libisoburn/xorriso/xorrisofs.1

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.TH XORRISOFS 1 "Mar 26, 2011"
.\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage.
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.nh
.SH NAME
xorrisofs - Emulation of ISO 9660 program mkisofs by program xorriso
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B xorrisofs
[ options ] [-o filename ] pathspec [pathspecs ...]
.br
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
\fBxorrisofs\fR
produces Rock Ridge enhanced ISO 9660 filesystems and add-on sessions to
such filesystems. Optionally it can produce Joliet directory trees too.
.br
.PP
xorrisofs understands options of program mkisofs from cdrtools by
Joerg Schilling.
Its implementation is part of program xorriso which shares no source
code with cdrtools.
.SS
\fBISO 9660, Rock Ridge, Joliet:\fR
.br
\fBISO 9660\fR
(aka \fBECMA-119\fR) is a read-only filesystem that is mainly used for
optical media CD, DVD, BD, but may also reside on other storage devices like
disk files, USB sticks or disk partitions. It is widely readable by many
operating systems and by boot facilities of personal computers.
.br
ISO 9660 describes directories and data files by
very restricted filenames with no distinction of upper case and lower case.
Its metadata do not comply to fundamental POSIX specifications.
.br
\fBRock Ridge\fR
is the name of a set of additional information which enhance
an ISO 9660 filesystem so that it can represent a POSIX compliant filesystem
with ownership, access permissions, symbolic links, and other attributes.
Rock Ridge allows filenames of up to 255 bytes and paths of up to
1024 bytes.
.br
Rock Ridge information is produced unconditionally with any xorrisofs image.
.br
\fBJoliet\fR
is the name of an additional directory tree which provides
filenames up to 64 characters encoded as UTF-16.
A Joliet tree is mainly interesting for reading the ISO image by
operating systems of Microsoft Corporation.
Production of this directory tree may be enabled by option -J.
.br
\fBISO 9660:1999\fR
is the name of an additional directory tree which provides longer
filenames. It allows single file names to have up to 207 characters.
It might be of use with some older computer system boot
facilities which read neither Rock Ridge nor Joliet but
need longer filenames nevertheless.
Production of this directory tree may be enabled by option -iso-level 4.
.SS
.B Inserting files into the ISO image:
.PP
xorrisofs deals with two kinds of file addresses:
.br
\fBdisk_path\fR
is a path to an object in the local filesystem tree.
.br
\fBiso_rr_path\fR
is the Rock Ridge address of a file object in the ISO image. (Do not
confuse with the lowlevel ISO 9660 names visible if Rock Ridge gets ignored.)
.br
.PP
A program argument is handled as a \fBpathspec\fR, if it is not
recognized as original mkisofs option or additional xorrisofs option.
A pathspec depicts an input file object by a disk_path.
If option -graft-points is not present, then this file object gets
copied into the /-directory of the ISO image.
.br
If -graft-points is present then each pathspec gets split at the first
occurence of the =-character.
The part before the = is taken as \fBtarget\fR, the iso_rr_path for
the file object in the ISO image. The part after the first = is taken
as \fBsource\fR, the disk_path of the input object.
.br
It is possible to make =-characters part of the iso_rr_path by preceeding
them with a \\-character. The same must be done for \\-characters which
shall be part of the iso_rr_path.
.br
.PP
If the source part of the pathspec leads to a directory, then all files
underneath this directory get inserted into the image, too.
It is possible to exclude particular files from being inserted
by help of option -m.
.SS
\fBRelation to program xorriso:\fR
.br
xorrisofs is actually a command mode of program \fBxorriso\fR,
which gets entered either by xorriso command "-as mkisofs" or by
starting the program by one of the names "xorrisofs", "mkisofs",
"genisoimage", or "genisofs".
.br
This command mode can be left by argument "--" which leads
to generic xorriso command mode. See \fBman xorriso\fR for its description.
.br
.PP
xorriso performs image reading and writing by help of libburn, which is
mainly intended for optical drives, but also operates on all POSIX
file types except directories.
.br
The program messages call any image file a "drive". File types which are not
supported for reading are reported as "blank". The reported free media
space may be quite fictional.
.br
Nevertheless xorrisofs does not operate directly on optical drives,
but rather forces libburn to regard them as general device files.
So for writing of sequential optical media (CD, DVD-R, DVD+R, BD-R)
one will have to use a burn program. E.g the cdrecord emulation of xorriso.
See EXAMPLES.
.SS
.br
.SH OPTIONS
.br
.PP
.TP
.B Image loading:
.PP
The following options control loading of an existing ISO image for the purpose
of preparing a suitable add-on session.
If they are missing then a new image is composed from scratch.
.TP
\fB\-M\fR disk_path
Set the path from which to load the existing ISO image directory tree
on which to base the upcomming directory tree as add-on session.
The path must lead to a random-access readable file object.
On GNU/Linux: regular data files or block device files.
.br
A special kind of pseudo disk_path has the form "/dev/fd/"number.
It depicts the open file descriptor with the given number, regardless whether
the operating system supports this feature by file nodes in /dev/fd or not.
E.g. /dev/fd/3 is file descriptor 3 which was opened by the program that
later started xorriso.
.TP
\fB\-prev-session\fR disk_path
Alias of -M.
.TP
\fB\-dev\fR disk_path
Alias of -M.
.TP
\fB\-C\fR last_session_start,next_writeable_address
Set the 2 KiB block address last_session_start from where to read the
ISO image out of the file given by option -M.
.br
Separated by a comma, set the next_writeable_address to which the
add-on session will finally be written. Decisive is actually the block
address which the intended readers will have to use as superblock address
on the intended media.
.br
Both values can be inquired from optical media by help of burn programs
and cdrecord option -msinfo. xorriso itself can obtain it in its
cdrecord emulation. Do not let it load the drive, but rather do this manually
or by a program like dd which reads a few bytes. Only then it is sure that
the device driver knows the true readable size of the media.
.br
dd if=/dev/... count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
.br
values=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/... -msinfo)
.br
echo $values
.br
Option -C may be used without option -M to create an ISO image from
scratch and prepare it for being finally written to a block address
other than 0. Parameter last_session_start must then be set to 0.
.TP
\fB\-cdrecord-params\fR last_session_start,next_writeable_address
Alias of -C.
.TP
.B Settings for file insertion:
.TP
\fB\-path-list\fR disk_path
Read pathspecs line-by-line from disk_file and insert the depicted file
objects into the ISO image. If disk_path is "-" then read the pathspecs
from standard input.
.TP
\fB--quoted_path_list\fR disk_path
Like option -path-list but reading quoted words rather than plain lines.
Whitespace outside of quotes will be discarded. On the other hand it is
possible to represent pathspecs which contain newline characters.
.br
The double quotation mark " and the single quotation mark ' can be used to
enclose whitespace and make it part of pathspecs. Each mark
type can enclose the marks of the other type. A trailing backslash \\ outside
quotations or an open quotation cause the next input line to be appended.
.TP
\fB\-f\fR
.br
Resolve symbolic links on disk rather than storing them as symbolic
links in the ISO image.
.TP
\fB\-follow-links\fR
Alias of -f.
.TP
\fB\-graft-points\fR
Enable interpretation of input file pathspecs as combination of iso_rr_path
and disk_path, separated by a =-character.
.TP
\fB\-m\fR disk_pattern
Exclude files from being inserted into the image. Silently ignored are
those files of which the disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
If no /-character is part of the pattern, then it gets matched against
the leaf name of the disk file.
.br
It is possible to give more than one -m option.
.TP
\fB\-exclude\fR
Alias of -m.
.TP
\fB\-x\fR
.br
Alias of -m.
.TP
\fB\-old-exclude\fR
Alias of -m.
.TP
\fB\-exclude-list\fR disk_path
Perform -m using each line out of file disk_path as argument disk_pattern.
.TP
\fB\-z\fR
.br
Enable recognition and proper processing of zisofs compressed files
as produced by program mkzftree. These files will get equipped with the
necessary meta data so that a Linux kernel will recognize them and
deliver their content in uncompressed form.
.TP
\fB\-transparent-compression\fR
Alias of -z.
.TP
\fB\-root\fR iso_rr_path
Insert all files under the given iso_rr_path. If option -graft-points is given,
then iso_rr_path is prepended to each target part of a pathspec.
.br
The default for -root is "/".
.TP
\fB\-old-root\fR iso_rr_path
Enable incremental insertion of files into the loaded image.
The effective target and source addresses of given pathspecs get compared
whether the target already exists in the ISO image and is still identical
to the source on disk. Metadata in the ISO image will eventually get adjusted.
New files and files with changed content will get newly added.
Target files which do not exist in any of the according pathspec sources
will get removed from the ISO directory tree.
.br
If the effective setting of -root differs from the iso_rr_path given
with -old-root, then the files underneath the -old-root directory get cloned
underneath the -root directory. Cloning happens before file comparison.
.TP
\fB--old-root-no-ino\fR
Disable recording and use of disk inode numbers.
If no disk inode numbers are recorded, then option -old-root will have
to read disk file content and compare it with the MD5 checksum that is
recorded in the ISO image.
.br
With recorded disk inode numbers and with credible ctime and mtime,
it is possible to detect potential changes in the content without actually
reading it.
A loophole remains if multiple different filesystems may get mounted
at the same directory, like it is habit with /mnt.
In this case one has to use option --old-root-devno
or disable the inode number shortcut by --old-root-no-ino.
.TP
\fB--old-root-devno\fR
Enable comparison of recorded device numbers together with recorded
inode numbers. This works only with good old stable device numbers which
get out of fashion, regrettably. If the hard disk has a different
device number after each reboot, then this comparison will see all
files as changed and thus prevent any incremental size saving.
.TP
\fB--old-root-no-md5\fR
Disable recording and eventual use of MD5 checksums for data file content.
If neither checksums and nor disk inode numbers are recorded, then
option -old-root will have to read ISO image file content when comparing
it with disk file content.
.TP
.B Settings for image production:
.TP
\fB\-o\fR disk_path
Set the output file address for the emerging ISO image.
If the address exists as regular file, it will be truncated to length 0
when image production begins. It may not already exist as directory.
If it does not exist yet then its parent directory must exist and
a regular file will get created.
.br
A special kind of pseudo disk_path has the form "/dev/fd/"number.
It depicts the open file descriptor with the given number, regardless whether
the operating system supports this feature by file nodes in /dev/fd or not.
E.g. /dev/fd/4 is file descriptor 4 which was opened by the program that
later started xorriso.
.br
Default is standard output (/dev/fd/1) which may also be set by disk_path "-".
.TP
\fB\-output\fR disk_path
Alias of -o.
.TP
\fB--stdio_sync\fR "on"|"off"|number
Set the number of bytes after which to force output to disk
in order to keep the memory from being clogged with lots of
pending data for slow devices. Default "on" is the same as "16m".
Forced output can be disabled by "off".
.br
xorriso uses an inner fifo buffer with default size 4 MiB. So forcing
the operating system i/o cache to disk does not necessarily block the
simultaneous production of more image content.
.TP
\fB--emul-toc\fR
Write a second superblock with the first session into random-access
files. If further sessions get appended and the first superblock gets updated,
then the second superblock will not be overwritten. This allows to still
mount the first session and to find the start blocks of the further sessions.
.br
The price is 64 KiB extra space consumption. If -partition_offset is non-zero,
then it is 128 KiB plus twice the partition setup.
.TP
\fB--no-emul-toc\fR
Do not write a second superblock with the first session into random-access
files.
.br
This is the default.
.TP
\fB--sort-weight\fR weight_number iso_rr_path
Attribute a LBA weight number to regular files. If iso_rr_path leads
to a directory then all regular files underneath will get the weight_number.
.br
The weight_number may range from -2147483648 to 2147483647.
The higher it is, the lower will be the block address of the file data
in the emerging ISO image.
Currently the El Torito boot catalog has a hardcoded weight of 1 billion.
Normally it should occupy the block with the lowest possible address.
Data files get added or loaded with initial weight 0.
.TP
\fB\-dir-mode\fR mode
Set the access permissions for all directories in the image to the given
mode which is either an octal number beginning with "0" or a comma separated
list of statements of the form [ugoa]*[+-=][rwxst]* . E.g. ug=rx,a-rwx
.TP
\fB\-file-mode\fR mode
Like -dir-mode but for all regular data files in the image.
.TP
\fB\-pad\fR
.br
Add 300 KiB to the end of the produced ISO image. This circumvents possible
read errors from ISO images which have been written to CD media in TAO mode.
The additional bytes are claimed as part of the ISO image if not --emul-toc
is given.
.br
Option -pad is the default.
.TP
\fB\-no-pad\fR
Disable padding of 300 KiB to the end of the produced ISO image.
This is safe if the image is not meant to be written on CD or if it
gets written to CD as only track in write mode SAO.
.TP
\fB--old-empty\fR
Use the old way of of giving block addresses in the range
of [0,31] to files with no own data content. The new way is to have
a dedicated block to which all such files will point.
.TP
.B Settings for standards compliance:
.TP
\fB\-iso-level\fR number
Specify the ISO 9660 version which defines the limitations of file naming
and data file size. The naming restrictions do not apply to the
Rock Ridge names but only to the low-level ISO 9660 names.
There are three conformance levels:
.br
Level 1 allows ISO names of the form 8.3 and file size up to 4 GiB - 1.
.br
Level 2 allows ISO names with up to 32 characters
and file size up to 4 GiB - 1.
.br
Level 3 allows ISO names with up to 32 characters
and file size of up to 400 GiB - 200 KiB. (This size limitation is
set by the xorriso implementation and not by ISO 9660 which would
allow nearly 8 TiB.)
.br
Pseudo-level 4 enables production of an additional ISO 9660:1999
directory tree.
.TP
\fB\-disallow_dir_id_ext\fR
Do not follow a bad habit of mkisofs which allows dots in the ISO names
of directories. On the other hand, some bootable GNU/Linux images depend on
this bad habit.
.TP
\fB\-U\fR
.br
This option allows ISO file names without dot and up to 37 characters,
ISO file paths longer than 255 characters, and all ASCII characters in file
names. Further it omits the semicolon and the version numbers at the end
of ISO names.
.br
This all violates ISO 9660 specs.
.TP
\fB\-untranslated-filenames\fR
Alias of -U.
\fB\-untranslated_name_len\fR number
Allow ISO file names up to the given number of characters
without any character conversion. The maximum number is 96.
If a file name has more characters, then image production will
fail deliberately.
.br
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
.TP
\fB\-allow-lowercase\fR
Allow lowercase character in ISO file names.
.br
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
.TP
\fB\-d\fR
.br
Do not add trailing dot to ISO file names without dot.
.br
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
.TP
\fB\-omit-period\fR
Alias of -d.
.TP
\fB\-l\fR
.br
Allow up to 37 characters in ISO file names.
.br
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
.TP
\fB\-full-iso9660-filenames\fR
Alias of -l.
.TP
\fB\-max-iso9660-filenames\fR
Alias of -l.
.TP
\fB\-N\fR
.br
Omit the semicolon and the version numbers at the end of ISO names.
.br
This violates ISO 9660 specs.
.TP
\fB\-omit-version-number\fR
Alias of -N.
.TP
.B Settings for standards extensions:
.TP
\fB\-R\fR
.br
With mkisofs this option enables Rock Ridge extensions. xorrisofs produces
them unconditionally.
.TP
\fB\-rock\fR
.br
Alias of -R.
.TP
\fB\-r\fR
.br
Set Rock Ridge user and group id of all files in the ISO image to 0.
Grant r-permissions to all. Deny all w-permissions.
If any x-permission is set, grant x-permission to all.
Remove s-bit and t-bit.
.TP
\fB\-rational-rock\fR
Alias of -r.
.TP
\fB--for_backup\fR
Enable options which improve backup fidelity:
--acl, --xattr, --md5,
--hardlinks.
.TP
\fB--acl\fR
.br
Enable recording and loading of GNU/Linux ACLs (see man getfacl, man acl).
They will not be in effect with mounted ISO images. But xorriso can
restore them when extracting files from the ISO image.
.TP
\fB--xattr\fR
.br
Enable recording and loading of GNU/Linux extended attributes in
user namespace (see man getfattr, man attr).
They will not be in effect with mounted ISO images. But xorriso can
restore them when extracting files from the ISO image.
.TP
\fB--md5\fR
.br
Enable recording of MD5 checksums for the overall ISO image and for each
single data file in the image. xorriso can check the content of an ISO
image with these sums and eventually raise alert on mismatch.
See man xorriso, options -check_media, check_md5_r.
xorriso can print recorded MD5 checksums. E.g. by:
.br
-find / -exec get_md5
.TP
\fB--hardlinks\fR
Enable loading and recording of hardlink relations.
Search for families of iso_rr files which stem from the same disk file,
have identical content filtering and have identical properties.
The members of each family get the same inode number in the ISO image.
.br
Whether these numbers are respected at mount time depends on the operating
system. xorriso can create hardlink families when extracting files from
the ISO image.
.TP
\fB--scdbackup_tag\fR disk_path record_name
Append a scdbackup checksum record to the image. This works only if the
parameter next_writeable_address of option -C is 0.
If disk_path is not an empty string, then append a scdbackup checksum record
to the end of this file. record_name is a word that gets part of tag
and record.
.br
Program scdbackup_verify will recognize and verify tag resp. record.
.TP
\fB\-J\fR
.br
Enable the production of an additional Joliet directory tree along
with the ISO 9660 Rock Ridge tree.
.TP
\fB\-joliet\fR
Alias of -J.
.TP
\fB\-joliet-long\fR
Allow 103 characters in Joliet file names rather than 64 as is prescribed
by the specification. Allow Joliet paths longer than the prescribed limit of
240 characters.
.br
Oversized names get truncated. Without this option, oversized paths get
excluded from the Joliet tree.
.TP
.B Settings for file hiding:
.TP
\fB\-hide\fR disk_path_pattern
Make files invisible in the directory tree of ISO 9660 and Rock Ridge,
if their disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
The eventual data content of such hidden files will be included in the
resulting image, even if they do not show up in any directory.
But you will need own means to find nameless data in the image.
.br
This command does not apply to the boot catalog.
.TP
\fB\-hide-list\fR disk_path
Perform -hide using each line out of file disk_path as argument
disk_path_pattern.
.TP
\fB\-hide-joliet\fR disk_path_pattern
Like option -hide but making files invisible in the directory tree of Joliet,
if their disk_path matches the given shell parser pattern.
.TP
\fB\-hide-joliet-list\fR disk_path
Perform -hide-joliet using each line out of file disk_path as argument
disk_path_pattern.
.TP
.B ISO image ID strings:
.PP
The following strings and file addresses get stored in the Primary Volume
Descriptor of the ISO9660 image. The file addresses are ISO 9660
paths. These files should have iso_rr_paths which consist only of
the characters [A-Z0-9_] and exactly one dot which separates
at most 8 characters from at most 3 characters.
.TP
\fB\-V\fR text
Set the Volume Id of the ISO image.
xorriso accepts any text up to 32 characters,
but according to rarely obeyed specs stricter rules apply:
.br
Conformant are ASCII characters out of [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.
.TP
\fB\-volid\fR text
Alias of -V.
.TP
\fB\-volset\fR text
Set the Volume Set Id of the ISO image.
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
.TP
\fB\-p\fR text
Set the Publisher Id of the ISO image. This may identify the person or
organisation who specified what shall be recorded.
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
.TP
\fB\-publisher\fR text
Alias of -p.
.TP
\fB\-A\fR text
Set the Application Id of the ISO image.
This may identify the specification of how the data are recorded.
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
.br
The special text "@xorriso@" gets converted to the id string of xorriso
which is normally written as Preparer Id. It is a wrong tradition to write
the program id as Application Id.
.TP
\fB\-appid\fR text
Alias of -A.
.TP
\fB\-sysid\fR text
Set the System Id of the ISO image. This may
identify the system which can recognize and act upon the content of the
System Area in image blocks 0 to 15.
Permissible are up to 32 characters.
.TP
\fB\-p\fR text
Set the Preparer Id of the ISO image. This may
identify the person or other entity which controls the preparation of the data
which shall be recorded. Normally this should be the id of xorriso and not
of the person or program which operates xorriso. Please avoid to change it.
Permissible are up to 128 characters.
.br
The special text "@xorriso@" gets converted to the id string of xorriso
which is default at program startup.
.TP
\fB\-preparer\fR text
Alias of -p.
.TP
\fB\-abstract\fR iso_path
Set the address of the Abstract File of the ISO image. This should
be the ISO 9660 path of a file in the image which contains an abstract
statement about the image content.
Permissible are up to 37 characters.
.TP
\fB\-biblio\fR iso_path
Set the address of the Biblio File of the ISO image. This should
be the ISO 9660 path of a file in the image which contains bibliographic
records.
Permissible are up to 37 characters.
.TP
\fB\-copyright\fR iso_path
Set the address of the Copyright File of the ISO image. This should
be the ISO 9660 path of a file in the image which contains a copyright
statement.
Permissible are up to 37 characters.
.TP
\fB--modification-date=YYYYMMDDhhmmsscc\fR
Set a timestring that overrides ISO image creation and modification timestamps
literally.
It must consist of 16 decimal digits which form YYYYMMDDhhmmsscc, with
YYYY between 1970 and 2999. Time zone is GMT.
It is supposed to match this GRUB line:
.br
search --fs-uuid --set YYYY-MM-DD-hh-mm-ss-cc
.br
E.g. 2010040711405800 is 7 Apr 2010 11:40:58 (+0 centiseconds).
.TP
.B El Torito Bootable ISO images:
.PP
The precondition for a bootable ISO image is to have in the ISO image
the files of a boot loader. The boot facilities of computers get
directed to such files, which usually execute further program files
from the ISO image.
xorrisofs can produce several kinds of boot block or boot record,
which become part of the ISO image, and get interpreted by the according
boot facility.
.br
.PP
An \fBEl Torito\fR
boot record points the bootstrapping facility to a boot catalog
with one or more boot images, which are binary program files stored in
the ISO image.
The content of the boot image files is not in the scope of El Torito.
.br
xorriso composes the boot catalog according to the boot image
files given and structured by options -b, -e, -el-torito-alt-boot,
and --efi-boot. Often it contains only one entry.
.br
El Torito gets interpreted by boot facilities PC-BIOS and EFI.
Most bootable GNU/Linux CDs are equipped with ISOLINUX or GRUB boot images
for PC-BIOS.
.br
xorrisofs supports the example options out of the ISOLINUX wiki,
the options used in GRUB script grub-mkrescue, and the example in the
FreeBSD AvgLiveCD wiki.
.br
.PP
For CD booting via boot facilities other than PC-BIOS and EFI, and
for booting from USB sticks or hard disks, see the next section
about the Sytem Area.
.br
.TP
\fB\-b\fR iso_rr_path
Specify the boot image file which shall be mentioned in the current
entry of the El Torito boot catalog. It will be marked as suitable for
PC-BIOS.
.br
With boot images from ISOLINUX and GRUB this option should be accompanied by
options -c , -no-emul-boot , -boot-load-size 4 , -boot-info-table.
.TP
\fB\-eltorito-boot\fR iso_rr_path
Alias of -b.
.TP
\fB\-eltorito-alt-boot\fR
Finalize the current El Torito boot catalog entry and begin a new one.
A boot image file and all its necessary options shall be specified before
option -eltorito-alt-boot.
All further El Torito boot options apply to the new catalog
entry. Up to 32 catalog entries are possible.
.TP
\fB\-e\fR iso_rr_path
Specify the boot image file which shall be mentioned in the current
entry of the El Torito boot catalog. It will be marked as suitable for EFI.
.br
Normally no other El Torito options should be used with the catalog entry
that points to an EFI image.
Consider to use --efi-boot rather than -e.
.TP
\fB--efi-boot\fR iso_rr_path
Perform eventual necessary -eltorito-alt-boot, option -e with the given
iso_rr_path, and again -eltorito-alt-boot. This gesture is
used for achieving EFI-bootability of the GRUB2 rescue CD.
.TP
\fB\-boot-load-size\fR number
Set the number of 512-byte blocks for boot images which emulate
a floppy or a hard disk. A safe default for non-emulating boot images is 4.
.TP
\fB\-hard-disk-boot\fR
Mark the boot image in the current catalog entry as emulated hard disk.
(Not suitable for any known boot loader.)
.TP
\fB\-no-emul-boot\fR
Mark the boot image in the current catalog entry as not emulating
floppy or hard disk. (This is to be used with all known boot loaders.)
.br
If neither -hard-disk-boot nor -no-emul-boot is given, then the
boot image will be marked as emulating a floppy.
(Not suitable for any known boot loader.)
.TP
\fB\-boot-info-table\fR
Overwrite certain bytes in the current boot image. The information will be
supplied by xorriso in the course of image production: Block address of
the Primary Volume Descriptor, block address of the boot image file,
size of the boot image file.
.TP
\fB\-c\fR iso_rr_path
Set the address of the El Torito boot catalog file within the image.
This file address is not significant for the booting PC-BIOS or EFI,
but it may later be read by other programs in order to learn about
the available boot images.
.TP
\fB\-eltorito-catalog\fR iso_rr_path
Alias of -c.
.TP
\fB--boot-catalog-hide\fR
Prevent the El Torito boot catalog from appearing as file
in the directory trees of the image.
.TP
.B System Area, MBR, other boot blocks:
.PP
The first 16 blocks of an ISO image are the System Area.
It is reserved for system dependent boot software. This may be the
CD boot facilities of exotic hardware architectures or it may be
a MBR for booting via PC-BIOS from USB stick or hard disk.
.br
A \fBMBR\fR (Master Boot Record) contains boot code and a partition table.
It does not hamper El Torito booting from CDROM.
.br
xorrisofs supports boot facilities other than PC-BIOS:
MIPS Big Endian (SGI), MIPS Little Endian (DEC), SUN SPARC.
Those are mutually not combinable and also not combinable with MBR.
.br
.TP
\fB\-G\fR disk_path
Copy at most 32768 bytes from the given disk file to the very start of
the ISO image.
.br
Other than a El Torito boot image, the file disk_path needs not to be added
to the ISO image. It will not show up as file in the directory trees.
.TP
\fB\-generic-boot\fR disk_path
Alias of -G.
.TP
\fB--embedded-boot\fR disk_path
Alias of -G.
.TP
\fB\-isohybrid-mbr\fR disk_path
Install disk_path as ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR which makes the boot image
given by option -b bootable from USB sticks and hard disks via PC-BIOS.
This preparation is normally done by ISOLINUX program isohybrid
on the already produced ISO image.
.br
The disk path should lead to one of the Syslinux files isohdp[fp]x*.bin .
The MBR gets patched according to isohybrid needs. The first partition
describes the range of the ISO image. Its start is at block 0 by default,
but may be set to 64 disk blocks by option -partition_offset 16.
.TP
\fB--protective-msdos-label\fR
Patch the System Area by a simple PC-DOS partition table where partition 1
claims the range of the ISO image but leaves the first block unclaimed.
.TP
\fB\-partition_offset\fR 2kb_block_adr
Cause a partition table with a single partition that begins at the
given block address. This is counted in 2048 byte
blocks, not in 512 byte blocks. If the block address is non-zero then it must
be at least 16. Values larger than 16 are hardly of use.
A non-zero partition offset causes two superblocks to be
generated and two sets of directory trees. The image is then mountable from its
absolute start as well as from the partition start.
.br
The offset value of an ISO image gets preserved when a new session is added
to a loaded image.
So the value defined here is only in effect if a new ISO image gets written.
.TP
\fB\-partition_hd_cyl\fR number
Set the number of heads per cylinder for the partition table.
0 chooses a default value. Maximum is 255.
.TP
\fB\-partition_sec_hd\fR number
Set the number of sectors per head for the partition table.
0 chooses a default value. Maximum is 63.
.br
The product partition_sec_hd * partition_hd_cyl * 512 is the cylinder size.
It should be divisible by 2048 in order to allow exact alignment.
If it is too small to describe the image size by at most 1024 cylinders,
then appropriate values of partition_hd_cyl are chosen with
partition_sec_hd 32 or 63. If the image is larger than 8,422,686,720 bytes,
then the cylinder size constraints cannot be fulfilled. They seem not overly
important anyway. Flat block addresses in partition tables are good for 1 TiB.
.TP
\fB\-partition_cyl_align\fR mode
Control image size alignment to an integer number of cylinders.
It is prescribed by isohybrid specs and it seems to please program fdisk.
Cylinder size must be divisible by 2048.
Images larger than 8,323,596,288 bytes cannot be aligned.
.br
Mode "auto" is default. Alignment by padding happens only if
option -isohybrid-mbr is given.
.br
Mode "on" causes alignment by padding with option
--protective-msdos-label too.
Mode "off" disables alignment unconditionally.
.TP
\fB\-append_partition\fR partition_number type_code disk_path
Cause a prepared filesystem image to be appended to the ISO image and to be
described by a partition table entry in a boot block at the start of the
emerging ISO image. The partition entry will bear the size of the submitted
file rounded up to the next multiple of 2048 bytes.
.br
Beware of subsequent multi-session runs. The appended partition will get
overwritten.
.br
partition_number may be 1 to 4. Number 1 will put the whole ISO image into
the unclaimed space before partition 1. So together with most xorriso MBR
features, number 2 would be the most natural choice.
.br
The type_code may be "FAT12", "FAT16", "Linux",
or a hexadecimal number between 0x00 and 0xff. Not all those numbers will
yield usable results. For a list of codes search the Internet for
"Partition Types" or run fdisk command "L".
.TP
\fB\-mips-boot\fR iso_rr_path
Declare a data file in the image to be a
MIPS Big Endian boot file and cause production of a MIPS Big Endian Volume
Header. This is mutually exclusive with production of other boot blocks
like MBR.
It will overwrite the first 512 bytes of any data eventually provided by -G.
Up to 15 boot files can be declared by multiple -mips-boot options.
.TP
\fB\-mipsel-boot\fR iso_rr_path
Declare a data file in the image to be the
MIPS Little Endian boot file. This is mutually exclusive with other boot
blocks.
It will overwrite the first 512 bytes of any data eventually
provided by -G.
Only a single boot file can be declared by -mipsel-boot.
.TP
\fB\-B\fR disk_path[,disk_path ...]
Cause one or more data files on disk to be written after the end of the
ISO image. A SUN Disk Label will be written into the first 512 bytes of the
ISO image which lists this image as partition 1 and the given disk_paths as
partition 2 up to 8.
.br
The disk files should contain suitable boot images for SUN SPARC systems.
.br
The pseudo disk_path "..." causes that all empty partition entries become
copies of the last non-empty entry. If no other disk_path is given before
"..." then all partitions describe the ISO image. In this case, the boot
loader code has to be imported by option -G.
.TP
\fB\-sparc-boot\fR disk_path[,disk_path ...]
Alias of -B.
.TP
\fB\-sparc-label\fR text
Set the ASCII label text of a SUN Disk Label.
.TP
.B Character sets:
.PP
Character sets should not matter as long as only english alphanumeric
characters are used for file names or as long as all writers and readers
of the media use the same character set.
Outside these constraints it may be necessary to let xorriso convert byte
codes.
.br
A conversion from input character set to the output character set is
performed when an ISO image gets written.
Vice versa there is a conversion from output character set to the
input character set when an ISO image gets loaded.
The sets can be defined by options -input-charset and -output-charset,
if needed.
.br
.TP
\fB\-input-charset\fR character_set_name
Set the character set from which to convert disk file names when
inserting them into the ISO image.
.TP
\fB\-output-charset\fR character_set_name
Set the character set from which to convert names of loaded ISO images
and to which to convert names when writing ISO images.
.TP
.B Jigdo Template Extraction:
.PP
From man genisoimage:
"Jigdo is a tool to help in the distribution of large files like CD and
DVD images; see http://atterer.net/jigdo/ for more details. Debian CDs
and DVD ISO images are published on the web in jigdo format to allow
end users to download them more efficiently."
.br
If the use of libjte was enabled at compile time of xorriso, then
xorrisofs can produce a .jigdo and a .template file together with a
single-session ISO image. If not, then Jigdo options will cause a
FAILURE event, which normally leads to program abort.
.br
One may determine the ability for Jigdo by:
.br
$ xorrisofs -version 2>&1 | grep '^libjte' && echo YES
.br
.PP
The .jigdo file contains checksums and symbolic file addresses.
The .template file contains the compressed ISO image with reference tags
instead of the content bytes of the listed files.
.br
Input for this process are the normal arguments for a xorrisofs session
with no image loaded, and a .md5 file which lists those data files which may be
listed in the .jigdo file and externally referenced in the .template file.
Each designated file is represented in the .md5 file by a single text line:
.br
MD5 as 32 hex digits, 2 blanks, size as 12 decimal digits or blanks, 2 blanks,
symbolic file address
.br
The file address in an .md5 line has to bear the same basename as the
disk_path of the file which it shall match. The directory path of
the file address is decisive for To=From mapping, not for file recognition.
After eventual To=From mapping, the file address gets written into the .jigdo
file. Jigdo restore tools will convert these addresses into really
reachable data source addresses from which they can read.
.br
If the list of jigdo parameters is not empty, then eventual padding will be
counted as part of the ISO image.
.br
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-jigdo\fR disk_path
Set the disk_path for the .jigdo file with the checksums
and download addresses for filling the holes in .template.
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-template\fR disk_path
Set the disk_path for the .template file with the
holed and compressed ISO image copy.
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-min-file-size\fR size
Set the minimum size for a data file to be listed
in the .jigdo file and being a hole in the .template file.
size may be a plain number counting bytes, or a number with appended
letter "k", "m", "g" to count KiB (1024 bytes), MiB (1024 KiB), or
GiB (1024 MiB).
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-force-md5\fR disk_path_pattern
adds a regular expression pattern which will get compared
with the absolute disk_path of any data file that was not found in the .md5
list. A match causes a MISHAP event, which normally does not abort the
program run but finally causes a non-zero exit value of the program.
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-exclude\fR disk_path_pattern
Add a regular expression pattern which will get compared
with the absolute disk_path of any data file. A match causes the file to
stay in .template in any case.
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-map\fR To=From
Add a string pair of the form To=From to the parameter list.
If a data file gets listed in the .jigdo file, then it is referred by the
file address from its line in the .md5 file. This file address gets checked
whether it begins with the From string. If so, then this string will be
replaced by the To string and a ':' character, before it goes into the .jigdo
file. The From string should end by a '/' character.
.TP
\fB\-md5-list\fR disk_path
Set the disk_path where to find the .md5 input file.
.TP
\fB\-jigdo-template-compress\fR "gzip"|"bzip2"
Choose one of "bzip2" or "gzip" for the compression of
the template file. The jigdo file is put out uncompressed.
.TP
\fB\-checksum_algorithm_iso\fR list_of_names
Choose one or more of "md5", "sha1", "sha256", "sha512"
for the auxiliary "# Image Hex" checksums in the .jigdo file. The list_of_names
may e.g. look like "md5,sha1,sha512". Value "all" chooses all available
algorithms.
Note that MD5 stays always enabled.
.TP
\fB\-checksum_algorithm_template\fR list_of_names
Choose the algorithms for the "# Template Hex" checksums in the .jigdo file.
The rules for list_of_names are the same as with -checksum_algorithm_iso.
.TP
.B Miscellaneous options:
.TP
\fB\-print-size\fR
Print to stdandard output the foreseeable number of 2048 byte blocks in
the emerging ISO image. Do not produce this image.
.br
The result depends on several settings.
.br
If option --emul-toc is given, then padding (see -pad) is not
counted as part of the image size. In this case either use -no-pad or
add 150 (= 300 KiB) to the resulting number.
.TP
\fB--no_rc\fR
Only if used as first argument this option
prevents reading and interpretation of eventual startup
files. See section FILES below.
.TP
\fB\-help\fR
.br
List supported options to stderr. Original mkisofs options bear their
original mkisofs description texts.
.TP
\fB\-quiet\fR
.br
Suppress most messages of the program run, except those which indicate
problems or errors.
.TP
\fB\-v\fR
.br
Enable the output of informational program messages.
.TP
\fB\-verbose\fR
Alias of -v.
.TP
\fB\-version\fR
Print to standard output a text that begins with
.br
"mkisofs 2.01-Emulation Copyright (C)"
.br
and to standard error the version information of xorriso.
.br
.SH EXAMPLES
.SS
.B Overview of examples:
A simple image production run
.br
Set ISO image paths by -graft-points
.br
Perform multi-session runs
.br
Let xorrisofs work underneath growisofs
.br
Incremental backup of a few directory trees
.br
Incremental backup with accumulated trees
.br
Create bootable images for PC-BIOS
.br
.SS
.B A simple image production run
A prepared file tree in directory ./for_iso gets copied into the root
directory of the ISO image. File permissions get set to read-only for
everybody.
Joliet attributes for Microsoft systems get added.
The resulting image gets written as data file ./image.iso on disk.
.br
$ xorrisofs -r -J -o ./image.iso ./for_iso
.SS
.B Set ISO image paths by -graft-points
Without option -graft-points each given disk file is copied into the root
directory of the ISO image, maintaining its name. If a directory is given,
then its files and sub-directories are copied into the root directory,
maintaining their names.
.br
$ xorrisofs ... /home/me/datafile /tmp/directory
.br
yields in the ISO image root directory:
.br
/datafile
.br
/file_1_from_directory
.br
...
.br
/file_N_from_directory
.br
.sp 1
With option -graft-points it is possible to put files and directories to
arbitrary paths in the ISO image.
.br
$ xorrisofs ... -graft-points /home/me/datafile /dir=/tmp/directory
.br
yields in the ISO image root directory:
.br
/datafile
.br
/dir
.br
Eventually needed parent directories in
the image will be created automatically:
.br
/datafiles/file1=/home/me/datafile
.br
yields in the ISO image:
.br
/datafiles/file1
.br
The attributes of directory /datafiles get copied from /home/me on disk.
.br
.sp 1
Normally one should avoid = and \\ characters in the ISO part of a pathspec.
But if it must be, one may escape them:
.br
/with_\\=_and_\\\\/file=/tmp/directory/file
.br
yields in the ISO image:
.br
/with_=_and_\\/file
.SS
.B Perform multi-session runs
This example works for multi-session media only:
CD-R[W], DVD-R[W], DVD+R, BD-R.
Add cdrskin option --grow_overwriteable_iso
to all -as cdrecord runs
in order to enable multi-session emulation on overwriteable media.
.br
The first session is written like this:
.br
$ xorrisofs -graft-points \\
.br
/tree1=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
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
.br
$ m=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
.br
$ xorrisofs -M /dev/sr0 -C $m -graft-points \\
.br
/tree2=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 /dev/sr0. Its device driver might not be aware
of the changed content before it loads the media again.
In this case the previous session would not be loaded and the
new session would contain only the newly added files.
.br
For the same reason do not let xorriso -as cdrecord load the media,
but rather do this manually or by a program that reads from /dev/sr0.
.SS
.B Let xorrisofs work underneath growisofs
growisofs expects an ISO formatter program which understands options -C and
-M. A variable is defined to override the hardcoded default name.
.br
$ export MKISOFS="xorrisofs"
.br
$ growisofs -Z /dev/dvd /some/files
.br
$ 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
$ ln -s $(which xorriso) "$HOME/xorrisofs"
.br
$ 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
$ growisofs -Z /dev/dvd --for_backup -- \\
.br
outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
.br
$ growisofs -M /dev/dvd --for_backup -- \\
.br
outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
.br
Note that --for_backup is given in the mkisofs emulation.
To preserve the recorded extra data it must already be in effect, when
the emulation loads the image.
.SS
.B Incremental backup of a few directory trees
This changes the directory trees /open_source_project and /personal_mail
in the ISO image so that they become exact copies of their disk counterparts.
ISO file objects get created, deleted or get their attributes adjusted
accordingly.
.br
ACL, xattr, hard links and MD5 checksums will be recorded.
It is expected that inode numbers in the disk filesystem are persistent
over cycles of mounting and booting.
Files with names matching *.o or *.swp get excluded explicitly.
.br
.sp 1
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
Do not let xorriso -as cdrecord load the media,
but rather do this manually or by a program that reads from /dev/sr0.
.br
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
.br
$ msinfo=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
.br
$ load_opts=
.br
$ test -n "$msinfo" && load_opts="-M /dev/sr0 -C $msinfo"
.br
$ xorrisofs $load_opts -o - --for_backup -m '*.o' -m '*.swp' \\
.br
-V PROJ_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" -graft-points \\
.br
-old-root / \\
.br
/projects=/home/thomas/projects \\
.br
/personal_mail=/home/thomas/personal_mail \\
.br
| xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v -multi -waiti -eject -
.br
.sp 1
This makes sense if the full backup leaves substantial remaining capacity
on media and if the expected changes are much smaller than the full backup.
.br
.sp 1
\fBBetter do not use your youngest backup for -old-root\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.
.br
.sp 1
If inode numbers on disk are not persistent, then use
option --old-root-no-ino .
In this case an update run will compare recorded MD5
sums against the current file content on hard disk.
.br
.sp 1
With \fBmount\fR option \fB\-o "sbsector="\fR on GNU/Linux
resp. \fB\-s\fR on FreeBSD
it is possible to access the session trees which represent the older backup
versions. With CD media, GNU/Linux mount accepts session numbers directly by
its option "session=".
.br
Multi-session media and most overwriteable media written by xorriso can tell
the sbsectors of their sessions by xorriso option -toc:
.br
$ xorriso -dev /dev/sr0 -toc
.br
xorriso can print the matching mount command for a session number:
.br
$ xorriso -mount_cmd /dev/sr0 session 12 /mnt
.br
or for a volume id that matches a search expression:
.br
$ xorriso -mount_cmd /dev/sr0 volid '*2008_12_05*' /mnt
.br
Both yield on standard output something like:
.br
mount -t iso9660 -o nodev,noexec,nosuid,ro,sbsector=1460256 '/dev/sr0' '/mnt'
.br
The superuser may let xorriso execute the mount command directly:
.br
# osirrox -mount /dev/sr0 "volid" '*2008_12_05*' /mnt
.SS
.B Incremental backup with accumulated trees
Solaris does not offer the option to mount older sessions.
In order to keep them accessible, one may map all files to a file tree under
a session directory and accumulate those directories from session to session.
The -root tree is cloned from the -old-root tree before it gets
compared with the appropriate trees on disk.
.br
This demands to know the previously used session directory name.
.br
With the first session:
.br
$ xorrisofs -root /session1 \\
.br
-o - --for_backup -m '*.o' -m '*.swp' \\
.br
-V PROJ_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" -graft-points \\
.br
/projects=/home/thomas/projects \\
.br
/personal_mail=/home/thomas/personal_mail \\
.br
| xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v blank=as_needed \\
.br
-multi -waiti -eject -
.br
.sp 1
With the second session, option -old-root refers to /session1 and the
new -root is /session2.
.br
Do not let xorriso -as cdrecord load the media,
but rather do this manually or by a program that reads from /dev/sr0.
.br
$ dd if=/dev/sr0 count=1 >/dev/null 2>&1
.br
$ msinfo=$(xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -msinfo)
.br
$ load_opts=
.br
$ test -n "$msinfo" && load_opts="-M /dev/sr0 -C $msinfo"
.br
$ xorrisofs $load_opts -root /session2 -old-root /session1 \\
.br
-o - --for_backup -m '*.o' -m '*.swp' \\
.br
-V PROJ_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" -graft-points \\
.br
/projects=/home/thomas/projects \\
.br
/personal_mail=/home/thomas/personal_mail \\
.br
| xorriso -as cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v -multi -waiti -eject -
.br
With the third session, option -old-root refers to /session2.
The new -root is /session3. And so on.
.SS
.B Create bootable images for PC-BIOS
The ISOLINUX wiki prescribes to create on disk a directory ./CD_root and
to copy all desired files underneath that directory. Especially file
isolinux.bin shall be copied to ./CD_root/isolinux/isolinux.bin .
This is the boot image file.
.br
The prescribed mkisofs options can be used unchanged with xorrisofs:
.br
$ xorrisofs -o output.iso \\
.br
-b isolinux/isolinux.bin -c isolinux/boot.cat \\
.br
-no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table \\
.br
./CD_root
.br
Put it on CD by a burn program. E.g.:
.br
$ xorriso -as cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 blank=as_needed output.iso
.br
.sp 1
The image from above example will boot from CD, DVD or BD, but not from
USB stick or other hard-disk-like devices. This can be done by help of an
isohybrid MBR. Syslinux provides matching template files
as isohdp[fp]x*.bin . E.g. /usr/lib/syslinux/isohdpfx.bin .
.br
If a few hundred KB of size do not matter, then option -partition_offset
can be used to create a partition table where partition 1 starts not
at block 0. This facilitates later manipulations of the USB stick by
tools for partitioning and formatting.
.br
The image from the following example will be prepared for booting via MBR
and its first parttion will start at hard disk block 64.
.br
It will also boot from optical media.
.br
$ xorrisofs -o output.iso \\
-b isolinux/isolinux.bin -c isolinux/boot.cat \\
-no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table \\
.br
-isohybrid-mbr /usr/lib/syslinux/isohdpfx.bin \\
.br
-partition_offset 16 \\
.br
./CD_root
.br
Become superuser and copy the image to the unpartitioned base device file
of the USB stick. On GNU/Linux this is e.g. /dev/sdb, not /dev/sdb1.
.br
CAUTION:
This will overwrite any eventual partitioning on the USB stick and make
remaining data unaccessible.
.br
So first make sure you got the correct address of the intended device.
E.g. by reading 100 MiB data from it and watching it blinking:
.br
# dd bs=2K if=/dev/sdb count=50K >/dev/null
.br
Now copy the image onto it
.br
# dd bs=2K if=output.iso of=/dev/sdb
.br
.SH FILES
.SS
.B Startup files:
.br
If not --no_rc is given as the first argument then xorrisofs
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 here, but none of them is required
to exist. The lines are not interpreted as xorrisofs options but as generic
xorriso commands. See man xorriso.
.PP
After the xorriso startup files, the program tries one by one to open for
reading:
.br
./.mkisofsrc
.br
$MKISOFSRC
.br
$HOME/.mkisofsrc
.br
$(dirname $0)/.mkisofsrc
.br
On success it interprets the file content and does not try further files.
The last address is used only if start argument 0 has a non-trivial dirname.
.br
The reader currently interprets the following NAME=VALUE pairs:
.br
APPI default for -A
.br
PUBL default for -publisher
.br
SYSI default for -sysid
.br
VOLI default for -V
.br
VOLS default for -volset
.br
Any other lines will be silently ignored.
.br
.SH SEE ALSO
.TP
For generic xorriso command mode
.BR xorriso(1)
.TP
For mounting xorriso generated ISO 9660 images (-t iso9660)
.BR mount(8)
.TP
Other programs which produce ISO 9660 images
.BR mkisofs(8),
.BR genisoimage(8)
.TP
Programs which burn sessions to optical media
.BR growisofs(1),
.BR cdrecord(1),
.BR wodim(1),
.BR cdrskin(1),
.BR xorriso(1)
.TP
ACL and xattr
.BR getfacl(1),
.BR setfacl(1),
.BR getfattr(1),
.BR setfattr(1)
.TP
MD5 checksums
.BR md5sum(1)
.SH AUTHOR
Thomas Schmitt <scdbackup@gmx.net>
.br
for libburnia-project.org
.SH COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2011 Thomas Schmitt
.br
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.
.SH CREDITS
xorrisofs is in part based on work by Vreixo Formoso who provides libisofs
together with Mario Danic who also leads the libburnia team.
.br
Compliments towards Joerg Schilling whose cdrtools served me for ten years.