those which will not be useable for reading an ISO image.
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.PP
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MMC compliant (i.e. optical) drives on Linux usually get addressed by
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the path of their block device or of their generic character device. E.g.
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.br
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-dev /dev/sr0
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.br
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-dev /dev/hdc
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.br
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-dev /dev/sg2
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.br
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Get a list of accessible drives by command
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.br
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-devices
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.br
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It might be necessary to do this as
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.B superuser
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in order to see all drives and to then allow rw-access for the intended users.
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Consider to bundle the authorized users in a group like old "floppy".
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.PP
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Filesystem objects of nearly any type can be addressed by prefix "stdio:" and
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their path in the filesystem. E.g.:
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.br
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|
-dev stdio:/tmp/pseudo_drive
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.br
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|
If path leads to a regular file or to a block device then the emulated drive
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is random access readable and can be used for the method of growing if it
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already contains a valid ISO 9660 image. Any other file type is not readable
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via "stdio:" and can only be used as target for the method of modifying or
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blind growing.
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Non existing paths in existing directories are handled as empty regular files.
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.PP
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A very special kind of pseudo drive are open file descriptors. They are
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depicted by "stdio:/dev/fd/" and descriptor number (see man 2 open).
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.br
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Addresses "-" or "stdio:/dev/fd/1" depict standard output, which normally is
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the output channel for result texts.
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To prevent a fatal intermingling of ISO image and text messages, all result
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texts get redirected to stderr if -*dev "-" or "stdio:/dev/fd/1" is among
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the start arguments of the program.
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.br
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Standard output is currently suitable for creating one session
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per program run without dialog. Use in other situations is discouraged
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and several restrictions apply:
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.br
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|
It is not allowed to use standard output as pseudo drive if it was not
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among the start arguments. Do not try to fool this ban via backdoor addresses
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to stdout.
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.br
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If stdout is used as drive, then -use_readline is permanently disabled.
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Use of backdoors will cause severe memory and/or tty corruption.
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.PP
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Be aware that especially the superuser can write into any accessible file or
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device by using its path with the "stdio:" prefix. Addresses without prefix
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"stdio:" will only work if they lead to a MMC drive.
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.br
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One may use option
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.B -ban_stdio_write
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to surely prevent this risk and to allow only MMC drives.
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.SS
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.B Rock Ridge, POSIX, X/Open:
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.br
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.B Rock Ridge
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is the name of a set of additional informations 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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.PP
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This is what xorriso uses for a decent representation of the disk files
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within the ISO image. Rock Ridge information is produced with any xorriso
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image and xorriso will load for manipulation only Rock Ridge enhanced images.
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.PP
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xorriso is not named "porriso" because POSIX only guarantees 14 characters
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of filename length. It is the X/Open System Interface standard XSI which
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demands a file name length of up to 255 characters and paths of up to 1024
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characters. Rock Ridge fulfills this demand.
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.SS
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.B Command processing:
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.br
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Commands are either actions or settings. They consist of a command word,
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followed by zero or more parameter words. If the list of parameter words
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is of variable length (indicated by "[...]" or "[***]") then it has to be
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terminated by either the list delimiter, or the end of argument list, or an
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end of an input line.
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.PP
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At program start the \fBlist delimiter\fR is the word "--". This may be changed
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by option -list_delimiter in order to allow "--" as argument in a list of
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variable length. It is advised to reset the delimiter to "--" immediately
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afterwards.
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.br
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For brevity the list delimiter is referred as "--" throughout this text.
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.br
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The list delimiter is silently tolerated if it appears after the parameters of
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a command with a fixed list length. It is handled as normal text if it
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appears among the arguments of such a command.
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.PP
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.B Pattern expansion
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is a property of some particular commands and not a general
|
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feature. It gets controlled by commands -iso_rr_pattern and -disk_pattern.
|
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Commands which eventually use pattern expansion all have variable argument
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lists which are marked in this man page by "[***]" rather than "[...]".
|
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.br
|
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Some other commands perform pattern matching unconditionally.
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.PP
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Command and parameter words are either read from program arguments, where one
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argument is one word, or from input lines where words are recognized similar
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to the quotation rules of a shell parser.
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.br
|
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xorriso is not a shell, although it might appear so on first glimpse.
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Be aware that the interaction of quotation marks and pattern symbols like "*"
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differs from the usual shell parsers. In xorriso, a quotation mark does not
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make a pattern symbol literal.
|
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.PP
|
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When the program begins then it first looks for argument -no_rc. If this is
|
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not present then it looks for its startup files and
|
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eventually reads their content as command input lines. Then it interprets
|
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the program arguments as commands and parameters and finally it enters
|
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dialog mode if command -dialog "on" was executed up to then.
|
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.PP
|
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The program ends either by command -end, or by the end of program arguments
|
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if not dialog was enabled up to that moment, or by a problem
|
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event which triggers the threshold of command -abort_on.
|
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.SS
|
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.B Dialog, Readline, Result pager:
|
|
.br
|
|
Dialog mode prompts for an input line, parses it into words, and performs
|
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them as commands with their parameters. It provides assisting services
|
|
to make dialog more comfortable.
|
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.PP
|
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Readline is an enhancement for the input line. You may know it already from
|
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the bash shell. Whether it is available in xorriso depends on the availability
|
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of package readline-dev at the time when xorriso was built from its sourcecode.
|
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.br
|
|
It allows to move the cursor over the text in the line by help of the
|
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Leftward and the Rightward arrow key.
|
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Text may be inserted at the cursor position. The Delete key removes the
|
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character under the cursor. Upward and Downward arrow keys navigate through
|
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the history of previous input lines.
|
|
.br
|
|
See man readline for more info about libreadline.
|
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.PP
|
|
Option -page activates a builtin result text pager which may be convenient in
|
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dialog. After an action has put out the given number of terminal lines,
|
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the pager prompts the user for a line of input.
|
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.br
|
|
An empty line lets xorriso resume work until the next page is put out.
|
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.br
|
|
The single character "@" disables paging for the current action.
|
|
.br
|
|
"@@@", "x", "q", "X", or "Q" urge the current action to abort and suppress
|
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further result output.
|
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.br
|
|
Any other line will be interpreted as new dialog line. The current action
|
|
is urged to abort. Afterwards, the input line is executed.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Some actions apply paging to their info output, too.
|
|
.br
|
|
The urge to abort may or may not be obeyed by the current action. All actions
|
|
try to abort as soon as possible.
|
|
.br
|
|
.SH OPTIONS
|
|
.br
|
|
All command words are shown with a leading dash although this dash is not
|
|
mandatory for the option to be recognized. There may be future emulation
|
|
modes, where dashes may become mandatory in order to distinguish options
|
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from file addresses.
|
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.br
|
|
Normally any number of leading dashes is ignored with command words and
|
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inner dashes are interpreted as underscores.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Aquiring source and target drive:
|
|
.TP
|
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\fB\-dev\fR address
|
|
Set input and output drive to the same address and load an eventual ISO image.
|
|
If there is no ISO image then create a blank one.
|
|
Set the image expansion method to growing.
|
|
.br
|
|
This is only allowed as long as no changes are pending in the currently
|
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loaded ISO image. Eventually one has to perform -commit or -rollback first.
|
|
Violation yields a FAILURE event.
|
|
.br
|
|
Special address string "-" means standard output, to which several restrictions
|
|
apply. See above paragraph "Libburn drives".
|
|
.br
|
|
An empty address string "" gives up the current device
|
|
without aquiring a new one.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-indev\fR address
|
|
Set input drive and load an eventual ISO image. If the new input drive differs
|
|
from -outdev then switch from growing to modifying or to blind growing.
|
|
It depends on the setting of -grow_blindly which of both gets activated.
|
|
The same rules and restrictions apply as with -dev.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-outdev\fR address
|
|
Set output drive and if it differs from the input drive then switch from
|
|
growing to modifying or to blind growing. Unlike -dev and -indev this action
|
|
does not load a new ISO image. So it can be performed even if there are pending
|
|
changes.
|
|
.br
|
|
-outdev can be performed without previous -dev or -indev. In that case an
|
|
empty ISO image with no changes pending is created. It can either be populated
|
|
by help of -add or it can be discarded silently if -dev or -indev are
|
|
performed afterwards.
|
|
.br
|
|
Special address string "-" means standard output, to which several restrictions
|
|
apply. See above paragraph "Libburn drives".
|
|
.br
|
|
An empty address string "" gives up the current output drive
|
|
without aquiring a new one. No writing is possible without an output drive.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-grow_blindly\fR "off"|predicted_nwa
|
|
If predicted_nwa is a non-negative number then perform blind growing rather
|
|
than modifying if -indev and -outdev are set to different drives.
|
|
"off" or "-1" switch to modifying, which is the default.
|
|
.br
|
|
predicted_nwa is the block address where the add-on session of blind
|
|
growing will finally end up. It is the responsibility of the user to ensure
|
|
this final position and the presence of the older sessions. Else the
|
|
overall ISO image will not be mountable or will produce read errors when
|
|
accessing file content. xorriso will write the session to the address
|
|
as obtained from examining -outdev and not necessarily to predicted_nwa.
|
|
.br
|
|
During a run of blind growing, the input drive gets released before output
|
|
begins. The output drive gets released when writing is done.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-load\fR entity id
|
|
Load a particular (possibly outdated) ISO image from a -dev or -indev which
|
|
hosts more than one session. Usually all available sessions are shown with
|
|
option -toc.
|
|
.br
|
|
entity depicts the kind of addressing. id depicts the particular
|
|
address. The following entities are defined:
|
|
.br
|
|
"auto" with any id addresses the last session in -toc. This is the default.
|
|
.br
|
|
"session" with id being a number as of a line "ISO session", column "Idx".
|
|
.br
|
|
"track" with id being a number as of a line "ISO track", column "Idx".
|
|
.br
|
|
"lba" or "sbsector" with a number as of a line "ISO ...", column "sbsector".
|
|
.br
|
|
"volid" with a text as of a line "ISO ...", column "Volume Id".
|
|
.br
|
|
Adressing a non-existing entity or one which does not represent an ISO
|
|
image will either abandon -indev or at least lead to a blank image.
|
|
.br
|
|
If an input drive is set at the moment when -load is executed, then the
|
|
addressed ISO image is loaded immediately. Else, the setting will be pending
|
|
until the next -dev or -indev. After the image has been loaded once, the
|
|
setting is valid for -rollback until next -dev or -indev, where it
|
|
will be reset to "auto".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-rom_toc_scan\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
Read-only drives do not tell the actual media type but show any media as
|
|
ROM (e.g. as DVD-ROM). The session history of MMC multi-session media might
|
|
be truncated to first and last session or even be completely false.
|
|
(The eventual emulated history of overwriteable media is not affected by this.)
|
|
.br
|
|
To have in case of failure a chance of getting the session history and
|
|
especially the address of the last session, there is a scan for ISO 9660
|
|
filesystem headers which might help but also might yield worse results
|
|
than the drive's table of content. At its end it can cause read attempts
|
|
to invalid addresses and thus ugly drive behavior.
|
|
.br
|
|
To be in effect, -rom_toc_scan has to be enabled by "on" before the -*dev
|
|
command which aquires drive and media.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-ban_stdio_write\fR
|
|
Allow for writing only the usage of MMC optical drives. Disallow
|
|
to write the result into files of nearly arbitrary type.
|
|
Once set, this command cannot be revoked.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Data manipulations:
|
|
.PP
|
|
The following commands expect file addresses of two kinds:
|
|
.br
|
|
.B disk_path
|
|
is a path to an object in the local filesystem tree.
|
|
.br
|
|
.B iso_rr_path
|
|
is the Rock Ridge name of a file object in the ISO image. (Do not
|
|
confuse with the lowlevel ISO 9660 names visible if Rock Ridge gets ignored.)
|
|
.PP
|
|
Note that in the ISO image you are as powerful as the superuser. Access
|
|
permissions of the existing files in the image do not apply to your write
|
|
operations. They are intended to be in effect with the read-only mounted image.
|
|
.PP
|
|
If the iso_rr_path of a newly inserted file leads to an existing
|
|
file object in the ISO image, then the following collision handling
|
|
happens:
|
|
.br
|
|
If both objects are directories then they get merged by recursively inserting
|
|
the subobjects from filesystem into ISO image.
|
|
If other file types collide then the setting of command
|
|
.B \-overwrite
|
|
decides.
|
|
.br
|
|
Renaming of files has similar collision handling, but directories can only
|
|
be replaced, not merged. Note that -mv inserts the source objects into an
|
|
eventual existing target directory rather than attempting to replace it.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The commands in this section alter the ISO image and not the local filesystem.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-iso_rr_pattern\fR "on"|"ls"|"off"
|
|
Set the pattern expansion mode for the iso_rr_path arguments of several
|
|
commands which support this feature.
|
|
.br
|
|
.B Pattern expansion
|
|
converts a list of pattern words into a list of existing file addresses.
|
|
Eventual unmatched pattern words appear themselves in that result list, though.
|
|
.br
|
|
Pattern matching supports the usual shell parser wildcards '*' '?' '[xyz]'
|
|
and respects '/' as separator which may only be matched literally.
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "off" disables this feature for all commands which are marked in this
|
|
man page by "iso_rr_path [***]" or "iso_rr_pattern [***]".
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "on" enables it for all those commands.
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "ls" enables it only for those which are marked by
|
|
"iso_rr_pattern [***]".
|
|
.br
|
|
Default is "on".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-disk_pattern\fR "on"|"ls"|"off"
|
|
Set the pattern expansion mode for the disk_path arguments of several
|
|
commands which support this feature.
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "off" disables this feature for all commands which are marked in this
|
|
man page by "disk_path [***]" or "disk_pattern [***]".
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "on" enables it for all those commands.
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "ls" enables it only for those which are marked by
|
|
"disk_pattern [***]".
|
|
.br
|
|
Default is "ls".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-add\fR pathspec [...] | disk_path [***]
|
|
Insert the given files or directory trees from filesystem
|
|
into the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
If -pathspecs is set to "on" then pattern expansion is always disabled and
|
|
character '=' has a special meaning. It eventually separates the ISO image path
|
|
from the disk path:
|
|
.br
|
|
iso_rr_path=disk_path
|
|
.br
|
|
The separator '=' can be escaped by '\\'.
|
|
If iso_rr_path does not begin with '/' then -cd is prepended.
|
|
If disk_path does not begin with '/' then -cdx is prepended.
|
|
.br
|
|
If no '=' is given then the word is used as both, iso_rr_path and disk path.
|
|
If in this case the word does not begin with '/' then -cdx is prepended to
|
|
the disk_path and -cd is prepended to the iso_rr_path.
|
|
.br
|
|
If -pathspecs is set to "off" then eventual -disk_pattern expansion applies.
|
|
The resulting words are used as both, iso_rr_path and disk path. Eventually
|
|
-cdx gets prepended to disk_path and -cd to iso_rr_path.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-add_plainly\fR mode
|
|
If set to mode "unknown" then any command word that does not begin with "-" and
|
|
is not recognized as known command will be subject to a virtual -add command.
|
|
I.e. it will be used as pathspec or as disk_path and added to the image.
|
|
Eventually -disk_pattern expansion applies to disk_paths.
|
|
.br
|
|
Mode "dashed" is similar to "unknown" but also adds unrecognized command
|
|
words even if they begin with "-".
|
|
.br
|
|
Mode "any" announces that all further words are to be added as pathspecs
|
|
or disk_paths. This does not work in dialog mode.
|
|
.br
|
|
Mode "none" is the default. It prevents any words from being understood
|
|
as files to add, if they are not parameters to appropriate commands.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-path_list\fR disk_path
|
|
Like -add but read the parameter words from file disk_path
|
|
or standard input if disk_path is "-".
|
|
The list must contain exactly one pathspec resp. disk_path pattern per line.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-map\fR disk_path iso_rr_path
|
|
Insert file object disk_path into the ISO image as iso_rr_path. If disk_path
|
|
is a directory then its whole sub tree is inserted into the ISO image.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-map_single\fR disk_path iso_rr_path
|
|
Like -map, but if disk_path is a directory then its sub tree is not inserted.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-map_l\fR disk_prefix iso_rr_prefix disk_path [***]
|
|
Performs -map with each of the disk_path arguments. iso_rr_path will be
|
|
composed from disk_path by replacing disk_prefix by iso_rr_prefix.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-update\fR disk_path iso_rr_path
|
|
Compare file object disk_path with file object iso_rr_path. If they do not
|
|
match, then perform the necessary image manipulations to make iso_rr_path
|
|
a matching copy of disk_path. This comparison will imply lengthy content
|
|
reading before a decision is made. On the other hand it strives for the
|
|
smallest possible amount of add-on data which is needed to achieve the
|
|
matching copy.
|
|
.br
|
|
If disk_path is a directory and iso_rr_path does not exist yet, then the
|
|
whole subtree will be inserted. Else only directory attributes will be
|
|
updated.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-update_r\fR disk_path iso_rr_path
|
|
Like -update but working recursively. I.e. all file objects below both
|
|
addresses get compared whether they have counterparts below the other address
|
|
and whether both counterparts match. If there is a mismatch then the necessary
|
|
update manipulation is done.
|
|
.br
|
|
Note that the comparison result may depend on option -follow. Its setting
|
|
should always be the same as with the first adding of disk_path as iso_rr_path.
|
|
.br
|
|
If iso_rr_path does not exist yet, then it gets added. If disk_path does not
|
|
exist, then iso_rr_path gets deleted.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-update_l\fR disk_prefix iso_rr_prefix disk_path [***]
|
|
Performs -update_r with each of the disk_path arguments. iso_rr_path will be
|
|
composed from disk_path by replacing disk_prefix by iso_rr_prefix.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cut_out\fR disk_path byte_offset byte_count iso_rr_path
|
|
Map a byte interval of a regular disk file into a regular file in the ISO
|
|
image.
|
|
This may be necessary if the disk file is larger than a single media, or if
|
|
it exceeds the traditional limit of 2 GiB - 1 for old operating systems,
|
|
or the limit of 4 GiB - 1 for newer ones. Only the newest Linux kernels
|
|
seem to read properly files >= 4 GiB - 1.
|
|
.br
|
|
A clumsy remedy for this limit is to backup file pieces and to concatenate
|
|
them at restore time. A well tested chopping size is 2047m.
|
|
It is permissible to request a higher byte_count than available. The
|
|
resulting file will be truncated to the correct size of a final piece.
|
|
To request a byte_offset higher than available yields no file in
|
|
the ISO image but a SORRY event.
|
|
E.g:
|
|
.br
|
|
-cut_out /my/disk/file 0 2047m \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/file/part_1_of_3_at_0_with_2047m_of_5753194821 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-cut_out /my/disk/file 2047m 2047m \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/file/part_2_of_3_at_2047m_with_2047m_of_5753194821 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-cut_out /my/disk/file 4094m 2047m \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/file/part_3_of_3_at_4094m_with_2047m_of_5753194821
|
|
.br
|
|
-cut_out is coordinated with -compare* and -update* if the names of the
|
|
part files follow a convention by which xorriso is able to recognize
|
|
file parts and process them accordingly:
|
|
.br
|
|
A disk file gets mapped to an ISO directory containing its split parts
|
|
as regular files. The parts have names which describe the splitting
|
|
by 5 numbers which are separated by some non-numerical text:
|
|
.br
|
|
part_number, total_parts, byte_offset, byte_count, disk_file_size
|
|
.br
|
|
Scaling characters like "m" or "k" are taken into respect and may
|
|
serve as separators as well. All digits are interpreted as decimal,
|
|
even if leading zeros are present.
|
|
.br
|
|
Not all parts have to be present on the same media. But those parts
|
|
which are present have to sit in the same directory. No other files
|
|
are allowed in there. Parts have to be disjoint. Their numbers have
|
|
to be plausible. E.g. byte_count must be valid as -cut_out argument
|
|
and it must be the same with all parts.
|
|
.br
|
|
If the disk file grows enough to need new parts then those get added
|
|
to the directory if it already contains all parts of the old disk file.
|
|
If not all parts are present, then only those present parts will
|
|
be updated.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cpr\fR disk_path [***] iso_rr_path
|
|
Insert the given files or directory trees from filesystem
|
|
into the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
The rules for generating the ISO addresses are similar as with
|
|
shell command cp -r. Nevertheless, directories of the iso_rr_path
|
|
are created if necessary. Especially a not yet existing iso_rr_path
|
|
will be handled as directory if multiple disk_paths are present.
|
|
The leafnames of the multiple disk_paths will be grafted under that
|
|
directory as would be done with an existing directory.
|
|
.br
|
|
If a single disk_path is present then a non-existing iso_rr_path will
|
|
get the same type as the disk_path.
|
|
.br
|
|
If a disk_path does not begin with '/' then -cdx is prepended.
|
|
If the iso_rr_path does not begin with '/' then -cd is prepended.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-rm\fR iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Delete the given files from the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
Note: This does not free any space on the -indev media, even if
|
|
the deletion is committed to that same media.
|
|
.br
|
|
The image size will shrink if the image is written to a different
|
|
media in modification mode.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-rm_r\fR iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Delete the given files or directory trees from the ISO image.
|
|
See also the note with option -rm.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-mv\fR iso_rr_path [***] iso_rr_path
|
|
Rename the given file objects in the ISO tree to the last
|
|
argument in the list. Use the same rules as with shell command mv.
|
|
.br
|
|
If pattern expansion is enabled and if the last argument contains wildcard
|
|
characters then it must match exactly one existing file address, or else the
|
|
command fails with a FAILURE event.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-chown\fR uid iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Set ownership of file objects in the ISO image. uid may either be a decimal
|
|
number or the name of a user known to the operating system.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-chown_r\fR uid iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Like -chown but affecting all files below eventual directories.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-chgrp\fR gid iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Set group attribute of file objects in the ISO image. gid may either be a
|
|
decimal number or the name of a group known to the operating system.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-chgrp_r\fR gid iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Like -chgrp but affecting all files below eventual directories.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-chmod\fR mode iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Equivalent to shell command chmod in the ISO image.
|
|
mode is either an octal number beginning with "0" or a comma separated
|
|
list of statements of the form [ugoa]*[+-=][rwxst]* .
|
|
.br
|
|
Like: go-rwx,u+rwx .
|
|
.br
|
|
.B Personalities:
|
|
u=user, g=group, o=others, a=all
|
|
.br
|
|
.B Operators:
|
|
+ adds given permissions, - revokes given permissions,
|
|
= revokes all old permissions and then adds the given ones.
|
|
.br
|
|
.B Permissions:
|
|
r=read, w=write, x=execute|inspect, s=setuid|setgid, t=sticky bit
|
|
.br
|
|
For octal numbers see man 2 stat.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-chmod_r\fR mode iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Like -chmod but affecting all files below eventual directories.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-alter_date\fR type timestring iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Alter the date entries of a file in the ISO image. type is
|
|
one of "a", "m", "b" for access time, modification time,
|
|
both times.
|
|
.br
|
|
timestring may be in the following formats
|
|
(see also section EXAMPLES):
|
|
.br
|
|
As expected by program date:
|
|
MMDDhhmm[[CC]YY][.ss]]
|
|
.br
|
|
As produced by program date:
|
|
[Day] MMM DD hh:mm:ss [TZON] YYYY
|
|
.br
|
|
Relative times counted from current clock time:
|
|
+|-Number["s"|"h"|"d"|"w"|"m"|"y"]
|
|
.br
|
|
where "s" means seconds, "h" hours, "d" days, "w" weeks, "m"=30d,
|
|
"y"=365.25d plus 1d added to multiplication result.
|
|
.br
|
|
Absolute seconds counted from Jan 1 1970:
|
|
=Number
|
|
.br
|
|
xorriso's own timestamps:
|
|
YYYY.MM.DD[.hh[mm[ss]]]
|
|
.br
|
|
scdbackup timestamps:
|
|
YYMMDD[.hhmm[ss]]
|
|
.br
|
|
where "A0" is year 2000, "B0" is 2010, etc.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-alter_date_r\fR type timestring iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Like -alter_date but affecting all files below eventual directories.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-find\fR iso_rr_path [test [test ...]] [-exec action [params]] --
|
|
A very restricted substitute for shell command find in the ISO image.
|
|
It performs an action on matching file objects at or below iso_rr_path.
|
|
.br
|
|
Tests are optional. If they are omitted then action is applied to all file
|
|
objects. If tests are given then action is applied only if all of them
|
|
match the file object. Available tests are:
|
|
.br
|
|
-name pattern
|
|
.br
|
|
Pattern is not expanded but used for comparison with
|
|
the particular file names of the eventual directory tree underneath
|
|
iso_rr_path.
|
|
.br
|
|
-type type_letter
|
|
.br
|
|
matches only files files of the given type:
|
|
"block", "char", "dir", "pipe", "file", "link", "socket",
|
|
"Xotic" which eventually matches what is not matched by the other types.
|
|
.br
|
|
Only the first letter is interpreted. E.g.: -find / -type d
|
|
.br
|
|
-damaged
|
|
.br
|
|
matches only files which use data blocks marked as damaged by a previous
|
|
run of -check_media. The damage info vanishes when a new ISO image gets
|
|
loaded.
|
|
.br
|
|
-undamaged
|
|
.br
|
|
matches only files which use data blocks outside the areas marked as damaged.
|
|
.br
|
|
-lba_range start_lba block_count
|
|
.br
|
|
matches only files which use data blocks within the range of start_lba
|
|
and start_lba+block_count-1.
|
|
.br
|
|
Default action is "echo",
|
|
i.e. to print the address of the found file. Other actions are certain
|
|
xorriso commands which get performed on the found files. These commands
|
|
may have specific parameters. See also their particular descriptions.
|
|
.br
|
|
"chown" and "chown_r" change the ownership and get the user id as param. E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -exec chown thomas --
|
|
.br
|
|
"chgrp" and "chgrp_r" change the group attribute and get the group id as param.
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / name 'news*' -type d -exec chgrp_r staff --
|
|
.br
|
|
"chmod" and "chmod_r" change access permissions and get a mode string as param.
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -exec chmod a-w,a+r --
|
|
.br
|
|
"alter_date" and "alter_date_r" change the timestamps.
|
|
They get a type character and a timestring as params.
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -exec alter_date "m" "Dec 30 19:34:12 2007" --
|
|
.br
|
|
"lsdl" prints file information like shell command ls -dl.
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -exec lsdl --
|
|
.br
|
|
"compare" performs command -compare with the found file address as iso_rr_path
|
|
and the corresponding file address below its argument disk_path_start. For this
|
|
the iso_rr_path of the -find command gets replaced by the disk_path_start.
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -exec compare /home/thomas --
|
|
.br
|
|
"update" performs command -update with the found file address as iso_rr_path.
|
|
The corresponding file address is determined like with above "compare".
|
|
.br
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -exec update /home/thomas --
|
|
.br
|
|
"rm" removes the found iso_rr_path from the image if it is not a directory with
|
|
files in it. I.e. this "rm" includes "rmdir".
|
|
.br
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -name *.doc -exec rm --
|
|
.br
|
|
"rm_r" removes the found iso_rr_path from the image, including whole directory
|
|
trees.
|
|
.br
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find /uh/oh -name *private* -exec rm_r --
|
|
.br
|
|
"report_damage" classifies files whether they hit a data block that is
|
|
marked as damaged. The result is printed together with the eventual address
|
|
of the first damaged byte, the maximum span of damages, file size, and the
|
|
path of the file.
|
|
.br
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -damaged -exec report_damage
|
|
.br
|
|
"report_lba" prints files which are associated to image data blocks.
|
|
It tells the logical block address, the block number, the byte size,
|
|
and the path of each file. There may be reported more than one
|
|
line per file if the file is very large. In this case each line has a
|
|
different extent number in column "xt".
|
|
.br
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -lba_range 302000 50000 -exec report_lba
|
|
.br
|
|
"find" performs another run of -find on the matching file address. It accepts
|
|
the same params as -find, except iso_rr_path.
|
|
E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-find / -name '???' -type d -exec find -name '[abc]*' -exec chmod a-w,a+r --
|
|
.br
|
|
If not used as last command in the line then the argument list
|
|
needs to get terminated by "--".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-mkdir\fR iso_rr_path [...]
|
|
Create empty directories if they do not exist yet.
|
|
Existence as directory generates a WARNING event, existence as
|
|
other file causes a FAILURE event.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-rmdir\fR iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Delete empty directories.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-rollback\fR
|
|
Discard the manipulated ISO image and reload it from -indev.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-rollback_end\fR
|
|
Discard the manipulated ISO image. End program without loading a new image.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Writing the result:
|
|
(see also paragraph about settings below)
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-commit\fR
|
|
Perform the write operation. Afterwards eventually make the
|
|
-outdev the new -dev and load the image from there.
|
|
Switch to growing mode.
|
|
(A subsequent -outdev will activate modification mode or blind growing.)
|
|
-commit is performed automatically at end of program if there
|
|
are uncommitted manipulations pending.
|
|
So, to perform a final write operation with no new -dev
|
|
and no new loading of image, rather execute option -end.
|
|
To suppress a final write, execute -rollback_end.
|
|
To eject outdev after write without new loading of image, use -commit_eject.
|
|
.br
|
|
|
|
Writing can last quite a while. It is not unnormal with several
|
|
types of media that there is no progress visible for the first
|
|
few minutes or that the drive gnaws on the media for a few
|
|
minutes after all data have been transmitted.
|
|
xorriso and the drives are in a client-server relationship.
|
|
The drives have much freedom about what to do with the media.
|
|
Some combinations of drives and media simply do not work,
|
|
despite the promises by their vendors.
|
|
If writing fails - or even the drive gets stuck and you need
|
|
to reboot - then try other media or another drive. The reason
|
|
for such failure is hardly ever in the code of the various
|
|
burn programs but you may well try some of those listed below
|
|
under SEE ALSO.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-eject\fR "in"|"out"|"all"
|
|
Eject the media in -indev, resp. -outdev, resp. both drives.
|
|
Note: It is not possible yet to effectively eject disk files.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-commit_eject\fR "in"|"out"|"all"|"none"
|
|
Combined -commit and -eject. When writing has finished do not make
|
|
-outdev the new -dev, and load no ISO image. Rather eject
|
|
-indev and/or -outdev. Eventually give up any non-ejected drive.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-blank\fR mode
|
|
Make media ready for writing from scratch (if not -dummy is activated).
|
|
.br
|
|
This affects only the -outdev not the -indev.
|
|
If both drives are the same and if the ISO image was altered
|
|
then this command leads to a FAILURE event.
|
|
Defined modes are:
|
|
as_needed, fast, all, deformat, deformat_quickest
|
|
.br
|
|
"as_needed" cares for used CD-RW, DVD-RW and for used overwriteable media
|
|
by applying -blank "fast". It applies -format "full" to yet unformatted
|
|
DVD-RAM or BD-RE. Other media or states are gracefully ignored.
|
|
.br
|
|
"fast" and "all" make CD-RW and unformatted DVD-RW re-usable,
|
|
or invalidate overwriteable ISO images.
|
|
.br
|
|
"deformat" converts overwriteable DVD-RW into unformatted ones.
|
|
.br
|
|
"deformat_quickest" is a faster way to deformat or blank DVD-RW
|
|
but produces media which are only suitable for a single session.
|
|
xorriso will write onto them only if option -close is set to "on".
|
|
.br
|
|
The progress reports issued by some drives while blanking are
|
|
quite unrealistic. Do not conclude success or failure from the
|
|
reported percentages. Blanking was successful if no SORRY event or
|
|
worse occured.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-format\fR mode
|
|
Convert unformatted DVD-RW into overwriteable ones, "de-ice" DVD+RW, format
|
|
newly purchased BD-RE, re-format DVD-RAM or BD-RE.
|
|
.br
|
|
Defined modes are:
|
|
.br
|
|
as_needed, full, fast, by_index_<num>, fast_by_index_<num>
|
|
.br
|
|
"as_needed" formats yet unformatted DVD-RW, DVD-RAM, BD-RE. Other media
|
|
are left untouched.
|
|
.br
|
|
"full" (re-)formats DVD-RW, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM, BD-RE.
|
|
.br
|
|
"fast" does the same as "full" but tries to be quicker.
|
|
.br
|
|
"by_index_" selects a format out of the descriptor list issued by option
|
|
-list_formats. The index number from that list is to be appended to the
|
|
mode word. E.g: "by_index_3".
|
|
.br
|
|
"fast_by_index_" does the same as "by_index_" but tries to be quicker.
|
|
.br
|
|
The formatting action has no effect on media if -dummy is activated.
|
|
.br
|
|
Formatting is normally needed only once during the lifetime of a media,
|
|
if ever. But it is a reason for re-formatting if:
|
|
.br
|
|
DVD-RW was deformatted by -blank,
|
|
.br
|
|
DVD+RW has read failures (re-formatting might help or not),
|
|
.br
|
|
DVD-RAM or BD-RE shall change their amount of defect reserve.
|
|
.br
|
|
The progress reports issued by some drives while formatting are
|
|
quite unrealistic. Do not conclude success or failure from the
|
|
reported percentages. Formatting was successful if no SORRY event
|
|
or worse occured. Be patient with apparently frozen progress.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-list_formats\fR
|
|
Put out a list of format descriptors as reported by the output drive for
|
|
the current media. The list gives the index number after "Format idx",
|
|
a MMC format code, the announced size in blocks (like "2236704s")
|
|
and the same size in MiB.
|
|
.br
|
|
MMC format codes are manifold. Most important are:
|
|
"00h" general formatting, "01h" increases reserve space for DVD-RAM,
|
|
"26h" for DVD+RW, "30h" for BD-RE with reserve space,
|
|
"31h" for BD-RE without reserve space.
|
|
.br
|
|
Smaller format size with DVD-RAM or BD-RE means more reserve space.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Settings for data insertion:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-file_size_limit\fR value [value [...]] --
|
|
Set the maximum permissible size for a single data file. The values get
|
|
summed up for the actual limit. If the only value is "off" then the file
|
|
size is not limited by xorriso. Default is a limit of 100 extents, 4g -2k each:
|
|
.br
|
|
-file_size_limit 400g -800k --
|
|
.br
|
|
When mounting ISO 9660 filesystems, old operating systems can handle only files
|
|
up to 2g -1 --. Newer ones are good up to 4g -1 --.
|
|
You need quite a new Linux kernel to read correctly the final bytes
|
|
of a file >= 4g if its size is not aligned to 2048 byte blocks.
|
|
.br
|
|
xorriso's own data read capabilities are not affected by eventual
|
|
operating system size limits. They apply to mounting only. Nevertheless,
|
|
the target filesystem of an -extract must be able to take the file size.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-not_mgt\fR code[:code[...]]
|
|
Control the behavior of the exclusion lists.
|
|
.br
|
|
Exclusion processing happens before disk_paths get mapped to the ISO image
|
|
and before disk files get compared with image files.
|
|
The absolute disk path of the source is matched against the -not_paths list.
|
|
The leafname of the disk path is matched against the patterns in the -not_leaf
|
|
list. If a match is detected then the disk path will not be regarded as an
|
|
existing file and not be added to the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
Several codes are defined.
|
|
The _on/_off settings persist until they are revoked by their_off/_on
|
|
counterparts.
|
|
.br
|
|
"erase" empties the lists which were accumulated by -not_paths and -not_leaf.
|
|
.br
|
|
"reset" is like "erase" but also re-installs default behavior.
|
|
.br
|
|
"off" disables exclusion processing temporarily without invalidating
|
|
the lists and settings.
|
|
.br
|
|
"on" re-enables exclusion processing.
|
|
.br
|
|
"param_off" applies exclusion processing only to paths below disk_path
|
|
parameter of commands. I.e. explicitely given disk_paths are exempted
|
|
from exclusion processing.
|
|
.br
|
|
"param_on" applies exclusion processing to command parameters as well as
|
|
to files below such parameters.
|
|
.br
|
|
"subtree_off" with "param_on" excludes parameter paths only if they
|
|
match a -not_paths item exactly.
|
|
.br
|
|
"subtree_on" additionally excludes parameter paths which lead to a file
|
|
address below any -not_paths item.
|
|
.br
|
|
"ignore_off" treats excluded disk files as if they were missing. I.e. they
|
|
get reported with -compare and deleted from the image with -update.
|
|
.br
|
|
"ignore_on" keeps excluded files out of -compare or -update activities.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-not_paths\fR disk_path [***]
|
|
Add the given paths to the list of excluded absolute disk paths. If a given
|
|
path is relative, then the current -cdx is prepended to form an absolute path.
|
|
Eventual pattern matching happens at definition time and not when exclusion
|
|
checks are made.
|
|
.br
|
|
(Do not forget to end the list of disk_paths by "--")
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-not_leaf\fR pattern
|
|
Add a single shell parser style pattern to the list of exclusions for
|
|
disk leafnames. These patterns are evaluated when the exclusion checks are
|
|
made.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-follow\fR occasion[:occasion[...]]
|
|
Enable or disable resolution of symbolic links and mountpoints under
|
|
disk_paths. This applies to actions -add, -du*x, -ls*x, -findx,
|
|
and to -disk_pattern expansion.
|
|
.br
|
|
There are two kinds of follow decisison to be made:
|
|
.br
|
|
"link" is the hop from a symbolic link to its target file object.
|
|
If enabled then symbolic links are handled as their target file objects,
|
|
else symbolic links are handled as themselves.
|
|
.br
|
|
"mount" is the hop from one filesystem to another subordinate filesystem.
|
|
If enabled then mountpoint directories are handled as any other directory,
|
|
else mountpoints are handled as empty directories if they are encountered in
|
|
directory tree traversals.
|
|
.br
|
|
Less general than above occasions:
|
|
.br
|
|
"pattern" is mount and link hopping, but only during -disk_pattern expansion.
|
|
.br
|
|
"param" is link hopping for parameter words (after eventual pattern expansion).
|
|
If enabled then -ls*x will show the link targets rather than the links
|
|
themselves. -du*x, -findx, and -add will process the link targets but not
|
|
follow links in an eventual directory tree below the targets (unless "link"
|
|
is enabled).
|
|
.br
|
|
Occasions can be combined in a colon separated list. All occasions
|
|
mentioned in the list will then lead to a positive follow decision.
|
|
.br
|
|
"off" prevents any positive follow decision. Use it if no other occasion
|
|
applies.
|
|
.br
|
|
Shortcuts:
|
|
.br
|
|
"default" is equivalent to "pattern:mount:limit=100".
|
|
.br
|
|
"on" always decides positive. Equivalent to "link:mount".
|
|
.br
|
|
|
|
Not an occasion but an optional setting is:
|
|
.br
|
|
"limit="<number> which sets the maximum number of link hops.
|
|
A link hop consists of a sequence of symbolic links and a final target
|
|
of different type. Nevertheless those hops can loop. Example:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR ln -s .. uploop
|
|
.br
|
|
Link hopping has a builtin loop detection which stops hopping at the first
|
|
repetition of a link target. Then the repeated link is handled as itself
|
|
and not as its target.
|
|
Regrettably one can construct link networks which
|
|
cause exponential workload before their loops get detected.
|
|
The number given with "limit=" can curb this workload at the risk of truncating
|
|
an intentional sequence of link hops.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-pathspecs\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
Control parameter interpretation with xorriso actions -add and -path_list.
|
|
.br
|
|
"on" enables pathspecs of the form
|
|
.B target=source
|
|
like with program mkisofs -graft-points.
|
|
It also disables -disk_pattern expansion for command -add.
|
|
.br
|
|
"off" disables pathspecs of the form target=source
|
|
and eventually enables -disk_pattern expansion.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-overwrite\fR "on"|"nondir"|"off"
|
|
Allow or disallow to overwrite existing files in the
|
|
ISO image by files with the same user defined name.
|
|
.br
|
|
With setting "off", name collisions cause FAILURE events.
|
|
With setting "nondir", only directories are protected by such events, other
|
|
existing file types get treated with -rm before the new file gets added.
|
|
Setting "on" allows automatic -rm_r. I.e. a non-directory can replace an
|
|
existing directory and all its subordinates.
|
|
.br
|
|
If restoring of files is enabled, then the overwrite rule applies to the
|
|
target file objects on disk as well, but "on" is downgraded to "nondir".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-split_size\fR number["k"|"m"]
|
|
Set the threshold for automatic splitting of regular files. Such splitting
|
|
maps a large disk file onto a ISO directory with several part files in it.
|
|
This is necessary if the size of the disk file exceeds -file_size_limit.
|
|
Older operating systems can handle files in mounted ISO 9660 filesystems
|
|
only if they are smaller than 2 GiB resp. 4 GiB.
|
|
See also option -cut_out for more information about file parts.
|
|
.br
|
|
Default is 0 which will exclude files larger than -file_size_limit by a
|
|
FAILURE event.
|
|
A well tested -split_size is 2047m. Sizes above -file_size_limit are not
|
|
permissible.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Settings for result writing:
|
|
.TP
|
|
Rock Ridge info will be generated by the program unconditionally.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-joliet\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
If enabled by "on", generate Joliet info additional to Rock Ridge info.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-volid\fR text
|
|
Specifies the volume ID. xorriso accepts any text up to 32 characters,
|
|
but according to rarely obeyed specs stricter rules apply:
|
|
.br
|
|
ECMA 119 demands character set [A-Z0-9_]. Like: "IMAGE_23"
|
|
.br
|
|
Joliet allows 16 UCS-2 characters. Like: "Windows name"
|
|
.br
|
|
Be aware that the volume id might get used automatically as name of the
|
|
mount point when the media is inserted into a playful computer system.
|
|
.br
|
|
If an ISO image gets loaded while the volume ID is set to default "ISOIMAGE"
|
|
or to "", then the volume ID of the loaded image will become the effective
|
|
volume id for the next write run. But as soon as command -volid is performed
|
|
afterwards, this pending id is overridden by the new setting.
|
|
.br
|
|
Consider this when setting -volid "ISOIMAGE" before executing -dev, -indev,
|
|
or -rollback.
|
|
If you insist in -volid "ISOIMAGE", set it again after those commands.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-publisher\fR text
|
|
Set the publisher string to be written with the next -commit. Permissible
|
|
are up to 128 characters.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-uid\fR uid
|
|
User id to be used for all files when the new ISO tree gets written to media.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-gid\fR gid
|
|
Group id to be used for all files when the new ISO tree gets written to media.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-speed\fR number[k|m|c|d|b]
|
|
Set the burn speed. Default is 0 = maximum speed.
|
|
Speed can be given in media dependent numbers or as a
|
|
desired throughput per second in MMC compliant kB (= 1000)
|
|
or MB (= 1000 kB). Media x-speed factor can be set explicity
|
|
by "c" for CD, "d" for DVD, "b" for BD, "x" is optional.
|
|
.br
|
|
Example speeds:
|
|
.br
|
|
706k = 706kB/s = 4c = 4xCD
|
|
.br
|
|
5540k = 5540kB/s = 4d = 4xDVD
|
|
.br
|
|
If there is no hint about the speed unit attached, then the
|
|
media in the -outdev will decide. Default unit is CD = 176.4k.
|
|
.br
|
|
MMC drives usually activate their own idea of speed and take
|
|
the speed value given by the burn program only as upper limit
|
|
for their own decision.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-stream_recording\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
Setting "on" tries to circumvent the management of defects on DVD-RAM and
|
|
BD-RE. Defect management keeps partly damaged media usable. But it reduces
|
|
write speed to half nominal speed even if the media is in perfect shape.
|
|
For the case of flawless media, one may use -stream_recording "on" to get
|
|
full speed.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-dummy\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
If "on" then simulate burning or refuse with FAILURE event if
|
|
no simulation is possible, do neither blank nor format.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB-fs\fR number["k"|"m"]
|
|
Set the size of the fifo buffer which smoothens the data
|
|
stream from ISO image generation to media burning. Default
|
|
is 4 MiB, minimum 64 kiB, maximum 1 GiB.
|
|
The number may be followed by letter "k" or "m"
|
|
which means unit is kiB (= 1024) or MiB (= 1024 kiB).
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-close\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
If "on" then mark the written media as not appendable
|
|
any more (if possible at all with the given type of target media).
|
|
.br
|
|
This is the contrary of cdrecord, wodim, cdrskin option -multi,
|
|
and is one aspect of growisofs option -dvd-compat.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-padding\fR number["k"|"m"]
|
|
Append the given number of extra bytes to the image stream.
|
|
This is a traditional remedy for a traditional bug in block
|
|
device read drivers. Needed only for CD recordings in TAO mode.
|
|
Since one can hardly predict on what media an image might end up,
|
|
xorriso adds the traditional 300k of padding by default to all images.
|
|
.br
|
|
For images which will never get to a CD it is safe to use -padding 0 .
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-boot_image\fR "any"|"isolinux" "discard"|"keep"|"patch"
|
|
Defines the handling of an eventual boot image (El-Torito) which has been read
|
|
from an existing ISO image. All types ("any") can be discarded or kept
|
|
unaltered. The latter makes only sense if the format of the boot image is
|
|
relocatable without content changes.
|
|
.br
|
|
The boot image type "isolinux" can be kept unaltered (not advisable), or
|
|
discarded, or it can be patched to match its relocation. In the latter case
|
|
the resulting ISO image is bootable if the boot image was really complying
|
|
to the isolinux standard.
|
|
.br
|
|
Creation of new boot images is not yet possible.
|
|
.br
|
|
CAUTION:
|
|
This is an expert option. xorriso is not an expert yet.
|
|
It cannot recognize the inner form of boot images.
|
|
So the user has already to know about the particular needs of the
|
|
bootimage which is present on the input media.
|
|
Most safe is the default: "any" "discard".
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Exception processing:
|
|
.PP
|
|
Since the tasks of xorriso are manifold and prone to external influence, there
|
|
may arise the need for xorriso to report and handle problem events.
|
|
.br
|
|
Those events get classified when they are detected by one of the software
|
|
modules and forwarded to reporting and evaluation modules which decide about
|
|
reactions. Event classes are sorted by severity:
|
|
.br
|
|
"NEVER" The upper end of the severity spectrum.
|
|
.br
|
|
"ABORT" The program is being aborted and on its way to end.
|
|
.br
|
|
"FATAL" The main purpose of the run failed
|
|
or an important resource failed unexpectedly.
|
|
.br
|
|
"FAILURE" An important part of the job could not be performed.
|
|
.br
|
|
"MISHAP" A FAILURE which can be tolerated during ISO image generation.
|
|
.br
|
|
"SORRY" A less important part of the job could not be performed.
|
|
.br
|
|
"WARNING" A situation is suspicious of being not intended by the user.
|
|
.br
|
|
"HINT" A proposal to the user how to achieve better results.
|
|
.br
|
|
"NOTE" A harmless information about noteworthy circumstances.
|
|
.br
|
|
"UPDATE" A pacifier message during long running operations.
|
|
.br
|
|
"DEBUG" A message which would only interest the program developers.
|
|
.br
|
|
"ALL" The lower end of the severity spectrum.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-abort_on\fR severity
|
|
Set the severity threshold for events to abort the program.
|
|
.br
|
|
Useful: "NEVER", "ABORT", "FATAL", "FAILURE" , "MISHAP", "SORRY"
|
|
.br
|
|
It may become necessary to abort the program anyway, despite
|
|
the setting by this option. Expect not many "ABORT" events to
|
|
be ignorable.
|
|
.br
|
|
A special property of this option is that it works preemptive if given as
|
|
program start argument. I.e. the first -abort_on setting among the
|
|
start arguments is in effect already when the first operations of xorriso
|
|
begin. Only "-abort_on" with dash "-" is recognized that way.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-return_with\fR severity exit_value
|
|
Set the threshold and exit_value to be returned at program end if no abort
|
|
has happened. This is to allow xorriso to go on after problems but to get
|
|
a failure indicating exit value from the program, nevertheless.
|
|
Useful is a value lower than the -abort_on threshold, down to "WARNING".
|
|
.br
|
|
exit_value may be either 0 (indicating success to the starter of the program)
|
|
or a number between 32 and 63. Some other exit_values are used by xorriso if
|
|
it decides to abort the program run:
|
|
.br
|
|
1=abort due to external signal
|
|
.br
|
|
2=no program arguments given
|
|
.br
|
|
3=creation of xorriso main object failed
|
|
.br
|
|
4=failure to start libburnia-project.org libraries
|
|
.br
|
|
5=program abort during argument processing
|
|
.br
|
|
6=program abort during dialog processing
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-report_about\fR severity
|
|
Set the threshold for events to be reported.
|
|
.br
|
|
Useful: "SORRY", "WARNING", "HINT", "NOTE", "UPDATE", "DEBUG", "ALL"
|
|
.br
|
|
Regardless what is set by -report_about, messages get always reported if they
|
|
reach the severity threshold of -abort_on .
|
|
.br
|
|
Event messages are sent to the info channel "I" which is usually stderr
|
|
but may be influenced by command -pkt_output.
|
|
Info messages which belong to no event get attributed severity "NOTE".
|
|
.br
|
|
A special property of this option is that the first -report_about setting
|
|
among the start arguments is in effect already when the first operations
|
|
of xorriso begin. Only "-report_about" with dash "-" is recognized that way.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-error_behavior\fR occasion behavior
|
|
Control the program behavior at problem event occasions.
|
|
For now this applies to occasions "image_loading" which is given while
|
|
an image tree is read from the input device, and to "file_extraction" which
|
|
is given with osirrox options like -extract.
|
|
.br
|
|
With "image_loading" there are three behaviors available:
|
|
.br
|
|
"best_effort" goes on with reading after events with severity below FAILURE
|
|
if the threshold of option -abort_on allows this.
|
|
.br
|
|
"failure" aborts image tree reading on first event of at least SORRY.
|
|
It issues an own FAILURE event.
|
|
.br
|
|
"fatal" acts like "failure" but issues the own event as FATAL.
|
|
This is the default.
|
|
.br
|
|
With occasion "file_extraction" there are three behaviors:
|
|
.br
|
|
"keep" maintains incompletely extracted files on disk. This is the default.
|
|
.br
|
|
"delete" removes files which encountered errors during content extraction.
|
|
.br
|
|
"best_effort" starts a revovery attempt by means of -extract_cut.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Dialog mode control:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-dialog\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
Enable or disable to enter dialog mode after all arguments
|
|
are processed. In dialog mode input lines get prompted via
|
|
readline or from stdin.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-page\fR length width
|
|
Describe terminal to the text pager. See also above, paragraph Result pager.
|
|
.br
|
|
If parameter length is nonzero then the user gets prompted after that
|
|
number of terminal lines. Zero length disables paging.
|
|
.br
|
|
Parameter width is the number of characters per terminal line. It is used
|
|
to compute the number of terminal lines which get occupied by an output line.
|
|
A usual terminal width is 80.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-use_readline\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
If "on" then use readline for dialog. Else use plain stdin.
|
|
.br
|
|
See also above, paragraph Dialog, Readline, Result pager.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-reassure\fR "on"|"tree"|"off"
|
|
If "on" then ask the user for "y" or "n":
|
|
.br
|
|
before deleting or overwriting any file in the ISO image,
|
|
.br
|
|
before overwriting any disk file during restore operations,
|
|
.br
|
|
before rolling back pending image changes,
|
|
.br
|
|
before committing image changes to media,
|
|
.br
|
|
before changing the input drive,
|
|
.br
|
|
before blanking or formatting media,
|
|
.br
|
|
before ending the program.
|
|
.br
|
|
With setting "tree" the reassuring prompt will appear for an eventual
|
|
directory only once and not for each file in its whole subtree.
|
|
.br
|
|
Setting "off" silently kills any kind of image file object resp. performs
|
|
above irrevocable actions.
|
|
.br
|
|
To really produce user prompts, option -dialog needs to be set to "on".
|
|
Note that the prompt does not appear in situations where file removal
|
|
is forbidden by option -overwrite. -reassure only imposes an additional
|
|
curb for removing existing file objects.
|
|
.br
|
|
Be aware that file objects get deleted from the ISO image immediately
|
|
after confirmation. They are gone even if the running command gets aborted
|
|
and its desired effect gets revoked. In case of severe mess-up, consider to
|
|
use -rollback to revoke the whole session.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Drive and media related inquiry actions:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-devices\fR
|
|
Show list of available MMC drives with the addresses of
|
|
their libburn standard device files.
|
|
.br
|
|
This is only possible when no ISO image changes are pending.
|
|
After this option was executed, there is no drive current
|
|
and no image loaded. Eventually one has to aquire a drive again.
|
|
.br
|
|
In order to be visible, a device has to offer rw-permissions
|
|
with its libburn standard device file. Thus it might be only the
|
|
.B superuser
|
|
who is able to see all drives.
|
|
.br
|
|
Drives which are occupied by other processes get not shown.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-toc\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
Show media specific table of content. This is the media session history,
|
|
not the ISO image directory tree.
|
|
.br
|
|
In case of overwriteable media holding a valid ISO image, a single session
|
|
gets fabricated from the ISO image size info. But if the first session on the
|
|
overwriteable media was written by xorriso then in most cases a complete
|
|
session history can be emulated.
|
|
.br
|
|
A drive which is incapable of writing may show any media as CD-ROM or DVD-ROM
|
|
with only one or two sessions on it. The last of these sessions is supposed
|
|
to be the most recent real session then.
|
|
.br
|
|
Some read-only drives and media show no usable session history at all.
|
|
Eventually option -rom_toc_scan might help.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-print_size\fR
|
|
Print the foreseeable consumption of 2048 byte blocks
|
|
by next -commit. This can last a while as a -commit gets
|
|
prepared and only in last moment is revoked by this option.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-tell_media_space\fR
|
|
Print available space on output media and the free space after
|
|
subtracting already foreseeable consumption by next -commit.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Navigation in ISO image and disk filesystem:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cd\fR iso_rr_path
|
|
Change the current working directory in the emerging ISO
|
|
image as it is at the moment. This is prepended to iso_rr_paths
|
|
which do not begin with '/'.
|
|
.br
|
|
It is possible to set the working directory to a path which does not exist
|
|
yet in the ISO image. The necessary parent directories will be created when
|
|
the first file object is inserted into that virtual directory.
|
|
Use -mkdir if you want to enforce the existence of the directory already at
|
|
first insertion.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cdx\fR disk_path
|
|
Change the current working directory on filesystem.
|
|
To be prepended to disk_paths which do not begin with '/'.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-pwd\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
Tell the current working directory in the ISO image.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-pwdx\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
Tell the current working directory on local filesystem.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-ls\fR iso_rr_pattern [***]
|
|
List files in the ISO image which match shell patterns
|
|
(i.e. with wildcards '*' '?' '[a-z]').
|
|
If a pattern does not begin with '/' then it is compared with addresses
|
|
relative to -cd, the current working directory in the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
Directories are listed by their content rather than as single file item.
|
|
.br
|
|
Pattern expansion may be disabled by command -iso_rr_pattern.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lsd\fR iso_rr_pattern [***]
|
|
Like -ls but listing directories as themselves and not by their content.
|
|
This resembles shell command ls -d.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lsl\fR iso_rr_pattern [***]
|
|
Like -ls but also list some of the file attributes.
|
|
Output format resembles shell command ls -ln.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lsdl\fR iso_rr_pattern [***]
|
|
Like -lsd but also list some of the file attributes.
|
|
Output format resembles shell command ls -dln.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lsx\fR disk_pattern [***]
|
|
List files on local filesystem which match shell patterns. Patterns which do
|
|
not begin with '/' are used relative to -cdx, the current working directory in
|
|
the local filesystem.
|
|
.br
|
|
Directories are listed by their content rather than as single file item.
|
|
.br
|
|
Pattern expansion may be disabled by command -disk_pattern.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lsdx\fR disk_pattern [***]
|
|
Like -lsx but listing directories as themselves and not by their content.
|
|
This resembles shell command ls -d.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lslx\fR disk_pattern [***]
|
|
Like -lsx but also listing some of the file attributes.
|
|
Output format resembles shell command ls -ln.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-lsdlx\fR disk_pattern [***]
|
|
Like -lsdx but also listing some of the file attributes.
|
|
Output format resembles shell command ls -dln.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-du\fR iso_rr_pattern [***]
|
|
Recursively list size of directories and files in the ISO image
|
|
which match one of the patterns.
|
|
similar to shell command du -k.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-dus\fR iso_rr_pattern [***]
|
|
List size of directories and files in the ISO image
|
|
which match one of the patterns.
|
|
Similar to shell command du -sk.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-dux\fR disk_pattern [***]
|
|
Recursively list size of directories and files in the local filesystem
|
|
which match one of the patterns, similar to shell command du -k.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-dusx\fR disk_pattern [***]
|
|
List size of directories and files in the local filesystem
|
|
which match one of the patterns.
|
|
Similar to shell command du -sk.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-findx\fR disk_path [-name pattern] [-type t] [-exec action [params]] --
|
|
Like -find but operating on local filesystem and not on the ISO image.
|
|
This is subject to the settings of -follow.
|
|
.br
|
|
Find accepts the same -type arguments as -find. Additionally it recognizes
|
|
type "mountpoint" (or "m"). It matches subdirectories which reside on a
|
|
different device than their parent. It never matches the disk_path
|
|
given as start address for -findx.
|
|
.br
|
|
-findx accepts the -exec actions as does -find. But except the following few
|
|
actions it will allways perform action "echo".
|
|
.br
|
|
"in_iso" iso_rr_path_start reports the path if its counterpart exist in
|
|
the ISO image. For this the disk_path of the -find command gets replaced
|
|
by iso_rr_path_start. E.g.:
|
|
.br
|
|
-findx /home -exec in_iso /
|
|
.br
|
|
"not_in_iso" iso_rr_path_start reports the path if its counterpart does
|
|
not exist in the ISO image. The report format is the same as with command
|
|
-compare.
|
|
E.g.
|
|
.br
|
|
-findx /home/thomas -exec not_in_iso /thomas_on_cd
|
|
.br
|
|
"add_missing" iso_rr_path_start adds the counterpart if it does not yet
|
|
exist in the ISO image.
|
|
E.g.
|
|
.br
|
|
-findx /home/thomas -exec add_missing /thomas_on_cd
|
|
.br
|
|
"is_full_in_iso" iso_rr_path_start reports if the counterpart in the ISO image
|
|
contains files. To be used with -type "m" to report mount points.
|
|
.br
|
|
"empty_iso_dir" iso_rr_path_start deletes all files from the counterpart
|
|
in the ISO image. To be used with -type "m" to truncate mount points.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-compare\fR disk_path iso_rr_path
|
|
Compare attributes and eventual data file content of a fileobject in the
|
|
local filesystem with a file object in the ISO image. The iso_rr_path may
|
|
well point to an image file object which is not yet committed, i.e. of which
|
|
the data content still resides in the local filesystem. Such data content is
|
|
prone to externally caused changes.
|
|
.br
|
|
If iso_rr_path is empty then disk_path is used as path in the ISO image too.
|
|
.br
|
|
Differing attributes are reported in detail, differing content is summarized.
|
|
Both to the result channel. In case of no differences no result lines are
|
|
emitted.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-compare_r\fR disk_path iso_rr_path
|
|
Like -compare but working recursively. I.e. all file objects below both
|
|
addresses get compared whether they have counterparts below the other address
|
|
and whether both counterparts match.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-compare_l\fR disk_prefix iso_rr_prefix disk_path [***]
|
|
Perform -compare_r with each of the disk_path arguments. iso_rr_path will be
|
|
composed from disk_path by replacing disk_prefix by iso_rr_prefix.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Evaluation of readability and recovery:
|
|
.PP
|
|
It is not uncommon that optical media produce read errors. The reasons may be
|
|
various and get obscured by error correction which is performed by the drives
|
|
and based on extra data on the media. If a drive returns data then one can
|
|
quite trust that they are valid. But at some degree of read problems the
|
|
correction will fail and the drive is supposed to indicate error.
|
|
.br
|
|
xorriso can scan the media for readable data blocks, classify them according
|
|
to their read speed, save them to a file, and keep track of successfuly saved
|
|
blocks for further tries on the same media.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-check_media\fR [option [option ...]] --
|
|
Try to read data blocks from the indev drive, eventually copy them to a
|
|
disk file, and finally report about the encountered quality. Several options
|
|
may be used to modify the default behavior.
|
|
.br
|
|
The options given with this command override the default settings which
|
|
may have been changed by option -check_media_defaults. See there for a
|
|
description of options.
|
|
.br
|
|
The result list tells intervals of 2 KiB blocks with start address, number
|
|
of blocks and quality. Qualities which begin with "+" are
|
|
supposed to be valid readable data. Qualities with "-" are no valid data.
|
|
.br
|
|
Alternatively it is possible to report damaged files rather than blocks.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-check_media_defaults\fR [option [option ...]] --
|
|
Preset options for runs of -check_media, -extract_cut and best_effort
|
|
file extraction. Eventual options given with -check_media will override the
|
|
preset options. -extract_cut will override some options automatically.
|
|
.br
|
|
An option consists of a keyword, a "=" character, and a value. Options
|
|
may override each other. So their sequence matters.
|
|
.br
|
|
The default setting at program start is:
|
|
.br
|
|
use=indev what=tracks min_lba=-1 max_lba=-1 retry=default
|
|
time_limit=28800 item_limit=100000
|
|
.br
|
|
abort_file=/var/opt/xorriso/do_abort_check_media
|
|
.br
|
|
data_to='' sector_map='' map_with_volid=off patch_lba0=off report=blocks
|
|
.br
|
|
Option "reset=now" restores these startup defaults.
|
|
.br
|
|
Non-default options are:
|
|
.br
|
|
"report=files" lists the files which use damaged blocks (not with use=outdev).
|
|
The format is like with find -exec report_damage.
|
|
.br
|
|
"report=blocks_files" first lists damaged blocks and then affected files.
|
|
.br
|
|
"use=outdev" reads from the output drive instead of the input drive. This
|
|
avoids loading the ISO image tree from media.
|
|
.br
|
|
"what=disc" scans the payload range of a media without respecting track gaps.
|
|
.br
|
|
"min_lba=" omits all blocks with addresses lower than the option value.
|
|
.br
|
|
"max_lba=" switches to what=disc and omits all blocks above its option value.
|
|
.br
|
|
"retry=on" forces read retries with single blocks when the normal read
|
|
chunk produces a read error. By default, retries are only enabled with CD
|
|
media. "retry=off" forbits retries for all media types.
|
|
.br
|
|
"abort_file=" gives the path of the file which may abort a scan run. Abort
|
|
happens if the file exists and its mtime is not older than the start time
|
|
of the run. Use shell command "touch" to trigger this.
|
|
Other than an aborted program run, this will report the tested and untested
|
|
blocks and go on with running xorriso.
|
|
.br
|
|
"time_limit=" gives the number of seconds after which the scan shall be
|
|
aborted. This is useful for unattended scanning of media which may else
|
|
overwork the drive in its effort to squeeze out some readable blocks.
|
|
Abort may be delayed by the drive gnawing on the last single read operation.
|
|
Value -1 means unlimited time.
|
|
.br
|
|
"item_limit=" gives the number of report list items after which to abort.
|
|
Value -1 means unlimited item number.
|
|
.br
|
|
"data_to=" copies the valid blocks to the file which is given as option value.
|
|
.br
|
|
"sector_map=" tries to read the file given by option value as
|
|
sector bitmap and to store such a map file after the scan run.
|
|
The bitmap tells which blocks have been read successfully in previous runs.
|
|
It allows to do several scans on the same media, eventually with intermediate
|
|
eject, in order to collect readable blocks whenever the drive is lucky enough
|
|
to produce them. The stored file contains a human readable TOC of tracks
|
|
and their start block addresses, followed by binary bitmap data.
|
|
.br
|
|
"map_with_volid=on" examines tracks whether they are ISO images and eventually
|
|
prints their volume ids into the human readable TOC of sector_map=.
|
|
.br
|
|
"patch_lba0=on" transfers within the data_to= file a copy of the currently
|
|
loaded session head to the start of that file and patches it to be valid
|
|
at that position.
|
|
This makes the loaded session the default session of the image file
|
|
when it gets mounted or loaded as stdio: drive. But it usually makes
|
|
the original session 1 inaccessible.
|
|
.br
|
|
"patch_lba0=force" performs "patch_lba0=on" even if xorriso believes
|
|
that the copied data are not valid.
|
|
.br
|
|
"patch_lba0=" may also bear a number. If it is 32 or higher it is taken as
|
|
start address of the session to be copied. In this case it is not necessary to
|
|
have an -indev and a loaded image. ":force" may be appended after the number.
|
|
.br
|
|
"use=sector_map" does not read any media but loads the file given by option
|
|
sector_map= and processes this virtual outcome.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B osirrox restore options:
|
|
.PP
|
|
Normally xorriso only writes to disk files which were given as stdio:
|
|
pseudo-drives or as log files.
|
|
But its alter ego, osirrox, is able to extract file objects
|
|
from ISO images and to create, overwrite, or delete file objects on disk.
|
|
.br
|
|
Disk file exclusions by -not_mgt, -not_leaf, -not_paths apply.
|
|
If disk file objects already exist then the settings of -overwrite and
|
|
-reassure apply. But -overwrite "on" only triggers the behavior
|
|
of -overwrite "nondir". I.e. directories cannot be deleted.
|
|
.br
|
|
Access permissions of files in the ISO image do not restrict restoring.
|
|
The directory permissions on disk have to allow rwx.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-osirrox\fR "on"|"device_files"|"off"[:option:...]
|
|
Setting "off" disables disk filesystem manipulations. This is the default
|
|
unless the program was started with leafname "osirrox". Elsewise
|
|
the capability to restore files can be enabled explicitly by -osirrox "on".
|
|
.br
|
|
To enable restoring of special files by "device_files" is potentially
|
|
dangerous.
|
|
The meaning of the number st_rdev (see man 2 stat) depends much on the
|
|
operating system. Best is to restore device files only to the same system
|
|
from where they were copied. If not enabled, device files in the ISO image
|
|
are ignored during restore operations.
|
|
.br
|
|
Due to a bug of previous versions, device files from previous sessions might
|
|
have been altered to major=0, minor=1. So this combination does not get
|
|
restored.
|
|
.br
|
|
Option "concat_split_on" is default. It enables restoring of split file
|
|
directories as data files if the directory contains a complete collection
|
|
of -cut_out part files. With option "concat_split_off" such directories are
|
|
handled like any other ISO image directory.
|
|
.br
|
|
Option "auto_chmod_off" is default. If "auto_chmod_on" is set then access
|
|
restrictions for disk directories get circumvented if those directories
|
|
are owned by the effective user who runs xorriso. This happens by temporarily
|
|
granting rwx permission to the owner. It will not work with ACL restrictions.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-extract\fR iso_rr_path disk_path
|
|
Restore the file objects at and underneath iso_rr_path to their corresponding
|
|
addresses at and underneath disk_path.
|
|
This is the inverse of -map or -update_r.
|
|
.br
|
|
If iso_rr_path is a directory and disk_path is an existing directory then
|
|
both trees will be merged. Directory attributes get extracted only if the disk
|
|
directory is newly created by the restore operation.
|
|
Disk files get removed only if they are to be replaced
|
|
by file objects from the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
As many attributes as possible are copied together with restored
|
|
file objects.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-extract_single\fR iso_rr_path disk_path
|
|
Like -extract, but if iso_rr_path is a directory then its sub tree gets not
|
|
restored.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-extract_l\fR iso_rr_prefix disk_prefix iso_rr_path [***]
|
|
Performs -extract with each of the iso_rr_path arguments. disk_path will be
|
|
composed from iso_rr_path by replacing iso_rr_prefix by disk_prefix.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-extract_cut\fR iso_rr_path byte_offset byte_count disk_path
|
|
Copy a byte interval from a data file out of an ISO image into a newly created
|
|
disk file.
|
|
Two restrictions apply:
|
|
.br
|
|
The data bytes of iso_rr_path need to be already stored in the loaded ISO image
|
|
and byte_offset must be a multiple of 2048, e.g. an integer with suffix
|
|
s, m, or g.
|
|
.br
|
|
This option is implemented by a special run of -check_media and governed by
|
|
most of the options which can be set iby -check_media_defaults.
|
|
Its main purpose is to allow handling of large files if they are not supported
|
|
by mount -t iso9660 and if the reading system is unable to buffer them as
|
|
a whole.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cpx\fR iso_rr_path [***] disk_path
|
|
Extract single leaf file objects from the ISO image and store them under
|
|
the address given by disk_path. If more then one iso_rr_path is given then
|
|
disk_path must be a directory or non-existent. In the latter case it gets
|
|
created and the extracted files get installed in it with the same leafnames.
|
|
.br
|
|
Missing directory components in disk_path will get created, if possible.
|
|
.br
|
|
Directories are allowed as iso_rr_path only with -osirrox "concat_split_on"
|
|
and only if they actually represent a complete collection of -cut_out split
|
|
file parts.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cpax\fR iso_rr_path [***] disk_path
|
|
Like -cpx but restoring mtime, atime as in ISO image and trying to set
|
|
ownership and group as in ISO image.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cp_rx\fR iso_rr_path [***] disk_path
|
|
Like -cpx but also extracting whole directory trees from the ISO image.
|
|
.br
|
|
The resulting disk paths are determined as with shell command cp -r :
|
|
If disk_path is an existing directory then the trees will be inserted or merged
|
|
underneath this directory and will keep their leaf names. The ISO directory "/"
|
|
has no leaf name and thus gets mapped directly to disk_path.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-cp_rax\fR iso_rr_path [***] disk_path
|
|
Like -cp_rx but restoring mtime, atime as in ISO image and trying to set
|
|
ownership and group as in ISO image.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-paste_in\fR iso_rr_path disk_path byte_offset byte_count
|
|
Read the content of a ISO data file and write it into a data file on disk
|
|
beginning at the byte_offset. Write at most byte_count bytes.
|
|
This is the inverse of option -cut_out.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Command compatibility emulations:
|
|
.PP
|
|
Writing of ISO 9660 on CD is traditionally done by program mkisofs
|
|
as ISO 9660 image producer and cdrecord as burn program.
|
|
xorriso does not strive for their comprehensive emulation.
|
|
Nevertheless it is ready to perform some of its core tasks under control
|
|
of commands which in said programs trigger comparable actions.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-as\fR personality option [options] --
|
|
.br
|
|
Performs its variable length option list as sparse emulation of the program
|
|
depicted by the personality word.
|
|
.br
|
|
|
|
Personality "\fBmkisofs\fR" accepts the options listed with:
|
|
.br
|
|
-as mkisofs -help --
|
|
.br
|
|
Among them: -R (always on), -J, -o, -M, -C, -path-list, -m, -exclude-list,
|
|
-f, -print-size, -pad, -no-pad, -V, -v, -version, -graft-points,
|
|
pathspecs as with xorriso -add.
|
|
A lot of options are not supported and lead to failure of the mkisofs
|
|
emulation. Some are ignored, but better do not rely on this tolerance.
|
|
.br
|
|
-graft-points is equivalent to -pathspecs on. Note that pathspecs without "="
|
|
are interpreted differently than with xorriso option -add. Directories get
|
|
merged with the root directory of the ISO image, other filetypes get mapped
|
|
into that root directory.
|
|
.br
|
|
Other than with the "cdrecord" personality there is no automatic -commit at
|
|
the end of a "mkisofs" option list. Verbosity settings -v (= "UPDATE") and
|
|
-quiet (= "SORRY") persist. The output file, eventually chosen with -o,
|
|
persists until things happen like -commit, -rollback, -dev, or end of xorriso.
|
|
-pacifier gets set to "mkisofs" if files are added to the image.
|
|
.br
|
|
If pathspecs are given and if no output file was chosen before or during the
|
|
"mkisofs" option list, then standard output (-outdev "-") will get into effect.
|
|
If -o points to a regular file, then it will be truncated to 0 bytes
|
|
when finally writing begins. This truncation does not happen if the drive
|
|
is chosen by xorriso options before or after -as mkisofs.
|
|
Directories and symbolic links are no valid -o targets.
|
|
.br
|
|
Writing to stdout is possible only if -as "mkisofs" was among the start
|
|
arguments or if other start arguments pointed the output drive to
|
|
standard output.
|
|
.br
|
|
Personalites "\fBxorrisofs\fR", "\fBgenisoimage\fR", and "\fBgenisofs\fR"
|
|
are aliases for "mkisofs".
|
|
.br
|
|
If xorriso is started with one of the leafnames "xorrisofs", "genisofs",
|
|
"mkisofs", or "genisoimage", then it automatically prepends -as "genisofs"
|
|
to the command line arguments. I.e. all arguments will be interpreted mkisofs
|
|
style until "--" is encountered. From then on, options are interpreted
|
|
as xorriso options.
|
|
.br
|
|
|
|
Personality "\fBcdrecord\fR" accepts the options listed with:
|
|
.br
|
|
-as cdrecord -help --
|
|
.br
|
|
Among them: -v, dev=, speed=, blank=, fs=, -eject, -atip, padsize=, tsize=,
|
|
-isosize, -multi, -msinfo, --grow_overwriteable_iso, write_start_address=,
|
|
track source file path or "-" for standard input as track source.
|
|
.br
|
|
It ignores most other options of cdrecord and cdrskin but refuses on
|
|
-audio, -scanbus, and on blanking modes unknown to xorriso.
|
|
.br
|
|
The scope is only a single data track per session to be written
|
|
to blank, overwriteable, or appendable media. The media gets closed if
|
|
closing is applicable and not option -multi is present.
|
|
.br
|
|
An eventually aquired input drive is given up.
|
|
This is only allowed if no image changes are pending.
|
|
.br
|
|
dev= must be given as xorriso device address. Adresses like 0,0,0 or ATA:1,1,0
|
|
are not supported.
|
|
.br
|
|
If a track source is given, then an automatic -commit happens at the end of
|
|
the "cdrecord" option list.
|
|
.br
|
|
--grow_overwriteable_iso enables emulation of multi-session on overwriteable
|
|
media. To enable emulation of a TOC, the first session needs -C 0,32 with
|
|
-as mkisofs (but no -M) and --grow_overwriteable_iso write_start_address=32s
|
|
with -as cdrecord.
|
|
.br
|
|
A much more elaborate libburn based cdrecord emulator is the program cdrskin.
|
|
.br
|
|
Personalites "\fBxorrecord\fR", "\fBwodim\fR", and "\fBcdrskin\fR" are aliases
|
|
for "cdrecord".
|
|
.br
|
|
If xorriso is started with one of the leafnames "xorrecord", "cdrskin",
|
|
"cdrecord", or "wodim", then it automatically prepends -as "cdrskin"
|
|
to the command line arguments. I.e. all arguments will be interpreted cdrecord
|
|
style until "--" is encountered and an eventual commit happens.
|
|
From then on, options are interpreted as xorriso options.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-pacifier\fR behavior_code
|
|
Control behavior of UPDATE pacifiers during write operations.
|
|
The following behavior codes are defined:
|
|
.br
|
|
"xorriso" is the default format:
|
|
.br
|
|
Writing: sector XXXXX of YYYYYY [fifo active, nn% fill]
|
|
.br
|
|
"cdrecord" looks like:
|
|
.br
|
|
X of Y MB written (fifo nn%) [buf mmm%]
|
|
.br
|
|
"mkisofs"
|
|
.br
|
|
nn% done, estimate finish Tue Jul 15 20:13:28 2008
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Scripting, dialog and program control features:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-no_rc\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
Only if used as first command line argument this option
|
|
prevents reading and interpretation of eventual startup
|
|
files. See section FILES below.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-options_from_file\fR fileaddress
|
|
Reads lines from fileaddress and executes them as dialog lines.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-help\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
Print helptext.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-version\fR
|
|
Print program name and version.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-history\fR textline
|
|
Copy textline into libreadline history.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-status\fR [mode|filter]
|
|
Print the current settings of xorriso.
|
|
Modes:
|
|
.br
|
|
short... print only important or altered settings
|
|
.br
|
|
long ... print all settings including defaults
|
|
.br
|
|
long_history like long plus history lines
|
|
.br
|
|
Filters begin with '-' and are compared literally against the
|
|
output lines of -status:long_history. A line is put out only
|
|
if its start matches the filter text. No wildcards.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-status_history_max\fR number
|
|
Set maximum number of history lines to be reported with -status "long_history".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-list_delimiter\fR word
|
|
Set the list delimiter to be used instead of "--". It has to be a single word,
|
|
must not be empty, not longer than 80 characters, and must not contain
|
|
quotation marks.
|
|
.br
|
|
For brevity the list delimiter is referred as "--" throughout this text.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-temp_mem_limit\fR number["k"|"m"]
|
|
Set the maximum size of temporary memory to be used for image dependent
|
|
buffering. Currently this applies to pattern expansion only.
|
|
.br
|
|
Default is 16m = 16 MiB, minimum 64k = 64 kiB, maximum 1024m = 1 GiB.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-print\fR text
|
|
Print a text to result channel.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-prompt\fR text
|
|
Show text at beginning of output line and
|
|
wait for the user to hit the Enter key
|
|
resp. to send a line via stdin.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-errfile_log\fR mode path|channel
|
|
.br
|
|
If problem events are related to input files from the filesystem, then their
|
|
disk_paths can be logged to a file or to output channels R or I.
|
|
.br
|
|
Mode can either be "plain" or "marked". The latter causes marker lines which
|
|
give the time of log start, burn session start, burn session end, log end
|
|
or program end. In mode "plain", only the file paths are logged.
|
|
.br
|
|
If path is "-" or "-R" then the log is directed to the result channel.
|
|
Path "-I" directs it to the info message channel. Any text that does not
|
|
begin with "-" is used as path for a file to append the log lines.
|
|
.br
|
|
Problematic files can be recorded multiple times during one program run.
|
|
If the program run aborts then the list might not be complete because
|
|
some input file arguments might not have been processed at all.
|
|
.br
|
|
The errfile paths are transported as messages of very low priority "ERRFILE".
|
|
This transport becomes visible with -report_about "ALL".
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-session_log\fR path
|
|
If path is not empty it gives the address of a plain text file where
|
|
a log record gets appended after each session. This log can be used to
|
|
determine the start_lba of a session for mount option sbsector= from
|
|
date or volume id.
|
|
.br
|
|
Record format is: timestamp start_lba size volume-id
|
|
.br
|
|
The first three items are single words, the rest of the line is the volume id.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-end\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
End program immediately
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB#\fR any text
|
|
In dialog or file execution mode only and only as first
|
|
non-whitespace in line:
|
|
Do not execute the line but eventually store it in history.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Support for frontend programs talking into stdin and listening at stdout:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-pkt_output\fR "on"|"off"
|
|
Consolidate text output on stdout and classify each
|
|
line by a channel indicator:
|
|
.br
|
|
'R:' for result lines,
|
|
.br
|
|
'I:' for notes and error messages,
|
|
.br
|
|
'M:' for -mark texts.
|
|
.br
|
|
Next is a decimal number of which only bit 0 has a meaning for now.
|
|
0 means no newline at end of payload, 1 means that the newline character at
|
|
the end of the output line belongs to the payload. After another colon follows
|
|
the payload text.
|
|
.br
|
|
Example:
|
|
.br
|
|
I:1: enter option and arguments :
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-logfile\fR channel fileaddress
|
|
Copy output of a channel to the given file.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-mark\fR text
|
|
If text is not empty it will get put out each time an
|
|
action has been completed.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-prog\fR text
|
|
Use text as this program's name in subsequent messages
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-prog_help\fR text
|
|
Use text as this program's name and perform -help.
|
|
.br
|
|
.SH EXAMPLES
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Overview of examples:
|
|
As superuser learn about available drives
|
|
.br
|
|
Blank media and compose a new ISO image as batch run
|
|
.br
|
|
A dialog session doing about the same
|
|
.br
|
|
Manipulating an existing ISO image on the same media
|
|
.br
|
|
Copy modified ISO image from one media to another
|
|
.br
|
|
Operate on storage facilities other than optical drives
|
|
.br
|
|
Perform multi-session runs as of cdrtools traditions
|
|
.br
|
|
Let xorriso work underneath growisofs
|
|
.br
|
|
Adjust thresholds for verbosity, exit value and program abort
|
|
.br
|
|
Examples of input timestrings
|
|
.br
|
|
Incremental backup of a few directory trees
|
|
.br
|
|
Restore directory trees from a particular ISO session to disk
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B As superuser learn about available drives
|
|
Consider to give rw permissions to those users or groups
|
|
which shall be able to use the drives with xorriso.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -devices
|
|
.br
|
|
0 -dev '/dev/sr0' rwrw-- : '_NEC ' 'DVD_RW ND-4570A'
|
|
.br
|
|
1 -dev '/dev/sr1' rwrw-- : 'HL-DT-ST' 'DVDRAM GSA-4082B'
|
|
.br
|
|
2 -dev '/dev/sr2' rwrw-- : 'PHILIPS ' 'SPD3300L'
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Blank media and compose a new ISO image as batch run
|
|
Aquire drive /dev/sr2, blank media resp. invalidate existing ISO image.
|
|
Add the files from hard disk directories /home/me/sounds and /pictures.
|
|
Omit some unwanted stuff by removing it from the image directory tree.
|
|
Re-add some wanted stuff.
|
|
.br
|
|
Because no -dialog "on" is given, the program will then end by committing the
|
|
session to media.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR cd /home/me
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -outdev /dev/sr2 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-blank as_needed \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-map /home/me/sounds /sounds \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-map /home/me/pictures /pictures \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-rm_r \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/sounds/indecent \\
|
|
.br
|
|
'/pictures/*private*' \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/pictures/confidential \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-- \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-cd / \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-add pictures/confidential/work*
|
|
.br
|
|
Note that '/pictures/*private*' is a pattern for iso_rr_paths
|
|
while pictures/confidential/work* gets expanded by the shell
|
|
with addresses from the hard disk.
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B A dialog session doing about the same
|
|
.br
|
|
-pathspecs is already given as start argument. The other activities
|
|
are done as dialog input. The pager gets set to 20 lines of 80 characters.
|
|
.br
|
|
The drive is aquired by option -dev rather than -outdev in order to see
|
|
the message about its current content. By option -blank this content is
|
|
made ready for being overwritten and the loaded ISO image is made empty.
|
|
.br
|
|
In order to be able to eject the media, the session needs to be committed
|
|
explicitely.
|
|
.br
|
|
.B $ xorriso -dialog on -page 20 80 -disk_pattern on
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-dev /dev/sr2
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-blank as_needed
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-map /home/me/sounds /sounds -map /home/me/pictures /pictures
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-rm_r /sounds/indecent /pictures/*private* /pictures/confidential
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-cdx /home/me/pictures -cd /pictures
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-add confidential/office confidential/factory
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-du /
|
|
.br
|
|
enter option and arguments :
|
|
.br
|
|
.B \-commit -eject all -end
|
|
.br
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Manipulating an existing ISO image on the same media
|
|
Load image from drive.
|
|
Remove (i.e. hide) directory /sounds and its subordinates.
|
|
Rename directory /pictures/confidential to /pictures/restricted.
|
|
Change access permissions of directory /pictures/restricted.
|
|
Add new directory trees /sounds and /movies. Burn to the same media and eject.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -dev /dev/sr2 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-rm_r /sounds -- \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-mv \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/pictures/confidential \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/pictures/restricted \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-- \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-chmod go-rwx /pictures/restricted -- \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-map /home/me/prepared_for_dvd/sounds_dummy /sounds \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-map /home/me/prepared_for_dvd/movies /movies \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-commit -eject all
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Copy modified ISO image from one media to another
|
|
Load image from input drive. Do the same manipulations as in the previous
|
|
example. Aquire output drive and blank it. Burn the modified image as
|
|
first and only session to the output drive.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -indev /dev/sr2 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-rm_r /sounds -- \\
|
|
.br
|
|
...
|
|
.br
|
|
-outdev /dev/sr0 -blank as_needed \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-commit -eject all
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Operate on storage facilities other than optical drives
|
|
Full read-write operation is possible with regular files and block devices:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -dev stdio:/tmp/regular_file ...
|
|
.br
|
|
Other writeable file types are supported write-only:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -outdev stdio:/tmp/named_pipe ...
|
|
.br
|
|
Among the write-only drives is standard output:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -outdev - \\
|
|
.br
|
|
...
|
|
.br
|
|
| gzip >image.iso.gz
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Perform multi-session runs as of cdrtools traditions
|
|
Between both processes there can be performed arbitrary transportation
|
|
or filtering.
|
|
.br
|
|
The first session is written like this:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -as mkisofs prepared_for_iso/tree1 | \\
|
|
.br
|
|
xorriso -as cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=fast -multi -eject -
|
|
.br
|
|
Follow-up sessions are written like this:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR m=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -as mkisofs -M /dev/sr0 -C $m prepared_for_iso/tree2 | \\
|
|
.br
|
|
xorriso -as cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 -waiti -multi -eject -
|
|
.br
|
|
Always eject the drive tray between sessions. The old sessions
|
|
get read via stdio:/dev/sr0 and thus are prone to device driver
|
|
peculiarities.
|
|
.br
|
|
This example works for multi-session media only.
|
|
Add cdrskin option --grow_overwriteable_iso to all -as cdrecord runs
|
|
in order to enable multi-session emulation on overwriteable media.
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Let xorriso work underneath growisofs
|
|
growisofs expects an ISO formatter program which understands options -C and
|
|
-M. If xorriso gets started by name "xorrisofs" then it is suitable for that.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR export MKISOFS="xorrisofs"
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR growisofs -Z /dev/dvd /some/files
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR growisofs -M /dev/dvd /more/files
|
|
.br
|
|
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:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR ln -s $(which xorriso) "$HOME/xorrisofs"
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR export MKISOFS="$HOME/xorrisofs"
|
|
.br
|
|
One may quit mkisofs emulation by argument "--" and make
|
|
use of all xorriso commands. growisofs dislikes options which
|
|
start with "-o" but -outdev must be set to "-".
|
|
So use "outdev" instead:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR growisofs -Z /dev/dvd -- outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR growisofs -M /dev/dvd -- outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
|
|
.br
|
|
growisofs has excellent burn capabilities with DVD and BD.
|
|
It does not emulate session history on overwriteable media, though.
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Adjust thresholds for verbosity, exit value and program abort
|
|
Be quite verbous, exit 32 if severity "FAILURE" was encountered,
|
|
do not abort prematurely but forcibly go on until the end of commands.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso ... \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-report_about UPDATE \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-return_with FAILURE 32 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-abort_on NEVER \\
|
|
.br
|
|
...
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Examples of input timestrings
|
|
.br
|
|
As printed by program date:
|
|
.B 'Thu Nov 8 14:51:13 CET 2007'
|
|
.br
|
|
The same without ignored parts:
|
|
.B 'Nov 8 14:51:13 2007'
|
|
.br
|
|
The same as expected by date:
|
|
.B 110814512007.13
|
|
.br
|
|
Four weeks in the future:
|
|
.B +4w
|
|
.br
|
|
The current time:
|
|
.B +0
|
|
.br
|
|
Three hours ago:
|
|
.B \-3h
|
|
.br
|
|
Seconds since Jan 1 1970:
|
|
.B =1194531416
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Incremental backup of a few directory trees
|
|
This does the following to directories /open_source_project and /personal_mail
|
|
in the ISO image:
|
|
create them if not existing yet,
|
|
compare them with their disk counterparts,
|
|
add disk file objects which are missing yet,
|
|
overwrite those which are different on disk,
|
|
and delete those which have vanished on disk.
|
|
But do not add or overwrite files matching *.o, *.swp.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -dev /dev/sr0 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-volid PROJECTS_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-not_leaf '*.o' -not_leaf '*.swp' \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-update_r /home/thomas/open_source_projects /open_source_projects \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-update_r /home/thomas/personal_mail /personal_mail \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-commit -toc -eject all
|
|
.br
|
|
To be used several times on the same media, whenever an update of
|
|
the two disk trees to the media is desired. Begin with blank media and start
|
|
a new blank media when the run fails due to lack of remaining space on
|
|
the old one.
|
|
.br
|
|
This makes most sense with backups on non-erasable media like CD-R,
|
|
DVD-R, DVD+R if the full backup leaves substantial remaining capacity
|
|
on media and if the expected changes are much smaller than the full backup.
|
|
An update run will probably save no time but last longer than a full backup.
|
|
Another good reason may be given if read speed is much higher than write speed.
|
|
.br
|
|
With \fBmount\fR option \fB"sbsector="\fR it is possible to access the session
|
|
trees which represent the older backup versions. With CD media, Linux mount
|
|
accepts session numbers directly by its option "session=".
|
|
.br
|
|
Multi-session media and most overwriteable media written by xorriso can tell
|
|
the sbsector of a session by xorriso option -toc.
|
|
.br
|
|
Sessions on multi-session media are separated by several MB of unused blocks.
|
|
So with small sessions the payload capacity can become substantially lower
|
|
than the overall media capacity. If the remaining space on media does not
|
|
suffice for the next gap, the drive is supposed to close the media
|
|
automatically.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fBBetter do not use your youngest backup for -update_r\fR.
|
|
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 media.
|
|
Always have a blank media ready to perform a full backup in case the update
|
|
attempt fails due to insufficient remaining capacity.
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Restore directory trees from a particular ISO session to disk
|
|
This is an alternative to mounting the media and using normal file operations.
|
|
.br
|
|
First check which backup sessions are on the media:
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -outdev /dev/sr0 -toc
|
|
.br
|
|
Then load the desired session and copy the file trees to disk.
|
|
Avoid to eventually create /home/thomas/restored without rwx-permission.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -load volid PROJECTS_MAIL_2008_06_19_205956 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-indev /dev/sr0 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-osirrox on:auto_chmod_on \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-chmod u+rwx / -- \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-extract /open_source_projects \\
|
|
.br
|
|
/home/thomas/restored/open_source_projects \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-extract /personal_mail /home/thomas/restored/personal_mail
|
|
.br
|
|
-rollback_end
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Try to retrieve as many blocks as possible from a damaged media
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB$\fR xorriso -abort_on NEVER -indev /dev/sr0 \\
|
|
.br
|
|
-check_media time_limit=1800 report=blocks_files \\
|
|
.br
|
|
data_to="$HOME"/dvd_copy sector_map="$HOME"/dvd_copy.map --
|
|
.br
|
|
This can be repeated several times, eventually with -eject or with other
|
|
-indev drives. See the human readable part of "$HOME"/dvd_copy.map for
|
|
addresses which can be used on "$HOME"/dvd_copy with mount option sbsector=.
|
|
.br
|
|
If you want to make the newest session the default mount session, you
|
|
may add option "patch_lba0=on" to the final -check_media run.
|
|
.SH FILES
|
|
.SS
|
|
.B Startup files:
|
|
.br
|
|
If not -no_rc is given as the first argument then xorriso attempts on startup
|
|
to read and execute lines from the following files:
|
|
.br
|
|
/etc/default/xorriso
|
|
.br
|
|
/etc/opt/xorriso/rc
|
|
.br
|
|
/etc/xorriso/xorriso.conf
|
|
.br
|
|
$HOME/.xorrisorc
|
|
.br
|
|
The files are read in the sequence given above, but none of them is required
|
|
for xorriso to function properly.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Runtime control files:
|
|
.br
|
|
The default setting of -check_media abort_file= is:
|
|
.br
|
|
/var/opt/xorriso/do_abort_check_media
|
|
.br
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.TP
|
|
For mounting xorriso generated ISO 9660 images
|
|
.br
|
|
.BR mount(8)
|
|
.TP
|
|
Libreadline, a comfortable input line facility
|
|
.BR readline(3)
|
|
.TP
|
|
Other programs which produce ISO 9660 images
|
|
.br
|
|
.BR mkisofs(8),
|
|
.BR genisoimage(8)
|
|
.TP
|
|
Other programs which burn sessions to optical media
|
|
.BR growisofs(1),
|
|
.BR cdrecord(1),
|
|
.BR wodim(1),
|
|
.BR cdrskin(1)
|
|
.br
|
|
.SH AUTHOR
|
|
Thomas Schmitt <scdbackup@gmx.net>
|
|
.br
|
|
for libburnia-project.org
|
|
.SH CREDITS
|
|
xorriso is in part based on work by Vreixo Formoso who provides libisofs
|
|
together with Mario Danic who also leads the libburnia team.
|
|
Thanks to Andy Polyakov who invented emulated growing,
|
|
to Derek Foreman and Ben Jansens who once founded libburn.
|
|
.br
|
|
Compliments towards Joerg Schilling whose cdrtools served me for ten years.
|
|
|