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we would be better off building on the given OS/arch instead of playing with preprocessor directives; all releng tests are gathered in libisoburn tree |
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cdrskin | ||
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libburn | ||
libcevap | ||
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acinclude.m4 | ||
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configure.ac | ||
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INSTALL | ||
libburn-1.pc.in | ||
Makefile.am | ||
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README | ||
version.h.in |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ libburnia-project.org ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This all is under GPL. (See GPL reference, our clarification and commitment at the end of this text) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ libburn-project.org By Mario Danic <mario.danic@gmail.com> and Thomas Schmitt <scdbackup@gmx.net> Copyright (C) 2006-2011 Mario Danic, Thomas Schmitt Still containing parts of Libburn. By Derek Foreman <derek@signalmarketing.com> and Ben Jansens <xor@orodu.net> Copyright (C) 2002-2006 Derek Foreman and Ben Jansens http://files.libburnia-project.org/releases/libburn-1.1.8.tar.gz ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Build and Installation From tarball Obtain libburn-1.1.8.tar.gz, take it to a directory of your choice and do: tar xzf libburn-1.1.8.tar.gz cd libburn-1.1.8 ./configure --prefix=/usr make To make libburn accessible for running resp. application development, and to install the cdrecord compatibility binary cdrskin, do (as Superuser): make install This procedure installs libburn.so.4 and cdrskin depending on it. For a standalone cdrskin binary, see cdrskin/README. A behavioral conflict is known between any burn software and demons like hald which probe CD drives. This can spoil burn runs for CD-R or CD-RW. You may have to keep your hald away from the drive. See for example http://www.freebsd.org/gnome/docs/halfaq.html From SVN Our build system is based on autotools. For preparing the build of a SVN snapshot you will need autotools of at least version 1.7. Do in a directory of your choice: svn co http://svn.libburnia-project.org/libburn/trunk libburn-svn cd libburn-svn ./bootstrap ./configure --prefix=/usr make make install Warning: The trunk might contain experimental features which might not persist until next release. Special ./configure options make install on GNU/Linux will try to run program ldconfig with the library installation directory as only argument. Failure to do so will not abort installation. One may disable ldconfig by ./configure option: --disable-ldconfig-at-install In some situations Linux may deliver a better write performance to drives if the track input is read with O_DIRECT (see man 2 open). The API call burn_os_open_track_src() and the input readers of cdrskin and libburn fifo can be told to use this peculiar read mode by: --enable-track-src-odirect But often libburn call burn_write_opts_set_dvd_obs(opts, 64*1024) will yield even better performance in such a situation. 64k can be made default at configure time by: --enable-dvd-obs-64k This may be combined with above --enable-track-src-odirect . Alternatively the transport of SCSI commands can be done via libcdio-0.83. You may install it and re-run libburn's ./configure with option --enable-libcdio By use of a version script, the libburn.so library exposes no other function names but those of the API definition in libburn/libburn.h. If -Wl,--version-script=... makes problems with the local compiler, then disable this encapsulation feature by --disable-versioned-libs Make sure to re-compile all source files after running ./configure make clean ; make make install Linux only: libburn tries to avoid a collision with udev's drive examination by waiting 0.1 seconds before opening the device file for a longer time, after udev might have been alarmed by drive scanning activities. The waiting time can be set at ./configure time with microsecond granularity. E.g. 2 seconds: CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -DLibburn_udev_wait_useC=2000000" ./configure ...options... Waiting can be disabled by zero waiting time: CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -DLibburn_udev_wait_useC=0" Alternatively, libburn can try to be nice by opening the device file, closing it immediately, waiting, and only then opening it for real: CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -DLibburn_udev_extra_open_cyclE -DLibburn_udev_wait_useC=500000" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ An important part of the project, libisofs, is hosted in a bzr repository at launchpad.net : bzr branch lp:libisofs Another part the project, libisoburn, is hosted in the libburnia SVN, too: svn co http://svn.libburnia-project.org/libisoburn/trunk libisoburn See README files there. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Overview of libburnia-project.org libburnia-project.org is an open-source software project for reading, mastering and writing optical discs. For now this means CD media, all DVD media, all BD media. The project comprises of several more or less interdependent parts which together strive to be a usable foundation for application development. These are libraries, language bindings, and middleware binaries which emulate classical (and valuable) Linux tools. Currently it is supported on GNU/Linux with kernels >= 2.4, on FreeBSD with ATAPI/CAM enabled in the kernel (see man atapicam), and on OpenSolaris (tested with kernel 5.11). On other X/Open compliant systems there will only be pseudo drives, but no direct MMC operation on real CD/DVD/BD drives. For full ports to other systems we would need : login on a development machine resp. a live OS on CD or DVD, advise from a system person about the equivalent of Linux sg or FreeBSD CAM, volunteers for testing of realistic use cases. We have a well tested code base for burning data and audio CDs, DVDs and BDs. The burn API is quite comprehensively documented and can be used to build a presentable application. We have a functional application which emulates the core use cases of cdrecord in order to prove that usability, and in order to allow you to explore libburn's scope by help of existing cdrecord frontends. ISO 9660 filesystems with Rock Ridge and Joliet extensions can be created and manipulated quite freely. This capability together with our burn capability makes possible a single binary application which covers all steps of image composition, updating and writing. Quite unique in the Linux world. The project components (list subject to growth, hopefully): - libburn is the library by which preformatted data get onto optical media. It uses either /dev/sgN (e.g. on kernel 2.4 with ide-scsi) or /dev/srM or /dev/hdX (e.g. on kernel 2.6). libburn is the foundation of our cdrecord emulation. Its code is independent of cdrecord. Its DVD capabilities are learned from studying the code of dvd+rw-tools and MMC-5 specs. No code but only the pure SCSI knowledge has been taken from dvd+rw-tools, though. - libisofs is the library to pack up hard disk files and directories into a ISO 9660 disk image. This may then be brought to CD via libburn. An own ISO 9660 extension stores ACLs, xattr, and MD5 of file content. - libisoburn is an add-on to libburn and libisofs which coordinates both and also allows to grow ISO-9660 filesystem images on multi-session media as well as on overwriteable media via the same API. All media peculiarities are handled automatically. It also contains the methods of command oriented application xorriso and offers them via a C language API. - cdrskin is a limited cdrecord compatibility wrapper for libburn. cdrecord is a powerful GPL'ed burn program included in Joerg Schilling's cdrtools. cdrskin strives to be a second source for the services traditionally provided by cdrecord. Additionally it provides libburn's DVD capabilities, where only -sao is compatible with cdrecord. cdrskin does not contain any bytes copied from cdrecord's sources. Many bytes have been copied from the message output of cdrecord runs, though. See cdrskin/README for more. - xorriso is an application of all three libraries which creates, loads, manipulates and writes ISO 9660 filesystem images with Rock Ridge extensions. Manipulation is not only adding or overwriting of files but also deleting, renaming, attribute changing, incremental backups, activating boot images, and extracting of files from ISO images to disk. There is also a sparse emulation of cdrecord and a more laborate one of mkisofs. All features of xorriso are also available via a C language API of libisoburn. A static compilation of xorriso and the libraries is dedicated to the GNU Operating System. See xorriso/README_gnu_xorriso . - "test" is a collection of application gestures and examples given by the authors of the library features. The burn API example of libburn is named test/libburner.c . The API for media information inquiry is demonstrated in test/telltoc.c . Explore these examples if you look for inspiration. We strive to be a responsive upstream. Our libraries are committed to maintain older feature sets in newer versions. This applies to source code headers (API) as well as to linkable objects (ABI). The only exception from this rule is about non-release versions x.y.*[13579] which are allowed to introduce new features, change those new features in any way and even may revoke such new features before the next release of x.y.*[02468]. As soon as it is released, a feature is promised to persist. SONAMES: libburn.so.4 (since 0.3.4, March 2007), libisofs.so.6 (since 0.6.2, February 2008), libisoburn.so.1 (since 0.1.0, February 2008). Applications must use 64 bit off_t. E.g. by defining #define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE #define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64 or take special precautions to interface with the libraries by 64 bit integers where the .h files prescribe off_t. To reduce libburn's off_t size to 32 bit will keep it from processing tracks of more than 2 GB size. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Project history as far as known to me: - Founded in 2002 as it seems. See mailing list archives http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/libburn/ The site of this founder team is reachable and offers download of a (somewhat outdated) tarball and from CVS : http://icculus.org/burn/ Copyright holders and most probably founders: Derek Foreman and Ben Jansens. - I came to using libburn in 2005. Founded the cdrskin project and submitted necessary patches which were accepted or implemented better. Except one remaining patch which prevented cdrskin from using vanilla libburn from CVS. The cdrskin project site is reachable and offers download of the heavily patched (elsewise outdated) tarball under the name cdrskin-0.1.2 : http://scdbackup.sourceforge.net/cdrskin_eng.html It has meanwhile moved to use vanilla libburn.pykix.org , though. Version 0.1.4 constitutes the first release of this kind. - In July 2006 our team mate Mario Danic announced a revival of libburn which by about nearly everybody else was perceived as unfriendly fork. Derek Foreman four days later posted a message which expressed his discontent. The situation first caused me to publically regret it and then - after i got the opportunity to move in with cdrskin - gave me true reason to personally apologize to Derek Foreman, Ben Jansens and the contributors at icculus.org/burn. Posted to both projects: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/libburn/2006-August/000446.html http://mailman-mail1.webfaction.com/pipermail/libburn-hackers/2006-August/000024.html - Mid August 2006 project cdrskin established a branch office in libburn.pykix.org so that all maintainers of our tools have one single place to get the current (at least slightely) usable coordinated versions of everything. Project cdrskin will live forth independendly for a while but it is committed to stay in sync with libburn.pykix.org (or some successor, if ever). cdrskin is also committed to support icculus.org/burn if the pending fork is made reality by content changes in that project. It will cease to maintain a patched version of icculus.org/burn though. Precondition for a new release of cdrskin on base of icculus.org/burn would be the pending "whitelist patch" therefore. I would rather prefer if both projects find consense and merge, or at least cooperate. I have not given up hope totally, yet. I, personally, will honor any approach. - 2nd September 2006 the decision is made to strive for a consolidation of copyright and a commitment to GPL in a reasonable and open minded way. This is to avoid long term problems with code of unknown origin and with finding consense among the not so clearly defined group of copyright claimers and -holders. libisofs is already claimed sole copyright Mario Danic. cdrskin and libburner are already claimed sole copyright Thomas Schmitt. Rewrites of other components will follow and concluded by claiming full copyright within the group of libburn.pykix.org-copyright holders. - 16th September 2006 feature freeze for release of libburn-0.2.2 . - 20th September 2006 release of libburn-0.2.2 . - 26th October 2006 feature freeze for cdrskin-0.2.4 based on libburn-0.2.3 . This version of cdrskin is much more cdrecord compatible in repect to drive addressing and audio features. - 30th October 2006 release of cdrskin-0.2.4 . - 13th November 2006 splitting releases of libburn+cdrskin from libisofs. - 24th November 2006 release of libburn-0.2.6 and cdrskin-0.2.6 . cdrskin has become suitable for unaware frontends as long as they perform only the core of cdrecord use cases (including open-ended input streams, audio, and multi-session). - 28th November 2006 the umbrella project which encloses both, libisofs and libburn, is now called libburnia. For the origin of this name, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liburnians . - 16th January 2007 release of libburn-0.3.0 and cdrskin-0.3.0 . Now the scope is widened to a first class of DVD media: overwriteable single layer types DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, DVD-RW. This is not a cdrecord emulation but rather inspired by dvd+rw-tools' "poor man" writing facility for this class of media. Taking a bow towards Andy Polyakov. - 11th February 2007 version 0.3.2 covers sequential DVD-RW and DVD-R with multi-session and with DAO. - 12th March 2007 version 0.3.4 supports DVD+R and thus covers all single layer DVD media. Code for double layer DVD+/-R is implemented but awaits a tester yet. - 23th April 2007 version 0.3.6 follows the unanimous opinion of Linux kernel people that one should not use /dev/sg on kernel 2.6. - 31st July 2007 version 0.3.8 marks the first anniversary of libburn revival. We look back on improved stability, a substantially extended list of media and write modes, and better protection against typical user mishaps. - 24th October 2007 version 0.4.0 is the foundation of new library libisoburn and an upcomming integrated application for manipulating and writing ISO 9660 + Rock Ridge images. cdrskin-0.4.0 got capabilities like growisofs by these enhancements: growing of overwriteable media and disk files. Taking again a bow towards Andy Polyakov. - 26th Januar 2008 version 0.4.2 rectifies the version numbering so that we reliably release libburn.so.4 as should have been done since libburn-0.3.2. cdrskin now is by default linked dynamically and does a runtime check to ensure not to be started with a libburn which is older than itself. - 3rd Feb 2008 libisofs-0.2.x (.so.5) has been deprecated. - 14th Feb 2008 libisofs-0.6.2 permanently replaces the old libisofs-0.2.x. It is the first release of new libisofs.so.6 which will guarantee future API/ABI compatibility for its whole feature set. - 15th Feb 2008 libisoburn-0.1.0 (.so.1) coordinates libisofs and libburn for the purpose of ISO image reading and writing. It emulates multi-session on overwriteable media. Application xorriso makes use of all three libraries. - 8th Apr 2008 libburn-0.4.4 has proven to be capable of burning to DVD+R/DL and read performance on disk file pseudo-drives has been improved. - 27th Apr 2008 libisofs-0.6.4 can now read data file content from images and can map pieces of disk files onto image files. Image directory iteration has been enhanced. Input data streams and extended information have been exposed in the API to allow future development. - 29th Apr 2008 libisoburn-0.1.4 was made more efficient with reading of image tree nodes. It now depends on libisofs-0.6.4 and libburn-0.4.4. xorriso makes use of new libisofs features by performing incremental updates of directory trees and by cutting oversized data files into pieces. A primitive single session emulation of cdrecord and mkisofs is provided. - 10th May 2008 libburn-0.4.6 supports formatting and writing of BD-RE, full nominal speed for DVD-RAM and BD-RE. cdrskin has a unified blank type with automatic media state recognition. - 17th May 2008 an old bug with DVD-RAM and now with BD-RE is fixed by libburn-0.4.8 to allow libisoburn emulation of multisession on those media. - 19th May 2008 libisoburn-0.1.6 brings better table-of-content emulation on overwriteble media and disk files. - 1st Jun 2008 libisofs-0.6.6 fixes some problems around device files. - 3rd Jun 2008 libisoburn-0.1.8 fixes a bug with overwriteable media. - 23rd Jun 2008 libisoburn-0.2.0 introduces extraction of files from ISO images. - 16th Jul 2008 libburn-0.5.0 handles systems with no /dev/sr* but only /dev/scd*. - 19th Jul 2008 libisoburn/xorriso-0.2.2 can do multi-session in mkisofs and cdrecord style. xorriso now can serve underneath growisofs. - 20th Aug 2008 libburn-0.5.2 revokes the necessity that a drive must be enumerable in order to be adressable. Enumeration is enhanced by examining /proc/sys/dev/cdrom/info. - 24th Aug 2008 libisoburn/xorriso-0.2.4 introduces a media readability check with data retrieval option. - 18th Sep 2008 libisofs-0.6.8 supports ISO 9660 Level 3 which allows very large data files in the image. - 20th Sep 2008 libisoburn/xorriso-0.2.6 takes into respect the new Level 3 capabilities of libisofs. - 6th Oct 2008 libburn-0.5.4 adjusts the changes of 0.5.2 to the needs of Linux kernel 2.4 and introduces human readable SCSI error messages. - 6th Oct 2008 libisofs-0.6.10 fixes two bugs which prevented adding and manipulation of ISOLINUX boot images. - 15th Oct 2008 libisoburn/xorriso-0.2.8 can activate and maintain an ISOLINUX boot image by an EL Torito boot record. - 12th Nov 2008 libburn-0.5.6 fixes usage of freed memory by the fifo thread of an aborted burn run. - 26th Nov 2008 libisofs-0.6.12 can produce a ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR on the fly and allows to produce ISO images which resemble old mkisofs images. - 2nd Dec 2008 libisoburn-0.3.0. xorriso now is ready for exotic character sets, for legacy FreeBSD systems which expect an outdated Rock Ridge signature, and for producing ISO images with MBR which boot from hard disk or USB stick. Three minor bugs were fixed. - 7th Dec 2008 libburn-0.5.8 prevents a SIGSEGV with wierd CD table-of-content and improves BD-RE formatting. - 9th Dec 2008 Our project received a donation from Thomas Weber. - 2nd Jan 2009 libburn-0.6.0 allows to format BD-R and to write to either formatted or unformatted BD-R. - 6th Jan 2009 libisoburn-0.3.2. xorriso can produce and execute commands for mounting older sessions from all kinds of media. Pseudo-drives outside the /dev/ tree can be addressed without prefix "stdio:". - 20th Feb 2009 libburn-0.6.2 source release now compiles out of the box on FreeBSD. - 28 Feb 2009 libisofs-0.6.14 can record ACLs and Extended Attributes xattr in its ISO images. - 01 Mar 2009 libisoburn-0.3.4. xorriso makes use of the ACL and xattr capabilities provided by libisofs for xorriso backup features. - 11 Mar 2009 libisofs-0.6.16 of libisofs fixes two bugs which on Solaris prevented to navigate the ISO images by ".." and to recognize the Rock Ridge extensions of ISO images. The ban to build libisofs on operating systems other than Linux and FreeBSD has been lifted. - 13 Mar 2009 libburn-0.6.4 got a dummy adapter for SCSI/MMC command transport. It will show no drives and thus libburn will only be able to perform operations on "stdio:" pseudo drives. Nevertheless this allowed to lift the ban to build libburn on operating systems other than Linux and FreeBSD. - 16 Mar 2009 libisoburn-0.3.6: xorriso uses RRIP version 1.10 as default in order to be mountable where mkisofs images are mountable. - 17 Apr 2009 libisofs-0.6.18 introduces content filtering of data files. Built-in filters allow compression to formats gzip and zisofs. External filter processes allow arbitrary data conversions like encryption. - 19 Apr 2009 libisoburn-0.3.8 makes use of the new libisofs capability to perform content filtering of data files. - 08 May 2009 libburn-0.6.6 fixes a bug with aborting on broken output pipe and a bug with device scan on FreeBSD. - 31 May 2009 libisofs-0.6.20 can record hard link relations in ISO images and offers support with restoring them to disk. Current Linux kernels will mount images with such hard links but will attribute a unique inode number to each file. - 28 Jun 2009 libisoburn-0.4.0: xorriso can record and restore hard link relations of files. Performance of data reading has been improved. Option -find now supports logical operators with its tests. - 14 Jul 2009 libburn-0.6.8 fixes bugs and shortcommings with old MMC-1 drives and with large SCSI bus numbers as handed out by Linux for USB drives. - 20 Jul 2009 libisoburn-0.4.0.pl01 fixes a regression in xorriso which caused data loss in older sessions if xorriso was used underneath growisofs. Affected are releases since libisoburn-0.3.2 in january 2009. - 25 Aug 2009 libisofs-0.6.22 can record MD5 checksums for the whole session and for each single data file. Checksum tags allow to verify superblock and directory tree before importing them. - 27 Aug 2009 libburn-0.7.0 allows to calm down a drive and to inquire its supported profiles. It works around some pitfalls with U3 enhanced memory sticks which emulate a CD-ROM. - 27 Aug 2009 libisoburn-0.4.0.pl00 can record MD5 checksums by which one may verify the session or single data files in the image. When comparing image files with files in the local filesystem, the MD5 sums avoid the need for reading file content from the image. - 22 Sep 2009 libisoburn-0.4.0.pl01 fixes a bug in xorriso option -cut_out. - 08 Oct 2009 libisofs-0.6.24 fixes a bug which could cause the loss of blanks in file names when a new session got added to an ISO image. With names shorter than 251 characters this happened only to trailing blanks. - 08 Oct 2009 libisoburn-0.4.0.pl02 fixes bugs with xorriso option -for_backup, with xorrisofs -help, and with xorrecord -help. - 12 Oct 2009 libburn-0.7.2 fixes a bug with CD TAO multi-track dummy sessions. It can retrieve media product info and can process track input which was prepared for CD-ROM XA Mode 2 Form 1. cdrskin now performs option -minfo. - 28 Oct 2009 libisoburn-0.4.4 fixes a bug with cdrecord emulation and introduces new information options about media type and ISO image id strings. On Linux it helps with mounting two sessions of the same media simultaneously. - 12 Nov 2009 libburn-0.7.2.pl01 works around problems with Pioneer DVR-216D. DVD-R runs made the drive stuck. Ejecting the tray did not work properly. - 06 Dec 2009 libburn-0.7.4 works around problems with newer DVD burners, provides throughput enhancements with hampered busses on Linux, and new API calls to log SCSI commands and to control the libburn fifo. - 09 Dec 2009 libisoburn-0.4.6 allows performance tuning of output to DVD drives or disk files. - 26 Dec 2009 libburn-0.7.4.pl01 fixes the release tarball which was lacking the files of the generic system adapter for X/Open. - 29 Dec 2009 Our project received a donation for purchasing a fine small computer which shall serve as OS farm for development and support. - 20 Jan 2010 Version 0.6.26 of libisofs fixes minor bugs and shall enhance portability. - 22 Jan 2010 libburn-0.7.6 has an improved system adapter for FreeBSD, fixes bugs about the generic X/Open system adapter, and allows to use libcdio >= 0.83 as SCSI transport facility. - 10 Feb 2010 libisofs-0.6.28 fixes a regression about bootable images which was introduced by version 0.6.22 in August 2009. - 23 Feb 2010 libisoburn-0.5.0 marks the transition of the xorriso standalone version to an official GNU project. The name changed to "GNU xorriso" and its license is now GPLv3+. The licenses of libburnia libraries and applications are not affected by this change. - 10 Mar 2010 libburn-0.7.8 fixes bugs and improves the built-in abort handler on FreeBSD. - 30 Mar 2010 Release 0.5.2 of libisoburn provides xorriso documentation in GNU Texinfo format with embedded extra data to derive a full man page. - 09 Apr 2010 libburn-0.8.0 now works with ahci driver on FreeBSD 8-STABLE. - 03 May 2010 Version 0.6.32 of libisofs is able to create ISO images with multiple boot images. All boot catalog parameters described in El-Torito specs can be set and inquired. This allows to use GRUB boot images for EFI. - 04 May 2010 Release 0.5.6.pl00 of libisoburn makes use of the new libisofs capabilities about boot images. - 11 Jun 2010 libburn-0.8.2 now works on Solaris. - 14 Jun 2010 By release 0.5.8.pl00 of libisoburn, xorriso becomes a public C language API of libisoburn. The emulations of mkisofs and cdrecord have been enhanced. - Tue Jun 29 2010 Version 0.6.34 of libisofs provides new features about hiding file names from directory trees. - Wed Jun 30 2010 libburn-0.8.4 removes some restrictions on operating systems other than Linux and FreeBSD. - Fri Jul 02 2010 Release 0.6.0.pl00 of libisoburn adds more options to the mkisofs emulation of xorriso. It also fixes minor bugs and shortcommings. - Wed Sep 15 2010 Version 0.6.36 of libisofs can produce ISO images which bear a partiton 1 with non-zero start address. They can be mounted from USB stick via the main device file (e.g. /dev/sdb) as well as via the partition device file (e.g. /dev/sdb1). - Fri Sep 17 2010 libburn-0.8.6 lifts the test reservation on DVD-R DL media. - Sat Sep 18 2010 Release 0.6.2.pl00 of libisoburn introduces a partition with non-zero offset for ISO 9660 images on USB sticks, improves mkisofs emulation, and fixes a regression which existed since version 0.4.2. - Wed Oct 20 2010 libburn-0.8.8 can report the used amount of BD spare blocks. - Sat Oct 23 2010 Version 0.6.38 of libisofs can use libjte to produce jigdo files along with the ISO image. Further filesystem images may be appended as MBR partitions 1 to 4. The capability was added to produce boot blocks for computers with MIPS CPU. - Tue Oct 26 2010 Release 0.6.4.pl00 of libisoburn and xorriso makes use of the new libisofs capabilities. - Wed Dec 08 2010 libburn-0.9.0 fixes a regression with SCSI command logging. - Fri Dec 10 2010 Version 0.6.40 of libisofs makes the prediction of the emerging image size less expensive and is able to make images bootable for SUN SPARC systems. - Sun Dec 12 2010 Release 0.6.6.pl00 of libisoburn and xorriso can read ISO images which were copied to a different start address than they were prepared for. - Mon Jan 17 2011 we go for release 1.0.0. This does not indicate a technological overhaul but shall emphasize the maturity of the software. libisofs-1.0.0 fixes a bug about the length of ECMA-119 directory names and is ready to allow untranslated ECMA-119 names (violating the specs). libburn-1.0.0.pl00 allows umask to create stdio-drive files with rw-permissions for all. cdrskin now refuses to burn if the foreseeable size exceeds media capacity libisoburn-1.0.0.pl00 allows to create an ISO 9660:1999 directory tree, improved the emulation fidelity of command -as mkisofs, lowered the default abort threshold for xorriso batch mode, and increased that threshold for xorriso dialog mode. - Wed Feb 23 2011 release 1.0.2: libisofs fixes several bugs and introduces the capability to copy files inside the ISO filesystem. libburn removed a compilation obstacle on Solaris 9 and improved recognition of stdio pseudo-drives. libisoburn and xorriso fix bugs and make use of the new libisofs capability. xorriso improves its mkisofs emulation. - Thu Mar 10 2011 release 1.0.4: Several bugs were fixed in the libraries and in the mkisofs emulation of xorriso. This emulation xorrisofs has now an own man page and info document. - Sat Apr 09 2011 release 1.0.6: libburn refined its representation of emulated drives. The size alignment of DVD DAO is now 2 kB rather than 32 kB. libisofs produces Joliet names of up to 103 characters. xorriso fixes two bugs and makes use of the library improvements. - Thu Apr 14 2011 release libisoburn-1.0.8: A bug in the mkisofs emulation of xorriso could cause options to be ignored. The problem was freshly introduced with libisoburn-1.0.6. - Fri May 13 2011 release libisofs-1.0.8: Fixes a few rarely occurring bugs that have been found during the last month. - Sat Jun 18 2011 release 1.1.0: The consumption of stack memory was reduced. Statical program analysis found some rarely occuring memory leaks. Several small bugs were fixed. The suffix .plXY was dropped from tarball names of libburn and libisoburn. - Mon Jun 20 2011 patch release libburn-1.1.0.pl01: libburn-1.1.0 compiled only on Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris, but not on other X/Open compliant systems. - Fri Jul 08 2011 release libisofs-1.1.2 and libisoburn-1.1.2: A severe regression was fixed in libisoburn and xorriso, which was introduced with version 1.0.6. It caused ISO 9660 images to be unreadable if they were written to a write-only random-access file. E.g. by: xorrisofs ... >image.iso - Mon Aug 08 2011 release 1.1.4: Several bugs were fixed in libburn. The most severe of them prevented xorriso on some drives from burning mountable ISO 9660 images to CD media. New means to list drives by their udev symbolic links help to deal with the non-persistent drive addresses on modern GNU/Linux. - Tue Sep 27 2011 release 1.1.6: libisoburn now comes with a test suite. See releng/README. Bugs were fixed in several rarely used features. Processing of ACL and extattr was enabled on FreeBSD. Workarounds try to cope with vanishing udev links on GNU/Linux. - Mon Nov 21 2011 release libburn-1.1.8 and libisoburn-1.1.8: libburn avoids to close and open drive device files while operating on them. xorriso emulation mode xorrecord now has an own manual. libburn and xorriso were prepared to operate on qemu virtio-blk-pci devices. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or later as published by the Free Software Foundation. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Clarification in my name and in the name of Mario Danic, upcoming copyright holders on toplevel of libburnia. To be fully in effect after the remaining other copyrighted code has been replaced by ours and by copyright-free contributions of our friends: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ We, the copyright holders, agree on the interpretation that dynamical linking of our libraries constitutes "use of" and not "derivation from" our work in the sense of GPL, provided those libraries are compiled from our unaltered code or from altered code published under GPL. So we will not raise legal protest if you link our libraries dynamically with applications which are not under GPL, or if you distribute our libraries and application tools in binary form, as long as you fulfill the usual condition of GPL to offer a copy of their source code -altered or unaltered- under GPL. We ask you politely to use our work in open source spirit and with the due reference to the entire open source community. If there should really arise the case where above clarification does not suffice to fulfill a clear and neat request in open source spirit that would otherwise be declined for mere formal reasons, only in that case we will duely consider to issue a special license covering only that special case. It is the open source idea of responsible freedom which will be decisive and you will have to prove that you exhausted all own means to qualify for GPL. For now we are firmly committed to maintain one single license: GPL. signed: Mario Danic, Thomas Schmitt Agreement joined later by: Vreixo Formoso