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<H1>GNU xorriso</H1>
<H2>ISO 9660 Rock Ridge Filesystem Manipulator<BR>
for GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris</H2>
</P>
</CENTER>
<P>
<H2>Purpose:</H2>
xorriso copies file objects from POSIX compliant filesystems
into Rock Ridge enhanced ISO 9660 filesystems and allows
session-wise manipulation of such filesystems. It can load the management
information of existing ISO images and it writes the session results to
optical media or to filesystem objects.
<BR>
Vice versa xorriso is able to copy file objects out of ISO 9660 filesystems.
</P>
<P>
<HR>
<A HREF="#download">Direct hop to download links -></A>
<P>
<H2>Hardware requirements:</H2>
About any CD, DVD, or BD recorder produced in the recent ten years.
<BR>
<A HREF="http://libburnia-project.org">libburn</A>
supports recorders which are compliant to standards MMC-1 for CD and
MMC-5 for DVD or BD.
<BR>
GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris allow to access drives connected
via SCSI, PATA (aka IDE, ATA), USB, or SATA.
<BR>
xorriso also operates on ISO images in data files or block devices.
Images or add-on sessions may be written to about any kind of file object.
</P>
<P>
<H2>Software requirements :</H2>
<DL>
<DT>GNU/Linux with kernel 2.4 or higher, libc, libpthread :</DT>
<DD>With kernel 2.4 a PATA/IDE drive has to be under ide-scsi emulation.</DD>
<DD>With kernel 2.6 ide-scsi is not needed.</DD>
<DT>or FreeBSD, libc, libpthread :</DT>
<DD>PATA/IDE drives need atapicam running.</DD>
<DD>SATA drives need atapicam running or need to be driven by ahci.</DD>
<DD>libcam has to be installed.</DD>
<DD>libiconv has to be installed.</DD>
<DT>or Solaris, libc, libpthread :</DT>
<DD>Tested on kernel 5.11, hopefully suitable for older ones too.</DD>
<DT>or some other X/Open system, libc, libpthread :</DT>
<DD>
There will be no direct operation of optical drives, but only POSIX i/o
with objects of the local filesystem.
</DD>
<DD>
Might work with DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, BD-RE
but rather not with CD, DVD-R, DVD+R, BD-R.
</DD>
</DL>
<H3>Optional supporting software:</H2>
<DL>
<DT>libreadline and libreadline-dev</DT>
<DD>make dialog more convenient.</DD>
<DT>libacl and libacl-devel</DT>
<DD>allow on GNU/Linux to get and set ACLs.</DD>
<DT>zlib and zlib-devel</DT>
<DD>allow zisofs, gzip compression, and Jigdo file production.</DD>
<DT>libbz2 and libbz2-devel</DT>
<DD>allow bzip2 compression of Jigdo template files.</DD>
</DL>
</P>
<P>
This program has been tested on GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris systems.<BR>
For ports to other usable systems <A HREF="#contact">contact us</A>.
</P>
<HR>
<P>
<H2>Special features:</H2>
<UL>
<LI>
ISO 9660 formatter and burner for CD, DVD, BD are fixely integrated.
</LI>
<LI>
Operates on an existing ISO image or creates a new one.
</LI>
<LI>
Copies files from filesystem into the ISO image and vice versa.
</LI>
<LI>
Changes file properties, renames or deletes file objects in the ISO image.
</LI>
<LI>
Updates ISO subtrees incrementally to match given disk subtrees.
</LI>
<LI>
Can record and restore hard link relations, ACL, and xattr.
</LI>
<LI>
Can attach MD5 checksums to each data file and the whole session.
</LI>
<LI>
File content may get zisofs or gzip compressed or filtered by external
processes.
</LI>
<LI>
Can activate ISOLINUX and GRUB boot images by El Torito boot record and MBR.
</LI>
<LI>
Writes result as completely new image or as add-on session
to optical media or filesystem objects.
</LI>
<LI>
Can perform multi-session tasks as emulation of mkisofs and cdrecord.
</LI>
<LI>
Can issue commands to mount older sessions on GNU/Linux or FreeBSD.
</LI>
<LI>
Can check media for damages and copy readable blocks to disk.
</LI>
<LI>
Scans for optical drives, blanks re-useable optical media, formats media.
</LI>
<LI>
Suitable for:
CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-R DL, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+R DL, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM,
BD-R, BD-RE.
</LI>
<LI>
Reads its instructions from command line arguments, dialog, and batch files.
</LI>
<LI>
Provides navigation commands for interactive ISO image manipulation.
</LI>
</UL>
</P>
<P>
<H2>Command Examples:</H2>
<DL>
<DT>Get an overview of drives and their addresses</DT>
<DD>#<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -devices</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>...</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>0 -dev '/dev/sr0' rwrw-- : 'TSSTcorp' 'CDDVDW SH-S203B'</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>1 -dev '/dev/scd1' rwrw-- : 'PHILIPS ' 'SPD3300L'</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>2 -dev '/dev/hda' rwrw-- : 'HL-DT-ST' 'DVD-ROM GDR8162B'</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>...</KBD></DD>
<DT>Being superuser avoids permission problems with /dev/srN resp. /dev/hdX .
</DT>
<DT>Ordinary users should then get granted rw access to the /dev files
as listed by option -devices.</DT>
<DT>&nbsp;</DT>
<DT>Options are either performed as program arguments or as dialog input.
Some options have a parameter list of variable length. This list has to
be terminated by word '--' or by the end of the input line. Option -add
may accept pathspecs of form target=source as known from program mkisofs.</DT>
<HR>
<DT>Get info about a particular drive and loaded media:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -indev /dev/sr0 -du / -- -toc 2>&amp;1 | less</KBD></DD>
<DT>Make re-usable media writable again, delete any ISO 9660 image,
prepare yet unused BD-RE:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -outdev /dev/sr0 -blank as_needed -eject all</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>Write some directories into a new or existing ISO 9660 image:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -dev /dev/sr0 -add /home/me/sounds /home/me/pictures
</KBD></DD>
<DT>Have a look at the result:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -indev /dev/sr0 -du / -- -toc 2>&amp;1 | less</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>Create new ISO-9660 filesystem image, compose content,
adjust permissions to make it publicly read-only,
write it to media and immediately eject media without
previously reloading the written image.
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;cd /home/me</KBD></DD>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -outdev /dev/sr0 -blank as_needed \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-map /home/me/sounds /sounds \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-map /home/me/pictures /pictures \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-rm_r /sounds/indecent '/pictures/*private*' -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-cd / \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-add pictures/private/horses* -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-chmod_r a+r,a-w / -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-find / -type d -exec chmod a+x -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-volid SOUNDS_PICS_2008_01_16 \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-commit_eject all</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>Load the previous session from media,
remove (i.e. hide) directory /sounds,
rename /pictures/private/horses,
add new directory trees /sounds and /movies,
disallow any access for group and others.
Finally write as additional session to media and eject:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -dev /dev/sr0 \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-rm_r /sounds -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-mv /pictures/private/horses /horse_show -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-map /home/me/prepared_for_dvd/sounds_dummy /sounds \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-map /home/me/prepared_for_dvd/movies /movies \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-chmod_r go-rwx / -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-volid SOUNDS_PICS_2008_01_17 \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-commit_eject all</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>Merge the various sessions from old readable media into a single session
on new writeable media,
cleaning out all invalidated files and session overhead.
Touch / in order to mark the image as worth to be written.
<BR>
Important: -indev and -outdev have to be different drives.
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -indev /dev/dvd \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-alter_date a +0 / -- \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-outdev /dev/sr0 -blank fast \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;-commit_eject all</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>Dialog mode accepts one or more options per line. An option and all its
arguments have to be given in one single line. Backslash may be used to mark
a line as incomplete so it gets continued by the next input line.
<BR>
Command -end stops the program run. It will write pending changes
to media, if that has not already been done by a previous -commit.</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -dialog on</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>enter option and arguments :</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD><B>-dev /dev/sr0</B></KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>enter option and arguments :</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD><B>-map /home/me/prepared_for_dvd/sounds_dummy /sounds</B></KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>enter option and arguments :</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD><B>-map /home/me/prepared_for_dvd/movies \</B></KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>Trailing backslash : Enter rest of line (or @@@ to clear it) :
</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD><B> /movies</B></KBD></DD>
<DD>Available navigation commands: -cd, -ls, -du, -find</DD>
<DD><KBD>enter option and arguments :</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD><B>-commit</B></KBD></DD>
<DD>... perform further commands and finally do:</DD>
<DD><KBD>enter option and arguments :</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD><B>-end</B></KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>The following command performs incremental backup.
It can be run on blank media to create a copy of the mentioned disk
directory trees, and it can be run on appendable media to perform a
minimal set of change operations which update the old ISO copies
to match the new disk trees.
Older states can be retrieved by help of mount options like "sbsector="
or by help of xorriso option -mount.
<BR>
Eventual ACL, xattr and hardlink relations will be recorded. MD5 checksums
will be computed and recorded. Data comparison will be avoided by accelerator
option -disk_dev_ino. After writing, the new session will be checked
by its recorded MD5.
<BR>
Only blank media or media with volume id "PROJECTS_MAIL_..." will be accepted.
Files with names ending by ".o" or ".swp" are excluded by options -not_leaf.
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -for_backup -disk_dev_ino on \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -assert_volid 'PROJECTS_MAIL_*' FATAL \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -dev /dev/sr0 \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -volid PROJECTS_MAIL_"$(date '+%Y_%m_%d_%H%M%S')" \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -not_leaf '*.o' -not_leaf '*.swp' \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -update_r /home/thomas/projects /projects \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -update_r /home/thomas/personal_mail /personal_mail \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -commit -toc -check_md5 FAILURE -- -eject all</KBD></DD>
<DT>
To apply zisofs compression to those data files which get newly copied from
the local filesystem, perform immediately before -commit :
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -hardlinks perform_update \</KBD></DD>
<DD>
<KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -find / -type f -pending_data -exec set_filter --zisofs -- \</KBD></DD>
</DD>
</DT>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>
Operating systems usually mount the most recent session on media.
xorriso can issue the appropriate mount commands for older sessions.
First get an overview of the sessions on the media:
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -outdev /dev/sr0 -toc</KBD></DD>
<PRE>
TOC layout : Idx , sbsector , Size , Volume Id
ISO session : 1 , 0 , 104719s , PROJECTS_MAIL_2008_08_10_231435
ISO session : 2 , 106928 , 6785s , PROJECTS_MAIL_2008_08_14_184548
...
ISO session : 76 , 820384 , 11035s , PROJECTS_MAIL_2009_01_04_191150
</PRE>
<DT>
Then become superuser and let xorriso mount the session of August 14, 2008
to directory /mnt:
</DT>
<DD>#<KBD>
&nbsp;xorriso -osirrox on -mount /dev/sr0 volid '*_2008_08_14_*' /mnt
</KBD></DD>
<DT>
To be later unmounted by: <KBD>umount /mnt</KBD>
</DT>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>
After the user has already created a suitable file tree on disk
and copied the ISOLINUX files into subdirectory ./boot/isolinux of
that tree, xorriso can burn an El Torito bootable media:
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -outdev /dev/sr0 -blank as_needed \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -map /home/me/ISOLINUX_prepared_tree / \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -boot_image isolinux dir=/boot/isolinux</KBD></DD>
<DT>
An additional MBR is generated if the file isolinux.bin is modern enough
(syslinux version 3.72) and ready for "isohybrid". An MBR enables booting
from hard disk or USB stick.
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>ISO images may not only be stored on optical media but also in
regular disk files or block devices for full multi-session operation.
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -dev /tmp/regular_file ...other.options...</DD>
<DT>
A default setting for safety reasons requires that files below /dev/
need prefix &quot;stdio:&quot; if they do not lead to MMC burner devices.
Be cautious not to overwrite your hard disk instead of your USB stick:
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -dev stdio:/dev/sdb ...other.options...</DD>
<DT>Other file types are suitable only for writing but not for reading:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -outdev /tmp/named_pipe ...other.options...</DD>
<DT>In batch mode it is possible to operate xorriso in a pipeline
with an external consumer of the generated ISO image. Any message
output will be redirected to stderr in this case.
Examples for consumers are cdrecord or growisofs on operating systems
where xorriso cannot operate the burner drive directly,
or a ssh pipe to another system which has the desired drive
and a suitable burn program.</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -outdev - ...other.options... | consumer</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>
Let xorriso serve underneath growisofs via its alias name "xorrisofs"
which enables mkisofs emulation:
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;export MKISOFS="xorrisofs"</KBD></DD>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;growisofs -Z /dev/dvd /some/files</KBD></DD>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;growisofs -M /dev/dvd /more/files</KBD></DD>
<DT>
One may switch from mkisofs emulation to xorriso's own command mode:
</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;growisofs -M /dev/dvd -- outdev - -update_r /my/files /files
</KBD></DD>
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>If for any reason the reading operating system mishandles the ISO image
or some files in it, one may enable reverse operation of xorriso and copy
files or trees to disk:
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;xorriso -acl on -xattr on \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -indev /dev/sr0 \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -osirrox on \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -cpx '/pictures/private/horses*/*buttercup*' \</KBD></DD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; /home/her/buttercup_dir -- \</KBD>
<DD><KBD>&nbsp;&nbsp; -extract /sounds /home/her/sounds_from_me</KBD></DD>
</DD>
<DT>Each copy command processes its files sorted by block address
in the ISO image in order to reduce head moves with optical media.
This can bring effective read performance near to the raw media reading speed.
</DT>
<DT>Consider to enter dialog mode and use commands like
<KBD>-cd , -du , -lsl , -find<KBD>.
<DT>
<HR>
</DT>
<DT>Get overview of the options:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;<A HREF="xorriso_help">xorriso -help</A></KBD></DD>
<DT>Read the detailed manual page:</DT>
<DD>$<KBD>&nbsp;<A HREF="man_1_xorriso.html">man xorriso</A></KBD></DD>
</DL>
</P>
<HR>
<A NAME="download"></A>
<P>
<DL>
<DT><H3>Download as source code (see README):</H3></DT>
<DD><A HREF="xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz">xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz</A>
(1930 KB).
</DD>
<DD>(Released 8 Aug 2011)</DD>
<DD><A HREF="xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz.sig">xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz.sig</A></DD>
<DD>
(detached GPG signature for verification by
<KBD>gpg --verify xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz.sig xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz</KBD>
<BR>
after <KBD>gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys ABC0A854</KBD>).
</DD>
<DD>
Also on <A HREF="http://www.gnu.org/prep/ftp.html">
mirrors of ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ </A>
as xorriso/xorriso-1.1.4.tar.gz
</DD>
</DL>
</DD>
</DL>
<DL><DT>Documentation:</DT>
<DD><A HREF="README_xorriso">README</A> about installation and drive setup</DD>
<DD><A HREF="xorriso_help">xorriso -help</A> gives an overview of options</DD>
<DD><A HREF="xorrisofs_help">xorriso -as mkisofs -help</A>
supported options of mkisofs emulation
</DD>
<DD><A HREF="xorrecord_help">xorriso -as cdrecord -help</A>
supported options of cdrecord emulation</DD>
<DD><A HREF="man_1_xorriso.html">man xorriso</A> is the manual page</DD>
<DD><A HREF="man_1_xorrisofs_devel.html">man xorrisofs</A>
describes the mkisofs emulation</DD>
</DL>
<A NAME="contact"></A>
<DL><DT>Contact:</DT>
<DD>GNU xorriso support mailing list,
<A HREF="mailto:bug-xorriso@gnu.org">bug-xorriso@gnu.org</A></DD>
<DD>libburnia development mailing list,
<A HREF="mailto:libburn-hackers@pykix.org">libburn-hackers@pykix.org</A></DD>
<DD>Thomas Schmitt, <A HREF="mailto:scdbackup@gmx.net">scdbackup@gmx.net</A></DD>
</DL>
<DL><DT>License:</DT>
<DD><A HREF="COPYING_xorriso">GPL version 3 or later.</A>
</DD>
<DD>&nbsp;</DD>
</DL>
</P>
<HR>
<P>
Bug fixes towards xorriso-1.1.2:
<UL>
<LI>xorriso native mode on some drives wrote unreadble ISO images to CD</LI>
<LI>-assert_volid did not work. Regression since version 1.1.0.</LI>
<LI>-acl or -xattr worked with -extract only on Linux and FreeBSD</LI>
<!--
<LI>- none -</LI>
-->
</UL>
</P>
<!--
<P>
Bug fixes in xorriso-1.1.0.pl01 towards xorriso-1.1.0:
<UL>
<LI>
</LI>
</UL>
</P>
-->
<P>
Enhancements towards previous stable version xorriso-1.1.2:
<UL>
<LI>
New option -device_links
</LI>
<!--
<LI>- none -</LI>
-->
</UL>
</P>
<HR>
<P>
<H3>
Software copies included in GNU xorriso:
</H3>
<DL>
<DT>
GNU xorriso is feature-wise equivalent to the dynamic compilation of
<A HREF="http://libburnia-project.org/"> libburnia </A>
libraries, libjte, and libburnia program xorriso.
It restricts itself to a technical form where the legal commitments of the
libburnia project and the legal intentions of
<A HREF="http://www.fsf.org/"> FSF </A> match completely.
</DT>
<DD>&nbsp;</DD>
<DT>libburn-1.1.4</DT>
<DD>reads and writes data from and to CD, DVD, BD.</DD>
<DD>(founded by Derek Foreman and Ben Jansens,
developed and maintained since August 2006 by
Thomas Schmitt from team of libburnia-project.org)</DD>
<DT>libisofs-1.1.4</DT>
<DD>operates on ISO 9660 filesystem images.</DD>
<DD>(By Vreixo Formoso, Mario Danic and Thomas Schmitt
from team of libburnia-project.org)</DD>
<DT>libisoburn-1.1.4</DT>
<DD>coordinates libburn and libisofs, emulates multi-session where needed,
and hosts the original source code of program xorriso.</DD>
<DD>It provides the complete functionality of xorriso via
a C language API.</DD>
<DD>(By Vreixo Formoso and Thomas Schmitt
from team of libburnia-project.org)</DD>
<DT>libjte-1.0.0</DT>
<DD>produces jigdo and template file together with the emerging ISO image.</DD>
<DD>(By Free Software Foundation, Steve McIntyre, George Danchev,
Thomas Schmitt)</DD>
<DD>&nbsp;</DD>
<DT>The source code of this software is independent of
cdrecord and mkisofs.</DT>
</DL>
</P>
<HR>
<P>
<DL>
<DT><H3>Development snapshot, version 1.1.5 :</H3></DT>
<DD>Bug fixes towards xorriso-1.1.4:
<UL>
<LI>-extract_single extracted directory content</LI>
<LI>-extract was not immediately aborted if -abort_on was triggered</LI>
<LI>xorriso did not write to files in filesystems with >= 4 TB free space</LI>
<!--
<LI>- none yet -</LI>
-->
</UL>
</DD>
<DD>Enhancements towards stable version 1.1.4:
<UL>
<LI>- none yet -</LI>
<!--
-->
</UL>
</DD>
<DD>&nbsp;</DD>
<DD><A HREF="README_xorriso_devel">README 1.1.5</A>
<DD><A HREF="xorriso_help_devel">xorriso-1.1.5 -help</A></DD>
<DD><A HREF="xorrisofs_help_devel">xorriso-1.1.5 -as mkisofs -help</A></DD>
<DD><A HREF="xorrecord_help_devel">xorriso-1.1.5 -as cdrecord -help</A></DD>
<DD><A HREF="man_1_xorriso_devel.html">man xorriso (as of 1.1.5)</A></DD>
<DD><A HREF="man_1_xorrisofs_devel.html">man xorrisofs (as of 1.1.5)</A></DD>
<DD>&nbsp;</DD>
<DT>If you want to distribute development versions of xorriso, then use
this tarball which produces static linking between xorriso and the
libburnia libraries.
</DT>
<DD>Source (./bootstrap is already applied, build tested,
installation see README)
</DD>
<DD>
<A HREF="xorriso-1.1.5.tar.gz">xorriso-1.1.5.tar.gz</A>
(1930 KB).
</DD>
<DT>A dynamically linked development version of xorriso can be obtained
from repositories of
<A HREF="http://libburnia-project.org"> libburnia-project.org</A>.
xorriso is part of libisoburn/trunk and will get built by its "make".
</DT>
<DT>Be warned that the libraries in SVN and bzr are development versions with
possibly unstable API/ABI enhancements. Do not distribute development
versions for dynamic linking. Only release versions are safe for that.
</DT>
<DD>Download: <KBD><B>svn co http://svn.libburnia-project.org/libburn/trunk libburn</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DD>Install: <KBD><B>cd libburn ; ./bootstrap ; ./configure --prefix /usr ; make ; make install</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DD>Download:
<KBD><B>bzr branch lp:~libburnia-team/libisofs/scdbackup</B></KBD>
</DD>
<DD>Install: <KBD><B>cd libisofs ; ./bootstrap ; ./configure --prefix /usr ; make ; make install</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DD>Download: <KBD><B>svn co http://svn.libburnia-project.org/libisoburn/trunk libisoburn</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DD>Install: <KBD><B>cd libisoburn ; ./bootstrap ; ./configure --prefix /usr ; make ; make install</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DT>Build of SVN versions needs of at least version 1.7 installed.
But after the run of <KBD>./bootstrap</KBD>, only
vanilla tools like make and gcc are needed.
</DT>
<DT>GNU xorriso contains a copy of libjte-1.0.0 from package jigit
which produces jigdo and template file together with the emerging ISO image.
(By Free Software Foundation, Steve McIntyre, George Danchev,
Thomas Schmitt)
</DT>
<DD>Important: If desired, libjte has to be already installed when libisofs
and libisoburn get built.</DD>
<DD>Download: <KBD><B>wget http://www.einval.com/~steve/software/JTE/download/jigit_1.17.orig.tar.gz</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DD>Install: <KBD><B>tar xzf jigit_1.17.orig.tar.gz ; cd jigit-1.17 ; make ; make install</B>
</KBD></DD>
<DD>&nbsp;</DD>
</DL>
</P>
<HR>
<P>
Many thanks to Derek Foreman and Ben Jansens for starting libburn.
<BR>
Very special thanks to Andy Polyakov whose
<A HREF="http://fy.chalmers.se/~appro/linux/DVD+RW/tools">dvd+rw-tools</A>
provide the libburnia project with invaluable examples on how to deal
with DVD media and how to emulate multi-session on overwriteable media.
</P>
<HR>
<!-- The following links might lead to sites which do not comply
to the strict rules of FSF about non-free software.
GNU xorriso does not endorse or recommend any non-free software
which can be reached by them directly or indirectly. Nevertheless
outside of official GNU sites, GNU xorriso thanks the following
entities for their long standing support.
-->
<!-- Start not-www.gnu.org -->
<P>
<CENTER><FONT SIZE=+0>
<FONT SIZE=+0>
<A HREF="http://www.gnu.org">Dedicated to the GNU Operating System</A><BR>
Enjoying free hosting by<BR>
<A HREF="http://www.webframe.org">www.webframe.org</A><BR>
<A HREF="http://sourceforge.net">sourceforge.net</A><BR>
<!--
Enjoying a FreeBSD shell account with the opportunity to
build, install and test xorriso at<BR>
<A HREF="http://www.en.free-shells.com.ar">free-shells.com.ar</A>
-->
</FONT></CENTER>
</P>
<HR>
<DL>
<DT>Links to related free software projects of Thomas Schmitt:</DT>
<DD><A HREF=http://scdbackup.webframe.org/cdrskin_eng.html>
cdrskin, a cdrecord emulator</A></DD>
<DD><A HREF=http://scdbackup.webframe.org/main_eng.html>
scdbackup, multi volume CD/DVD/BD backup</A></DD>
<DL><DD><A HREF=http://scdbackup.sourceforge.net/main_eng.html>
(a second source of above)</A></DD></DL>
</DL>
<!-- End not-www.gnu.org -->
<BR>
Legal statement: This website does not serve any commercial purpose.
<BR><BR>
Copyright &copy; 2008 - 2011 Thomas Schmitt.
<BR>
This text is freely distributable. It shall only be modified in sync with
the factual properties of xorriso and its public storage locations.
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.
<DL>
<DT>Contact for issues of this web page or the described program:</DT>
<DD>Thomas Schmitt, <A HREF="mailto:scdbackup@gmx.net">scdbackup@gmx.net</A></DD>
<DD>GNU xorriso support mailing list,
<A HREF="mailto:bug-xorriso@gnu.org">bug-xorriso@gnu.org</A></DD>
<DD>libburnia development mailing list,
<A HREF="mailto:libburn-hackers@pykix.org">libburn-hackers@pykix.org</A></DD>
</DL>
</FONT>
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