124 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
124 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
===============================================================================
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ISO/IEC 9660:1999 Cookbook
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===============================================================================
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Creation date: 2008-Jan-14
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Author: Vreixo Formoso
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_______________________________________________________________________________
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Contents:
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---------
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1. References
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2. General
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3. Features
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4. Implementation
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5. Known implementation bugs and specification ambiguities/problems
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1. References:
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Meanwhile this is specified in ECMA-119 4th Edition of 2019 by the description
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of the Enhanced Volume Descriptor.
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The old name "ISO 9660:1999" comes from:
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ISO/IEC DIS 9660:1999(E) "Information processing. Volume and file structure of
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CD-ROM for Information Interchange"
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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2. General
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ISO 9660:1999, also known as ISO-9660 version 2 is an update of the old
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ISO 9660:1988 standard for writing data images for CD.
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In the same way Joliet does, it is based on a Secondary Volume Descriptor (that
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is called Enhanced Volume Descriptor), that provides a second tree where the
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new file information is recorded.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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3. Features
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It makes some improvements with respect to ECMA-119, mainly related to relax
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the constraints imposed by its predecessor.
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- It removes the limit to the deep of the directory hierarchy (6.8.2.1).
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However, it still keep a limit to the path length, of 255 characters as in
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ECMA-119.
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- File names don't need the version number (;1) anymore, and the "." and ";",
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used as SEPARATORS for extension and version number, have no special meaning
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now.
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- The file name max length is incremented to 207 bytes.
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- The file name is not restricted to d-characters.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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4. Implementation
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ISO 9660:1999 is very similar to old ISO 9660:1988 (ECMA-119). It needs two
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tree hierarchies: one, identified by the Primary Volume Descriptor, is recorded
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in the same way that an ECMA-119 structure.
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The second structure is identified by a Enhanced Volume Descriptor (8.5). The
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structure is exactly like defined in ECMA-119, with the exceptions named above.
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Thus, to write an ISO 9660:1999:
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- First 16 blocks are set to 0.
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- Block 16 identifies a PVD (8.4), associated with a directory structure
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written following ECMA-119.
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- It is needed a Enhanced Volume descriptor to describe the additional
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structure. It is much like a SVD, with version number set to 2 to identify
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this new version.
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- We can also write boot records (El-Torito) and additional SVD (Joliet).
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- We write a Volume Descriptor Set Terminator (8.3)
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- We write directory structure and path tables (L and M) for both ECMA-119
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tree and enhanced tree. Path table record and directory record format is
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the same in both structures. However, ECMA-119 is constrained by the usual
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restrictions.
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- And write the contents of the files.
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Interchange levels 1, 2 and 3 are also defined. For PVD tree, they have the
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same meaning as in ECMA-119. For EVD tree, in levels 1 and 2 files are
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restricted to one file section (i.e., 4 GB filesize limit). In level 3 we can
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have more than one section per file. Level 1 does not impose other
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restrictions than that in the EVD tree.
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It seems that both El-Torito and Joliet can coexist in a ISO 9660:1999 image.
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However, Joliet has no utility at all in this kind of images, as it has no
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benefit over ISO 9660:1999, and it is more restrictive in filename length.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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5. Known implementation bugs and specification ambiguities/problems
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- While the specification clearly states that the tree speficied by the Primary
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Volume Descriptor should remain compatible with ISO-9660 (ECMA-119), i.e., it
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should be constrained by ECMA-119 restrictions, some image generation
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applications out there just make both Primary and Enhanced Volume Descriptors
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to point to the same directory structure. That is a specification violation, as
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for a) the directory hierarchy specified in the Primary Volume Descriptor
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doesn't follow the restrictions specified in the specs, and b) the same
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directories are part of two different hiearchies (6.8.3 "A directory shall not
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be a part of more than one Directory Hierarchy.").
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Thus, we should keep two trees as we do with Joliet. Or are there strong
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reasons against this?
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- It's not very clear what characters are allowed for files and dir names. For
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the tree identified in the Enhanced Volume Descriptor, it seems that a
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"sequence of characters rather than d-characters or d1-characters" is allowed.
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It also seems that the charset is determined by the escape sequence in the
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EVD. Anyway, leaving escape sequence to 0 and use any user-specified sequence
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(such as UTF-8) seems a good solution and is what many other applications do.
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Linux correctly mounts the images in this case.
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- It is not clear if RR extensions are allowed in the tree identified by the
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Enhanced Volume Descriptor. However, it seems not a good idea. With 207 bytes
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filenames and XA extensions, there is no place for RR entries in the directory
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records of the enhanced tree. In my opinion, RR extension should be attached to
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the ECMA-119 tree that must also be written to image.
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