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1159 lines
43 KiB
1159 lines
43 KiB
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- |
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@c %**start of header |
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@setfilename xorrecord.info |
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@settitle GNU xorrecord 1.4.1 |
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@c %**end of header |
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@c |
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@c man-ignore-lines begin |
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@dircategory Archiving |
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@direntry |
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* Xorrecord: (xorrecord). Emulates CD/DVD/BD program cdrecord |
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@end direntry |
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@c man-ignore-lines end |
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@c |
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@c Notes about embedded man page: |
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@c This texinfo code contains the necessary info to produce a man page |
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@c which resembles much the version of xorriso.1 from which this code |
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@c was originally derived in march 2010. |
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@c One can produce the man page by applying the following rules: |
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@c The first line gets discarded. |
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@c Line start "@c man " will become "", the remainder is put out unaltered. |
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@c Lines "@*" will be converted to ".br" |
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@c "@c man-ignore-lines N" will discard N following lines. |
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@c "@c man-ignore-lines begin" discards all following lines |
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@c up to "@c man-ignore-lines end". |
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@c Line blocks of "@menu" "@end menu" will be discarded. |
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@c "@item word words" becomes "\fBword\fR words". |
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@c @b{...}, @command{...}, @dfn{...}, @emph{...}, @strong{...} |
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@c get mapped to \fB...\fR . |
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@c @abbr{...}, @code{...}, @file{...}, @i{...}, @option{...}, @r{...}, |
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@c @ref{...}, @samp{...},@var{...}, get mapped to ... . |
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@c @ref{...}, @xref{...} get mapped to empty text. |
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@c @email{...} gets mapped to <...> . |
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@c Mapped {...} content is subject to the rules except {...} mapping. |
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@c @minus{} will become "-". |
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@c @@ , @{, @} will get stripped of their first @. |
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@c Other lines which begin by "@" will be discarded. |
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@c In lines not stemming from "@c man", "\" becomes "\\" |
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@c "-" which are not preceded by an uneven number of "\" will get |
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@c prepended one "\". |
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@c |
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@c |
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@c man .\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- |
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@c man .\" |
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@c man .\" IMPORTANT NOTE: |
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@c man .\" |
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@c man .\" The original of this file is kept in xorriso/xorrecord.texi |
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@c man .\" This here was generated by program xorriso/make_xorriso_1 |
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@c man .\" |
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@c man .\" |
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@c man .\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps |
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@c man .\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection |
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@c man .\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1) |
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@c man .TH XORRECORD 1 "Version 1.4.1, Sep 20, 2015" |
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@c man .\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. |
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@c man .\" |
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@c man .\" Some roff macros, for reference: |
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@c man .\" .nh disable hyphenation |
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@c man .\" .hy enable hyphenation |
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@c man .\" .ad l left justify |
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@c man .\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins |
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@c man .\" .nf disable filling |
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@c man .\" .fi enable filling |
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@c man .\" .br insert line break |
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@c man .\" .sp <n> insert n+1 empty lines |
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@c man .\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7) |
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@c man .nh |
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@c man-ignore-lines begin |
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@copying |
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xorrecord - Emulation of CD/DVD/BD program cdrecord by program xorriso |
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|
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Copyright @copyright{} 2011 - 2015 Thomas Schmitt |
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@quotation |
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Permission is granted to distrubute this text freely. |
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@end quotation |
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@end copying |
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@c man-ignore-lines end |
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@titlepage |
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@title Manual of GNU xorriso personality xorrecord 1.4.1 |
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@author Thomas Schmitt |
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@page |
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@vskip 0pt plus 1filll |
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@insertcopying |
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@end titlepage |
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@contents |
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@ifnottex |
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@node Top |
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@top xorrecord 1.4.1 |
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@c man-ignore-lines 1 |
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|
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@c man .SH NAME |
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xorrecord - Emulation of CD/DVD/BD program cdrecord by program xorriso |
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@end ifnottex |
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@menu |
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* Overview:: Overview |
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* Standards:: MMC, Session, Track, Media types |
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* Drive:: Drive preparation and addressing |
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* Xorriso:: Relation to program xorriso |
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* Options:: Options |
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* Examples:: Examples |
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* Files:: Files |
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* Seealso:: See also |
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* Bugreport:: Reporting bugs |
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* Legal:: Author, Copyright, Credits |
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* CommandIdx:: Alphabetic Command List |
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* ConceptIdx:: Alphabetic List of Concepts and Objects |
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@end menu |
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@node Overview, Standards, Top, Top |
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@chapter Overview |
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@c man .SH SYNOPSIS |
|
@c man .B xorrecord |
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@c man [ options ] dev=device [track_source] |
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@c man .br |
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@c man .SH DESCRIPTION |
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@c man .PP |
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@command{xorrecord} |
|
writes preformatted data to CD, DVD, and BD media. |
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@* |
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@sp 1 |
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@c man .PP |
|
It understands some options of program cdrecord from cdrtools by |
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Joerg Schilling. |
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Its implementation is part of program xorriso which shares no source |
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code with cdrtools, but rather makes use of libburn for communicating |
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with the drive. |
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@* |
|
@sp 1 |
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Another, more complete cdrecord emulator is program @strong{cdrskin} |
|
which uses the same burn functions as @strong{xorrecord}, but is able |
|
to burn audio CDs and to handle CD-TEXT. |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@node Standards, Drive, Overview, Top |
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@chapter MMC, Session, Track, Media types |
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@c man \fBMMC, Session, Track, Media types:\fR |
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@c man .br |
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@cindex MMC, _definiton |
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@strong{MMC} |
|
is a standard out of the SCSI family which defines the interaction between |
|
computers and optical drives. Since more than a decade all CD, DVD, or BD |
|
recorders obey this standard regardless by what bus cabling they are |
|
attached to the computer. libburn relies on this standard compliance and |
|
on the capability of the operating system to perform SCSI transactions |
|
over the particular bus cabling. |
|
@* |
|
@cindex Session, _definiton |
|
A @strong{Session} is a data region on an optical disc which usually |
|
gets written in a single sweep. It contains at least one |
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@cindex Track, _definiton |
|
@strong{Track} which is a contiguous string of readable blocks. |
|
@command{xorrecord} produces a single session with a single data track |
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which consists of blocks with 2048 bytes each. It chooses the write mode |
|
automatically according to media type, medium state, and option -multi. |
|
@* |
|
On CD media there are other track types, like audio, and particular write |
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modes like TAO and SAO. CD and DVD- media can put more than one track into |
|
a session. Some of these features can be addressed by program @strong{cdrskin}. |
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@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@cindex Media types, _definiton |
|
MMC describes several recordable @strong{media types} which roughly form two |
|
families. |
|
@* |
|
@cindex Sequentially recordable media, _definiton |
|
@strong{Sequentially recordable media} |
|
are CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-R DL, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+R DL, BD-R. |
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Except DVD-R DL they can store more than one session if there is still |
|
unwritten space and if the previous session was written with option |
|
@strong{-multi}. CD-RW and DVD-RW can be blanked in order to be re-usable |
|
from scratch. |
|
@* |
|
@cindex Overwritable media, _definiton |
|
@strong{Overwritable media} are DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, formatted DVD-RW, BD-RE. |
|
They offer a single session with a single track for random access writing. |
|
There is no need to blank overwritable media before re-use. |
|
@* |
|
DVD-RW media are sold in sequentially recordable state but can be |
|
formatted once to become overwritable. See options |
|
@strong{blank=format_overwrite} and @strong{blank=deformat}. |
|
@* |
|
If ISO 9660 filesystems are to be stored on overwritable media, then it |
|
is possible to emulate multiple sessions, by using option |
|
@strong{--grow_overwriteable_iso}. In this case, the need for |
|
blanking before re-use is emulated too. |
|
@c man .SS |
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@sp 1 |
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@c man .B Drive preparation and addressing: |
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@node Drive, Xorriso, Standards, Top |
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@chapter Drive preparation and addressing |
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@c man .PP |
|
The drives, CD, DVD, or BD burners, are accessed via file addresses which |
|
are specific to libburn and the operating system. Those addresses get listed |
|
by a run of @command{xorrecord --devices} or @command{xorriso -device_links}. |
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@* |
|
On GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, and NetBSD, the user needs rw-permission for the |
|
device file. |
|
On Solaris, the user needs r-permission and privilege "sys_devices", |
|
which is usually gained by running @command{xorrecord} via command pfexec. |
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@* |
|
These permissions or privileges are needed already for listing a drive. |
|
So it might be necessary to get the overview as superuser or via pfexec. |
|
@* |
|
@command{xorrecord} does not perform cdrecord option -scanbus and does |
|
not accept the addresses of form Bus,Target,Lun which are told by -scanbus. |
|
If support for these addresses is necessary, consider to use program cdrskin. |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
It is possible to let @command{xorrecord} work on emulated drives. |
|
Their addresses begin by prefix "stdio:" followed by a file address. |
|
The emulated media behavior depends on the file type. |
|
See man xorriso for details. |
|
@* |
|
If standard output is chosen as emulated drive, then all program result |
|
texts, which usually appear on standard output, will get redirected to |
|
standard error. |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@node Xorriso, Options, Drive, Top |
|
@chapter Relation to program xorriso |
|
@c man \fBRelation to program xorriso:\fR |
|
@c man .br |
|
@cindex xorriso, mkisofs emulation |
|
@command{xorrecord} is actually a command mode of program @strong{xorriso}, |
|
which gets entered either by xorriso command "-as cdrecord" or by |
|
starting the program by one of the names "xorrecord", "cdrecord", |
|
"wodim", or "cdrskin". |
|
@* |
|
This command mode can be left by argument "@minus{}@minus{}" which leads |
|
to generic xorriso command mode. See @strong{man xorriso} for its description. |
|
Other than in xorriso command mode, the sequence of the cdrecord emulation |
|
options does not matter. |
|
All pending actions get performed in a fixed sequence before the program |
|
run ends or before cdrecord emulation ends. |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@node Options, Examples, Xorriso, Top |
|
@chapter Options |
|
@cindex xorriso, options |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man .SH OPTIONS |
|
@c man .br |
|
@menu |
|
* DriveAddr:: Drive addressing |
|
* Inquire:: Inquiring drive and media |
|
* SetBurn:: Settings for the burn run |
|
* Verbous:: Program version and verbosity |
|
* NonCdrecord:: Options not compatible to cdrecord |
|
@end menu |
|
@c man .PP |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man .B Addressing the drive: |
|
@node DriveAddr, Inquire, Options, Options |
|
@section Addressing the drive |
|
@table @asis |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}devices |
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}devices get list of drives |
|
@cindex Drive, get list of, @minus{}@minus{}devices |
|
Print the list of accessible CD, DVD, or BD drives to standard output. |
|
Drives might be inaccessible if the user lacks of permissions to use them |
|
or if the drive is in use by another program. |
|
@* |
|
Each accessible drive is shown by a line like: |
|
@* |
|
0 -dev '/dev/sr0' rwrw-- : 'TSSTcorp' 'CDDVDW SH-S203B' |
|
@* |
|
The libburn address of this drive is '/dev/sr0'. 'TSSTcorp' is the |
|
name of the vendor (in this case: Toshiba Samsung Storage Technologies |
|
Corporation), 'CDDVDW SH-S203B' is the model name (in this case: a DVD burner). |
|
@* |
|
Afterwards end emulation without performing any further drive operation. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item dev=drive_address |
|
@kindex dev= address the drive to be used |
|
@cindex Drive, address, dev= |
|
Set the libburn address of the drive to be used. |
|
@* |
|
E.g. on GNU/Linux: dev=/dev/sr0 |
|
@* |
|
E.g. on FreeBSD: dev=/dev/cd0 |
|
@* |
|
E.g. on NetBSD: dev=/dev/rcd0d |
|
@* |
|
E.g. on Solaris: dev=/dev/rdsk/c2t2d0s2 |
|
@* |
|
See also above "Drive preparation and addressing". |
|
@* |
|
The medium in the drive should not be mounted or be otherwise in use. |
|
@* |
|
This option will only get into effect if a track source, a blank= option, |
|
or a drive inquiry option is given. Else it will lead to a SORRY event |
|
and normally cause a non-zero exit value. |
|
@end table |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man .B Inquiring drive and media: |
|
@node Inquire, SetBurn, DriveAddr, Options |
|
@section Inquiring drive and media |
|
@table @asis |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -inq |
|
@kindex -inq inquire drive identifiers |
|
@cindex Drive, inquire identifiers, -inq |
|
Print to standard output: vendor, model name, and firmware revision |
|
of the drive. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -checkdrive |
|
@kindex -checkdrive inquire drive CD capabilities |
|
@cindex Drive, inquire CD capabilities, -checkdrive |
|
Print unconditionally that the drive supports burnfree, SAO, and TAO. |
|
Also print the output of option -inq. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -atip |
|
@kindex -atip inquire medium state |
|
@cindex medium state, inquire, -atip |
|
Print the output of -checkdrive, the most capable profile of the medium |
|
in the drive, the list of profiles which are supported by the drive, |
|
whether it is erasable (i.e. can be blanked), the media manufacturer, and |
|
the medium product name. |
|
@* |
|
Profiles are usage models, which are often tied to a particular media type |
|
(e.g. CD-RW), but may also apply to a family of media. E.g. profile CD-ROM |
|
applies to all CD media which contain data. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -toc |
|
@kindex -toc inquire medium content |
|
@cindex medium content, inquire, -toc |
|
Print a table of content of the medium in the drive. The output is not |
|
compatible to |
|
cdrecord option -toc, but rather the one of @command{xorriso} command -toc. |
|
It lists the address, vendor, model name, and firmware revision of the drive. |
|
@* |
|
About the medium it tells product name and manufacturer, whether there |
|
is already content written, and if so, whether the medium is closed or |
|
appendable. Appendable media can take another session. |
|
The amount of readable and writable data is told. |
|
If there are sessions, then their start block address and size is reported. |
|
If a session contains an ISO 9660 filesystem, then its Volume Id is reported. |
|
If the medium is writable, then the next writable block address is reported. |
|
@* |
|
If not option @strong{--grow_overwriteable_iso} is given or no ISO 9660 |
|
file system is present on the medium, then overwritable media are reported |
|
as being blank. This is due to the fact that they can be written from |
|
scratch without further preparation, and that MMC does not distinguish |
|
between data written by the most previous burn run and older data |
|
which have not been overwritten by that burn run. |
|
Consequently, these media are reported with 0 readable blocks, although |
|
all their writable blocks normally are readable, too. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -msinfo |
|
@kindex -msinfo retrieve multi-session info |
|
@cindex multi-session info, retrieve, -msinfo |
|
Print the argument text for option -C of programs mkisofs, genisoimage, |
|
or xorrisofs. It consists of two numbers separated by a comma. |
|
@* |
|
The first number tells the first block of the first track of the last recorded |
|
session. This is also the address used by default when operating systems |
|
mount a medium with e.g. ISO 9660 filesystem. |
|
@* |
|
The second number tells the next writable address, where @command{xorrecord} |
|
will begin to write the next session. |
|
@* |
|
This option is only valid for written, appendable media. In all other |
|
cases it will yield no output text but will abort the program |
|
with non-zero exit value. |
|
@end table |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man .B Settings for the burn run: |
|
@node SetBurn, Verbous, Inquire, Options |
|
@section Settings for the burn run |
|
@table @asis |
|
@c man .PP |
|
A burn run requires exactly one track source address argument, which |
|
tells from where to read the data wich shall be put into the upcomming |
|
session. The medium state must be either blank or appendable. |
|
@* |
|
Track source may be "-" for standard input or the address of a readable |
|
file of any type except directories. Nearly all media types accept a track |
|
source with unpredictable byte count, like standard input or named pipes. |
|
Nevertheless, DVD-R DL and DVD-RW blanked by mode deformat_quickest |
|
demand exact in-advance reservation of the track size, so that they either |
|
need to be read from a source of |
|
predictable length, or need to be accompanied by option @strong{tsize=} or |
|
by option @strong{-isosize}. |
|
@* |
|
Several options expect a size value as argument. A number with a trailing |
|
letter "b" or without a trailing letter is a plain byte count. Other trailing |
|
letters cause multiplication of the given number by a scaling factor: |
|
@* |
|
"k" or "K" = 1024 , "m" or "M" = 1024k , "g" or "G" = 1024m , "s" or "S" = 2048 |
|
@* |
|
E.g. tsize=234567s means a size of 234567 * 2048 = 480393216 bytes. |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item blank=mode |
|
@kindex blank= make media re-usabable or format media |
|
@cindex Media, blank, blank= |
|
@cindex Media, make re-usable, blank= |
|
@cindex Media, format, blank= |
|
Blank a CD-RW or DVD-RW to make it re-usable from scratch. |
|
Format a DVD-RW, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM, BD-R, or BD-RE if not yet formatted. |
|
@* |
|
This operation normally makes any recorded data on the medium unreadable. |
|
It is combinable with burning in the same run of @command{xorrecord}, |
|
or it may be performed without a track source, leaving the medium empty. |
|
@* |
|
The mode given with blank= selects the particular behavior: |
|
@c man .RS |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
as_needed |
|
@* |
|
Try to make the media ready for writing from scratch. If it needs formatting, |
|
then format it. If it is not blank, then try to apply blank=fast. |
|
It is a reason to abort if the medium cannot assume thoroughly writeable |
|
state, e.g. if it is a non-blank write-once. |
|
@* |
|
This leaves unformatted DVD-RW in unformatted blank state. To format DVD-RW use |
|
blank=format_overwrite. Blank unformatted BD-R stay unformatted. |
|
@* |
|
(Note: blank=as_needed is not an original cdrecord option.) |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
all |
|
@* |
|
Blank an entire CD-RW or an unformatted DVD-RW. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@* |
|
fast |
|
@* |
|
Minimally blank an entire CD-RW or blank an unformatted DVD-RW. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@* |
|
deformat |
|
@* |
|
Like blank=all but with the additional ability to blank overwriteable DVD-RW. |
|
This will destroy their formatting and make them sequentially recordable. |
|
@* |
|
(Note: blank=deformat is not an original cdrecord options) |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@* |
|
deformat_quickest |
|
@* |
|
Like blank=deformat but blanking DVD-RW only minimally. |
|
This is faster than full blanking but yields media incapable of |
|
writing tracks of unpredicatable size. |
|
Multi-session will not be possible either. |
|
@* |
|
(Note: blank=deformat_quickest is not an original cdrecord option.) |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@* |
|
format_overwrite |
|
@* |
|
Format a DVD-RW to "Restricted Overwrite". The user should bring some patience. |
|
@* |
|
Format unformatted DVD+RW, BD-RE or blank BD-R to their default size. |
|
It is not mandatory to do this with DVD+RW and BD-RE media, because they |
|
will get formatted automatically on the first write attempt. |
|
@* |
|
BD-R media may be written in unformatted state. This keeps disabled the |
|
replacement of bad blocks and enables full nominal write speed. Once BD-R |
|
media are written, they cannot be formatted any more. |
|
@* |
|
For re-formatting already formatted media or for formatting with |
|
non-default size, use program @strong{xorriso} with command @strong{-format}. |
|
@* |
|
(Note: blank=format_overwrite is not an original cdrecord options) |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@* |
|
help |
|
@* |
|
Print a short overview of blank modes to standard error output. |
|
@* |
|
Afterwards end emulation without performing any drive operation. |
|
@c man .RE |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -multi |
|
@kindex -multi keep media appendable after burn run |
|
@cindex Media, keep appendable, -multi |
|
This option keeps CD, unformatted DVD-R[W], DVD+R, or BD-R appendable |
|
after the current session has been written. |
|
Without it the disc gets closed and may not be written any more - unless it |
|
is a -RW and gets blanked, which causes loss of its content. |
|
@* |
|
This option cannot be applied to DVD-R DL or to DVD-RW which were blanked |
|
by mode "deformat_quickest". Option --multi_if_possible |
|
may automatically recognize and handle this situation. |
|
@* |
|
In order to have all filesystem content accessible, the eventual ISO-9660 |
|
filesystem of a follow-up |
|
session needs to be prepared in a special way by the filesystem formatter |
|
program. mkisofs, genisoimage, and xorrisofs expect particular info about |
|
the situation which can be retrieved by @command{xorrecord} option -msinfo. |
|
@* |
|
With overwriteable DVD or BD media, -multi cannot mark the end of the session. |
|
So when adding a new session, this end has to be determined from the payload. |
|
Currently only ISO-9660 filesystems can be used that way. See option |
|
@strong{--grow_overwriteable_iso}. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -dummy |
|
@kindex -dummy control write simulation |
|
@cindex Write simulation , control, -dummy |
|
Try to perform the drive operations without actually affecting the inserted |
|
media. There is no warranty that this will work with a particular combination |
|
of drive and media. Blanking is prevented reliably, though. |
|
To avoid inadverted real burning, -dummy refuses burn runs on anything but |
|
CD-R[W], DVD-R[W], or emulated stdio-drives. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -waiti |
|
@kindex -waiti access drive only after stdin delivers data |
|
@cindex Accessing drive, wait for stdin, -waiti |
|
Wait until input data is available at stdin or EOF occurs at stdin. |
|
Only then begin to access any drives. |
|
@* |
|
One should use this if xorrisofs is working at the end of a pipe where the |
|
feeder process reads from the drive before it starts writing its output into |
|
xorrisofs. Example: |
|
@* |
|
xorrisofs ... -C 0,12800 -M /dev/sr0 ... | \ |
|
@* |
|
xorrecord dev=/dev/sr0 ... -waiti - |
|
@* |
|
This option works even if standard input is not the track source. If no process |
|
is piping in, then the Enter key of your terminal will act as trigger for |
|
@command{xorrecord}. Note that this input line will not be consumed by |
|
cdrskin if standard input is not the track source. It will end up as shell |
|
command, usually. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item tsize=size |
|
@kindex tsize= set a fixed track size |
|
@cindex Track size, set fixed, tsize= |
|
Announce the exact size of the track source. This is necessary with |
|
DVD-R DL media and with quickest blanked DVD-RW, if the size cannot be |
|
determined in advance from the track source. E.g. if it is standard input |
|
or a named pipe. |
|
@* |
|
If the track source does not deliver the predicted amount of bytes, the |
|
remainder of the track is padded with zeros. This is not considered an error. |
|
If on the other hand the track source delivers more than the announced bytes |
|
then the track on media gets truncated to the predicted size and xorrecord |
|
exits with non-zero value. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -isosize |
|
@kindex -isosize obtain track size from ISO 9660 superblock |
|
@cindex Track size, obtain from ISO 9660, -isosize |
|
Try to obtain the track size from the content of the track source. |
|
This works only if the track source bears an ISO 9660 filesystem. |
|
Any other track source content will cause the burn run to abort. |
|
@* |
|
If the track source is not a regular file or block device, then this option |
|
will work only if the program's fifo size is at least 64k. See option fs=. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item padsize=size |
|
@kindex padsize= add bytes to end of track |
|
@cindex Padding, at end of track, padsize= |
|
Add the given amount of trailing zeros to the upcomming track. |
|
This feature can be disabled by size 0. Default is 300 kB in order to |
|
work around a problem with GNU/Linux which often fails to read the last few |
|
blocks of a CD track which was written in write mode TAO. TAO is used |
|
by @command{xorrecord} if the track size cannot be predicted or if the CD |
|
medium is not blank but appendable. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -nopad |
|
@kindex -nopad disable adding of bytes to end of track |
|
@cindex Padding, disable, -nopad |
|
The same as padsize=0. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -pad |
|
@kindex -pad add 15 blocks to end of track |
|
@cindex Padding, insufficient old, -pad |
|
The same as padsize=15s. This was once sufficient with older GNU/Linux |
|
kernels. Meanwhile one should at least use padsize=128k, if not padsize=300k. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -data |
|
@kindex -data explicitely announce a data track |
|
@cindex Data track, announce, -data |
|
Explicitly announce that the track source shall be recorded as data track, |
|
and not as audio track. This option has no effect with @command{xorrecord}, |
|
because there is no support for other track formats anyway. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -tao |
|
@kindex -tao explicitely set write type TAO |
|
@cindex Write type, TAO, -tao |
|
Explicitly demand that write type TAO shall be used for CD, or Incremental |
|
for DVD-R. Normally the program will choose the write type according to the |
|
given medium state, option -multi, and track source. Demanding it explicitely |
|
prevents the start of a write run, if it is not appropriate to the situation. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -sao |
|
@kindex -sao explicitely set write type SAO/DAO |
|
@cindex Write type, SAO/DAO, -sao |
|
Explicitly demand that write type SAO shall be used for CD, or DAO for DVD-R. |
|
This might prevent the write run, if it is not appropriate to the situation. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -dao |
|
@kindex -dao explicitely set write type SAO/DAO |
|
@cindex Write type, SAO/DAO, -dao |
|
Alias of -sao. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item fs=size |
|
@kindex fs= set program fifo size |
|
@cindex Fifo, set size, fs= |
|
Set the size of the program fifo buffer to the given value |
|
rather than the default of 4m. |
|
@* |
|
The fifo buffers a temporary surplus of track source data in order to |
|
provide the drive with a steady stream during times of temporary lack of track |
|
source supply. |
|
@* |
|
Other than cdrecord, xorrecord enables drive buffer underrun protection by |
|
default and does not wait with writing until the fifo is full for a first |
|
time. |
|
On very old CD drives and slow computers, this might cause aborted burn runs. |
|
In this case, consider to use program @strong{cdrskin} for CD burning. |
|
DVD and BD drives tolerate buffer underrun without problems. |
|
@* |
|
The larger the fifo, the longer periods of poor source supply can be |
|
compensated. But a large fifo can deprive the operating system of read cache |
|
for better filesystem performance. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item speed=value |
|
@kindex speed= set write speed |
|
@cindex Speed, set for writing, speed= |
|
Set the write speed. Default is 0 = maximum speed. |
|
Speed can be given in media type dependent x-speed 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 appending "c" for CD, "d" for DVD, "b" for BD. "x" is optional. |
|
@* |
|
Example speeds: |
|
@* |
|
706k = 706kB/s = 4c = 4xCD |
|
@* |
|
5540k = 5540kB/s = 4d = 4xDVD |
|
@* |
|
If there is no hint about the speed unit attached, then the |
|
medium in the drive will decide. |
|
Default unit is CD, 1x = 176,400 raw bytes/second. |
|
With DVD, 1x = 1,385,000 bytes/second. |
|
With BD, 1x = 4,495,625 bytes/second. |
|
@* |
|
MMC drives usually activate their own idea of speed and take |
|
the speed value given by the burn program only as a hint |
|
for their own decision. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item minbuf=percentage |
|
@kindex minbuf= keep drive buffer hungry |
|
@cindex Write, drive buffer, minbuf= |
|
Equivalent to: |
|
@* |
|
modesty_on_drive=<percentage> |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -immed |
|
@kindex -immed keep drive buffer hungry |
|
@cindex Write, drive buffer, -immed |
|
Equivalent to: |
|
@* |
|
modesty_on_drive=75 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -eject |
|
@kindex -eject finally eject drive tray |
|
@cindex Eject, the tray, -eject |
|
@cindex Tray, eject, -eject |
|
Eject the drive tray after alll other work is done. |
|
@end table |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man .B Program version and verbosity: |
|
@node Verbous, NonCdrecord, SetBurn, Options |
|
@section Program version and verbosity |
|
@table @asis |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -version |
|
@kindex -version report emulation and xorriso version |
|
@cindex Version, report, -version |
|
Print to standard output a line beginning by |
|
@* |
|
"Cdrecord 2.01-Emulation Copyright" |
|
@* |
|
and further lines which report the version of xorriso and its |
|
supporting libraries. They also state the license under which the program |
|
is provided, and disclaim any warranty, to the extent permitted by law. |
|
@* |
|
Afterwards end emulation without performing any drive operation. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -v |
|
@kindex -v increase program verbosity |
|
@cindex Verbosity, increase, -v |
|
Increase program verbosity by one level. There are four verbosity levels |
|
from nearly silent to debugging verbosity. The both highest levels can |
|
be enabled by repeated -v or by -vv or by -vvv. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -V |
|
@kindex -V log SCSI command transactions to stderr |
|
@cindex Verbosity, SCSI commands, -V |
|
@cindex SCSI commands, log, -V |
|
Log SCSI commands and drive replies to standard error. |
|
This might be of interest if @strong{xorrecord} and a particular drive |
|
or medium do not cooperate as expected, or if you just want to know |
|
how libburn interacts with the drive. |
|
To understand this extremely verbous log, one needs to read SCSI |
|
specs SPC, SBC, and MMC. |
|
@* |
|
Please do not add such a log to a bug report on the first hand, |
|
unless you want to point out a particular deviation |
|
from said specs, or if you get asked for this log by a maintainer of |
|
@command{xorrecord} who feels in charge for your bug report. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item -help |
|
@kindex -help print sparse overview of options |
|
@cindex Options, overview, -help |
|
Print a sparse list of program options to standard error |
|
and declare not to be cdrecord. |
|
@* |
|
Afterwards end emulation without performing any drive operation. |
|
@end table |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man .B Options not compatible to cdrecord: |
|
@node NonCdrecord, ExDevices, Verbous, Options |
|
@section Options not compatible to cdrecord |
|
@table @asis |
|
@sp 1 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}no_rc |
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}no_rc do not execute xorriso startup files |
|
@cindex Startup files, do not execute, @minus{}@minus{}no_rc |
|
Only if used as first command line argument this option |
|
prevents reading and interpretation of startup files. See section FILES below. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}grow_overwriteable_iso |
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}grow_overwriteable_iso emulate ISO 9660 multi-session |
|
@cindex Multi-session, emulate ISO 9660, @minus{}@minus{}grow_overwriteable_iso |
|
Enable emulation of multi-session writing on overwriteable media which |
|
contain an ISO 9660 filesystem. This emulation is learned from growisofs -M |
|
but adapted to the usage model of |
|
@* |
|
xorrecord -msinfo |
|
@* |
|
xorrisofs -C -M | xorrecord -waiti -multi - |
|
@* |
|
for sequential media. |
|
@* |
|
--grow_overwriteable_iso does not hamper the use of true multi-session media. |
|
I.e. it is possible to use the same @command{xorrecord} options with both |
|
kinds of media |
|
and to achieve similar results if ISO 9660 filesystem images are to be written. |
|
This option implies option -isosize and therefore demands that the track |
|
source is a ISO 9660 filesystem image. |
|
@* |
|
With overwriteable media and no option blank=fast|all present it expands an |
|
eventual ISO 9660 filesystem on media. It is assumed that this image's inner |
|
size description points to the end of the valuable data. |
|
Overwriteable media with a recognizable ISO 9660 size will be regarded as |
|
appendable rather than as blank. I.e. options -msinfo and -toc will work. |
|
-toc will always show a single session with its size increasing with |
|
every added ISO 9660 image. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item @minus{}@minus{}multi_if_possible |
|
@kindex @minus{}@minus{}multi_if_possible apply -multi if medium is suitable |
|
@cindex Media, keep appendable, @minus{}@minus{}multi_if_possible |
|
Apply option -multi if the medium is suitable. Not suitable are DVD-R DL |
|
and DVD-RW, which were blanked with mode "deformat_quickest". |
|
@* |
|
Not all drives correctly recognize such fast-blanked DVD-RW which need "on". |
|
If there is well founded suspicion that a burn run failed due to |
|
-multi, then this causes a re-try without -multi. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item stream_recording="on"|"off"|number |
|
@kindex stream_recording= try to get full speed on DVD-RAM, BD |
|
@cindex Full speed, on DVD-RAM and BD, stream_recording= |
|
@cindex Defect management, control, stream_recording= |
|
Mode "on" requests that compliance to the desired speed setting is |
|
preferred over management of write errors. With DVD-RAM and BD this can |
|
bring effective write speed near to the nominal write speed of the media. |
|
But it will also disable the automatic use of replacement blocks |
|
if write errors occur. It might as well be disliked or ignored by the drive. |
|
@* |
|
If a number is given, then error management stays enabled for all byte |
|
addresses below that number. Any number below 16s is the same as "off". |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item dvd_obs="default"|"32k"|"64k" |
|
@kindex dvd_obs= set write transaction payload size |
|
@cindex Transaction size, set, dvd_obs= |
|
Linux specific: |
|
Set the number of bytes to be transmitted with each write operation to DVD |
|
or BD media. Tracks get padded up to the next multiple of this write |
|
size. A number of 64 KB may improve throughput with bus systems which |
|
show latency problems. The default depends on media type, option |
|
stream_recording=, and on compile time options. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item modesty_on_drive=parameter[:parameters] |
|
@kindex -modesty_on_drive keep drive buffer hungry |
|
@cindex Write, drive buffer, modesty_on_drive= |
|
Control whether the drive buffer shall be kept from getting completely filled. |
|
Parameter "on" (or "1") keeps the program from trying to write to the burner |
|
drive while its buffer is in danger to be filled over a given limit. |
|
If this filling is exceeded then the program will wait until the filling |
|
reaches a given low percentage value. |
|
@* |
|
This can ease the load on operating system and drive controller and thus help |
|
with achieving better input bandwidth if disk and burner are not on independent |
|
controllers (like hda and hdb). It may also help with simultaneous burns on |
|
different burners with Linux kernels like 3.16. On the other hand it increases |
|
the risk of buffer underflow and thus reduced write speed. |
|
@* |
|
Some burners are not suitable because they |
|
report buffer fill with granularity too coarse in size or time, |
|
or expect their buffer to be filled to the top before they go to full speed. |
|
@* |
|
Parameters "off" or "0" disable this feature. |
|
@* |
|
The threshhold for beginning to wait is given by parameter "max_percent=". |
|
Parameter "min_percent=" defines the threshhold for resuming transmission. |
|
Percentages are permissible in the range of 25 to 100. Numbers in this |
|
range without a prepended name are interpreted as "on:min_percent=". |
|
@* |
|
E.g.: modesty_on_drive=75 |
|
@* |
|
The optimal values depend on the buffer behavior of the drive. |
|
@* |
|
Parameter "timeout_sec=" defines after which time of unsuccessful waiting |
|
the modesty shall be disabled because it does not work. |
|
@* |
|
Parameter "min_usec=" defines the initial sleeping period in microseconds. |
|
If the drive buffer appears to be too full for sending more data, the |
|
program will wait the given time and inquire the buffer fill state again. |
|
If repeated inquiry shows not enough free space, the sleep time will |
|
slowly be increased to what parameter "max_usec=" defines. |
|
@* |
|
Parameters, which are not mentioned with a modesty_on_drive= option, |
|
stay unchanged. |
|
Default is: |
|
@* |
|
modesty_on_drive=off:min_percent=90:max_percent=95:timeout_sec=120:min_usec=5000:max_usec=25000 |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item write_start_address=value |
|
@kindex write_start_address= set block address for write start |
|
@cindex Write start address, set, write_start_address= |
|
Set the block address on overwritable media where to start writing the track. |
|
With DVD+RW, DVD-RAM or BD-RE, byte_offset must be aligned to 2 kiB blocks, |
|
but better is 32 kiB on DVD and 64 kiB on BD. |
|
With formatted DVD-RW 32 kiB alignment is mandatory. |
|
@* |
|
Other media are not suitable for this option. |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@item stdio_sync="on"|"off"|number |
|
@kindex stdio_sync= control stdio buffer |
|
@cindex Write, buffer syncing, stdio_sync= |
|
Set the number of bytes after which to force output to emulated stdio: drives. |
|
This forcing keeps the memory from being clogged with lots of |
|
pending data for slow devices. Default "on" is the same as "16m". |
|
Forced output can be disabled by "off". |
|
@end table |
|
@node Examples, Files, Options, Top |
|
@chapter Examples |
|
@c man .SH EXAMPLES |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Overview of examples: |
|
@c man Get an overview of drives and their addresses |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Get info about a particular drive or loaded media |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Prepare CD-RW or DVD-RW for re-use, BD-R for bad block handling |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Format DVD-RW to avoid need for blanking before re-use |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man De-format DVD-RW to make it capable of multi-session again |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Write a single ISO 9660 filesystem image |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Write multiple ISO 9660 sessions |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Write ISO 9660 session on-the-fly |
|
@c man .br |
|
@c man Write compressed afio archive on-the-fly |
|
@c man .br |
|
@cindex Examples |
|
@menu |
|
* ExDevices:: Get an overview of drives and their addresses |
|
* ExMedium:: Get info about a particular drive or loaded media |
|
* ExBlank:: Prepare CD-RW or DVD-RW for re-use |
|
* ExFormat:: Format DVD-RW to avoid need for blanking before re-use |
|
* ExDeformat:: De-format DVD-RW to make it capable of multi-session again |
|
* ExIsoSingle:: Write a single ISO 9660 filesystem image |
|
* ExIsoMulti:: Write multiple ISO 9660 sessions |
|
* ExIsoFly:: Write ISO 9660 session on-the-fly |
|
* ExAfio:: Write compressed afio archive on-the-fly |
|
@end menu |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Get an overview of drives and their addresses: |
|
@node ExDevices, ExMedium, NonCdrecord, Examples |
|
@section Get an overview of drives and their addresses |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord --devices |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Get info about a particular drive and loaded media: |
|
@node ExMedium, ExBlank, ExDevices, Examples |
|
@section Get info about a particular drive and loaded media |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -atip -toc --grow_overwriteable_iso |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Prepare CD-RW or DVD-RW for re-use: |
|
@node ExBlank, ExFormat, ExMedium, Examples |
|
@section Prepare CD-RW or DVD-RW for re-use |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=as_needed -eject |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Format DVD-RW to avoid need for blanking before re-use: |
|
@node ExFormat, ExDeformat, ExBlank, Examples |
|
@section Format DVD-RW to avoid need for blanking before re-use |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=format_overwrite -eject |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
This command may also be used to format BD-R media before first use, |
|
in order to enable handling of write errors. Several hundred MB of spare |
|
blocks will be reserved and write runs on such media will perform |
|
with less than half nominal speed. |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B De-format DVD-RW to make it capable of multi-session again: |
|
@node ExDeformat, ExIsoSingle, ExFormat, Examples |
|
@section De-format DVD-RW to make it capable of multi-session again |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=deformat |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Write a single ISO 9660 filesystem image: |
|
@node ExIsoSingle, ExIsoMulti, ExDeformat, Examples |
|
@section Write a single ISO 9660 filesystem image |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=12 fs=8m \ |
|
blank=as_needed -eject padsize=300k my_image.iso |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Write multiple ISO 9660 sessions: |
|
@node ExIsoMulti, ExIsoFly, ExIsoSingle, Examples |
|
@section Write multiple ISO 9660 sessions |
|
This is possible with all media except minimally blanked DVD-RW and DVD-R DL, |
|
which cannot do multi-session. |
|
@* |
|
The first session is written like in the previous example, except that |
|
option -multi is used. It will contain the files of hard disk |
|
directory ./tree1 under the ISO 9660 directory /dir1: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrisofs -o image_1.iso -J -graft-points /dir1=./tree1 |
|
@* |
|
$ xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=12 fs=8m \ |
|
@* |
|
-multi --grow_overwriteable_iso \ |
|
@* |
|
blank=as_needed -eject padsize=300k image_1.iso |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
For the second session xorrisofs needs to know the -msinfo numbers |
|
of the medium. Further it will read data from the medium by using the |
|
system's read-only CD-ROM driver. |
|
@* |
|
It is advised to load the tray manually |
|
or via dd by the CD-ROM driver, rather than letting xorrecord do this |
|
by its own SCSI driver. Many system CD-ROM drivers do not take notice |
|
of xorrecord's activities. |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1 |
|
@* |
|
Now get the -msinfo numbers: |
|
@* |
|
$ m=$(xorrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo) |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
and use them with xorrisofs to add ./tree2 to the image as /dir2: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrisofs -M /dev/sr0 -C $m -o image_2.iso \ |
|
@* |
|
-J -graft-points /dir2=./tree2 |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
Now burn the new session onto the same medium. This time without blanking: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=12 fs=8m \ |
|
@* |
|
-multi --grow_overwriteable_iso \ |
|
@* |
|
-eject padsize=300k image_2.iso |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
Operating systems which mount this medium will read the superblock |
|
of the second session and show both directories /dir1 and /dir2. |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Write ISO 9660 session on-the-fly: |
|
@node ExIsoFly, ExAfio, ExIsoMulti, Examples |
|
@section Write ISO 9660 session on-the-fly |
|
It is possible to combine the run of @strong{xorrisofs} and @command{xorrecord} |
|
in a pipeline without storing the ISO 9660 image as file on hard disk: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorrisofs -M /dev/sr0 -C $m \ |
|
@* |
|
-J -graft-points /dir2=./tree2 \ |
|
@* |
|
| xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=12 fs=8m \ |
|
@* |
|
-waiti -multi --grow_overwriteable_iso \ |
|
@* |
|
-eject padsize=300k - |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
This is also the main use case of program @strong{xorriso} itself, |
|
where this run would look like: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ xorriso -dev /dev/sr0 -joliet on -speed 12 -fs 8m \ |
|
@* |
|
-map ./tree2 /dir2 -commit_eject all |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Write compressed afio archive on-the-fly: |
|
@node ExAfio, , ExIsoFly, Examples |
|
@section Write compressed afio archive on-the-fly |
|
This is possible with all media except minimally blanked DVD-RW and DVD-R DL. |
|
Since the compressed output stream is of very variable speed, a larger fifo |
|
is advised. Nevertheless, this example is not suitable for very old CD drives |
|
which have no underrun protection and thus would abort the burn run on |
|
temporary data shortage. |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ find . | afio -oZ - | \ |
|
@* |
|
xorrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=12 fs=64m \ |
|
@* |
|
-multi padsize=300k - |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
afio archives do not contain references to absolute data block addresses. So |
|
they need no special precautions for multi-session. One may get the session |
|
start addresses by option -toc, and then use dd option skip= to begin reading |
|
at one of those addresses. E.g. for listing its content: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 bs=2048 skip=64046 | afio -tvZ - |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
afio will know when the end of the archive is reached. |
|
@c man .SH FILES |
|
@node Files, Seealso, Examples, Top |
|
@chapter Files |
|
@c man .SS |
|
@c man .B Startup files: |
|
@section Startup Files |
|
@* |
|
If not --no_rc is given as the first argument then @command{xorrecord} |
|
attempts on startup to read and execute lines from the following files: |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
/etc/default/xorriso |
|
@* |
|
/etc/opt/xorriso/rc |
|
@* |
|
/etc/xorriso/xorriso.conf |
|
@* |
|
$HOME/.xorrisorc |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
The files are read in the sequence given here, but none of them is required |
|
to exist. The lines are not interpreted as @command{xorrecord} options but |
|
as generic @strong{xorriso} commands. See man xorriso. |
|
@c man .SH SEE ALSO |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man For generic xorriso command mode |
|
@c man .BR xorriso(1) |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man Formatting track sources for xorrecord: |
|
@c man .BR xorrisofs(1), |
|
@c man .BR mkisofs(8), |
|
@c man .BR genisoimage(8), |
|
@c man .BR afio(1), |
|
@c man .BR star(1) |
|
@c man .TP |
|
@c man Other programs which burn sessions to optical media |
|
@c man .BR growisofs(1), |
|
@c man .BR cdrecord(1), |
|
@c man .BR wodim(1), |
|
@c man .BR cdrskin(1) |
|
@c man-ignore-lines begin |
|
@node Seealso, Bugreport, Files, Top |
|
@chapter See also |
|
@table @asis |
|
@item For generic xorriso command mode |
|
xorriso(1) |
|
@item Formatting track sources for xorrecord |
|
xorrisofs(1), |
|
mkisofs(8), |
|
genisoimage(8), |
|
afio(1), |
|
star(1) |
|
@item Other programs which burn sessions to optical media |
|
growisofs(1), |
|
cdrecord(1), |
|
wodim(1), |
|
cdrskin(1) |
|
@end table |
|
@c man-ignore-lines end |
|
@c man .SH BUGS |
|
@node Bugreport, Legal, Seealso, Top |
|
@chapter Reporting bugs |
|
@cindex Bugs, reporting |
|
@cindex Problems, reporting |
|
To report bugs, request help, or suggest enhancements for @command{xorriso}, |
|
please send electronic mail to the public list @email{bug-xorriso@@gnu.org}. |
|
If more privacy is desired, mail to @email{scdbackup@@gmx.net}. |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
Please describe what you expect @command{xorriso} to do, |
|
the program arguments or dialog commands by which you tried to achieve it, |
|
the messages of @command{xorriso}, and the undesirable outcome of your |
|
program run. |
|
@* |
|
@sp 1 |
|
Expect to get asked more questions before solutions can be proposed. |
|
@c man .SH AUTHOR |
|
@node Legal, CommandIdx, Bugreport, Top |
|
@chapter Author, Copyright, Credits |
|
@section Author |
|
Thomas Schmitt <scdbackup@@gmx.net> |
|
@* |
|
for libburnia-project.org |
|
@c man .SH COPYRIGHT |
|
@section Copyright |
|
Copyright (c) 2011 - 2015 Thomas Schmitt |
|
@* |
|
Permission is granted to distribute this text freely. It shall only be |
|
modified in sync with the technical properties of xorriso. If you make use |
|
of the license to derive modified versions of xorriso then you are entitled |
|
to modify this text under that same license. |
|
@c man .SH CREDITS |
|
@section Credits |
|
@command{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. |
|
@* |
|
Compliments towards Joerg Schilling whose cdrtools served me for ten years. |
|
@c man-ignore-lines begin |
|
|
|
@node CommandIdx, ConceptIdx, Legal, Top |
|
@chapter Alphabetic Command List |
|
@printindex ky |
|
|
|
@node ConceptIdx,, CommandIdx, Top |
|
@chapter Alphabetic List of Concepts and Objects |
|
@printindex cp |
|
|
|
@c man-ignore-lines end |
|
@bye
|
|
|