Will do next time I get a windows-burnt disc in housejamesbond wrote:try do modprobe udf then mount the disc on command line "mount -t udf /dev/sr0 /mnt/cdrom"
Thank you
Sigmund
The only reason for using UDF (as I see it) is if your files are more than 4Gb. Else, a multisession with ISO9660 combined with an extended filesystem (Rockridge and/or Joliet) would be just perfect.Smithy wrote:If I can achieve the same thing with Pburn in a multisession way, that would do!
So i would try something likeMount options for udf
udf is the "Universal Disk Format" filesystem defined by the Optical Storage Technology Association, and is often used for DVD-ROM. See also iso9660.
gid=
Set the default group.
umask=
Set the default umask. The value is given in octal.
uid=
Set the default user.
unhide
Show otherwise hidden files.
undelete
Show deleted files in lists.
nostrict
Unset strict conformance.
iocharset
Set the NLS character set.
bs=
Set the block size. (May not work unless 2048.)
novrs
Skip volume sequence recognition.
session=
Set the CDROM session counting from 0. Default: last session.
anchor=
Override standard anchor location. Default: 256.
volume=
Override the VolumeDesc location. (unused)
partition=
Override the PartitionDesc location. (unused)
lastblock=
Set the last block of the filesystem.
fileset=
Override the fileset block location. (unused)
rootdir=
Override the root directory location. (unused)
Code: Select all
mkdir /mnt/DVD
mount-FULL -s -o nostrict /dev/sr0 /mnt/DVD
It's a compliment, really It means pburn works so well that I never need to see the innards to figure out what's wrong with itzigbert wrote:I guess that mean my coding is unreadablejamesbond wrote:Pburn is an awesome goodness that I only use but don't understand
Hi Zigbert, yes I am just burning data, wavs, .pod files (music application file) so I will try out multisession. If I was burning 4gb+ I would just burn a closed DVD.zigbert wrote:The only reason for using UDF (as I see it) is if your files are more than 4Gb. Else, a multisession with ISO9660 combined with an extended filesystem (Rockridge and/or Joliet) would be just perfect.Smithy wrote:If I can achieve the same thing with Pburn in a multisession way, that would do!
The above answer is only true if you mean audio-files written to a data-CD/DVD. If you on the other side actually mean an audio CD, you wouldn't use UDF, so ISO9660 would obviously also fail (Pburn supports burning Audio-CD). Audio-DVD is a completely different story. It is a set standard, but never active used. If this is what you are talking about, we have to dig deeper to learn more about the Audio-DVD specs.
Sigmund
Really dont know for the moment ..Master_wrong wrote:@Karl
i tested this to read udf disc burned by nero linux and it work.Code:
mkdir /mnt/DVD
mount-FULL -s -o nostrict /dev/sr0 /mnt/DVD
shouldnt this be implemented in puppy ?
Thanks
I believe all DVD-Video and Blu-Ray video discs are written using different versions of UDF. Not sure about commercially-released/retail data DVDs/BDs - I haven't checked, but they're probably also written using a UDF format (like ISO+UDF).musher0 wrote:Sorry to put the bushel in front of the light, but I'd like to ask what may be an essential question...
What is the utility of the UDF format nowadays ?
And its corollary:
What is the utility of having UDF in Puppy? (Besides reading data from UDF CD's burnt in Windows or other distros, of course.)
Thanks in advance.
Thank you Karl, that works in Lighthouse64 for a Windows 7 install disc I have. (udf kernel module was already loaded.)Master_wrong wrote:@Karli tested this to read udf disc burned by nero linux and it work.Code:
mkdir /mnt/DVD
mount-FULL -s -o nostrict /dev/sr0 /mnt/DVD
shouldnt this be implemented in puppy ?
Thanks
Oh god . disktype is heavy . But for comparison Windows Vista also fires the DVD drive up at DirectX/xwin $Windowmanger/boot .. and seems to automount. Have no idea about the commandline for windows though(used a "black 98" once and can remember windows fdisk command).tazoc wrote:Thank you Karl, that works in Lighthouse64 for a Windows 7 install disc I have. (udf kernel module was already loaded.)Master_wrong wrote:@Karli tested this to read udf disc burned by nero linux and it work.Code:
mkdir /mnt/DVD
mount-FULL -s -o nostrict /dev/sr0 /mnt/DVD
shouldnt this be implemented in puppy ?
Thanks
Unfortunately blkid and probepart just tells me its media type is 'iso-9660', so I don't know how to automate that in pmount. Is there a way to detect a UDF disc device from the command line, prior to mounting the disc?
-TaZoC
Code: Select all
file `which blkid`
/bin/blkid: symbolic link to `busybox'
BusyBox v1.19.4 (2012-04-19 16:14:01 GMT+1) multi-call binary.
Copyright (C) 1998-2011 Erik Andersen, Rob Landley, Denys Vlasenko
and others. Licensed under GPLv2.
See source distribution for full notice.
2:/dev/sr0: LABEL="SUSE9-2-V0-WINBM" TYPE="udf"
Code: Select all
/sbin/blkid -c /dev/null /dev/sr0
/dev/sr0: LABEL="SUSE9_2_V0_WINBM" TYPE="udf"
Code: Select all
/sbin/blkid -v
3:blkid 1.0.0 (12-Feb-2003)
Code: Select all
/usr/local/sbin/blkid -c /dev/null /dev/sr0
/dev/sr0: LABEL="SUSE9-2-V0-WINBM" TYPE="udf"
Code: Select all
/usr/local/sbin/blkid -v
*blkid from util-linux-ng 2.16.2 (libblkid 2.16.0, 10-Feb-2009)
Code: Select all
bash-4.1# blkid -v
blkid from util-linux 2.19 (libblkid 2.19.0, 10-Feb-2011)
bash-4.1# blkid /dev/sr1
/dev/sr1: LABEL="GRMCULXFRER_EN_DVD" TYPE="iso9660"
bash-4.1# blkid -p /dev/sr1
/dev/sr1: LABEL="UDF Volume" TYPE="udf" USAGE="filesystem"
bash-4.1# blkid --help 2>&1|grep 'superblocks'
-p low-level superblocks probing (bypass cache)