09-30-2010
...in other words, you almost never do. The ISO9660 file structure is not designed for modification, everything has a strictly defined place with no room to extend files or directories. (not the same thing as multisession.) You copy the whole file structure it somewhere else, modify that, and build a new image from it.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Tips and Tutorials
Many software packages can be downloaded in the form of an ISO image. ISO images can also be created from CD and saved as ISO images:
$ cat /dev/somecd > somename.iso
Rather than burning the image to a CD-ROM to access its contents, it is easy to mount the image directly into the filesystem... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kduffin
0 Replies
2. HP-UX
There is a HP APPOLLO series 700 workstation where I am working that runs some CAD/CAM software. The department has not upgraded, backup, or done anything with the box.
They have been using it this way for years.
It doesn't boot up now, seems like probably bad drive. It would be nice to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: camsoft
0 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I would like to mount an iso CD image on my Suse linux (SLES 9), the image has been copied to my suse linux machine.
am able to mount the iso image manually by mount -oloop /iso/SLES-9-i386-CD1.iso /free
but I would like to put the above entry in /etc/fstab so that when the machine is rebooted,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hassan1
2 Replies
4. Ubuntu
I want to install Ubuntu 7.10 and I have ISO image ubuntu-7.10-desktop-i386.iso .
How can I convert to a bootable CD on linux or on windows.
Thanks,
J. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: superuser84
5 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi All,
Please help me with this.
My plan is to create an ISO image of my current solaris 8 OS.Because we use a stripped out version of solaris 8 which is different than the standard one in CD. Will dd command will do ?
My idea is to create a VMware image from iso file and play it in... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jartan
6 Replies
6. AIX
Hi,
Could anyone let me know how to mount an ISO image in AIX 5.2 ?
--SaiP (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: saip
2 Replies
7. AIX
Hi all,
Can anyone get the link to download the iso image of AIX as i am new to AIX need to study and work on the concepts of AIX.
Thnx in advance...
VINU:) (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vinuvinod
3 Replies
8. Solaris
Hi All,
Can anyone give me the lnik to download the iso image file Solaris 10 .
I need to install it on my local machine .
Pls help me out.
VINU (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vinuvinod
5 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hello Everyone,
Can anyone let me know how to make minimal boot.iso from rhl6 installation dvd iso image. I have a dvd image with me but i want to make just a minimal boot media. Somehow it is not shipped with dvd iso. I know we can download boot.iso from redhat site but is there any anyway we... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rohit Bhanot
5 Replies
10. Solaris
Hi Solaris 10 Experts,
How can I create an ISO Image of a CD/DVD from the cdrom to a temporary directory, and then use that image to burn it on a blank DVD in the cdrom in Solaris 10 1/13 OS environment?
Please provide me with an example.
With best regards,
SS (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ssabet
1 Replies
BURN(1) Burn BURN(1)
NAME
burn - record from various sources to optical media (CD, DVD)
SYNOPSIS
burn MAIN_MODE [OPTIONS]... [FILE/S]...
burn --help
DESCRIPTION
CD-writing program/script. Features Data-CD, Audio-CD, Copy on the fly, Iso-CD.
CONFIGURATION
Configuration files for burn are: ~/.burnrc or /etc/burn.conf. You can edit them to change values.
If you don't have these files you can:
1. use burn-configure utility
2. take the configuration template, edit and copy it as ~/.burnrc or /etc/burn.conf
MAIN MODES
-D, --data-cd
To create Data-CD
-I, --iso-cd
To create ISO-CD
-C, --copy-cd
To copy CDs
-A, --audio-cd
To create an audio CD from WAV, MP3 and ogg files
EXAMPLES
# burn -D -p /etc/
Creates a CD with /etc/ contents. (you will find files and directories contained in /etc in CD's root.)
# burn -D -p /home/bigpaul/video/summer_2003/spain.tar.gz
Creates a CD with spain.tar.gz in CD's root
# burn -D -r /etc/
Creates a CD containing the whole /etc/ directory. (-r preserves path)
# burn -D -c /mail_2003 /home/bigpaul/Mail -p /boot/vmli*
Creates a CD containing the whole /home/bigpaul/Mail renamed into /mail_2003. (-c changes path name). This command also adds in CD's root
every vmli* file in /boot/ directory
# burn -I -n image.iso
Burns image.iso
# burn -C
Copy CDs (disk at once).
# burn -A -a *.wav
Creates an Audio CD. Tracks come from wav files
# burn -A -a *.mp3
Creates an Audio CD. Tracks come from mp3 files
# burn -A -a *.ogg
Creates an Audio CD. Tracks come from Ogg Vorbis files
# burn -A -a *.mp3 file.ogg track01.wav
Creates an Audio CD preserving input order. In this example the first audio tracks will come from mp3 files, than we will find the one from
file.ogg and finally the one from track01.wav
GENERAL OPTIONS
-s, --simulate
to perform a burn simulation
DATA-CD OPTIONS
-p, --path
add file/s or path's content to CD-ROM's root. e.g.: -p /cvs/myproj/. In this example we will find CD-ROM's root filled with
/cvs/myproj/ contents, but no /cvs/myproj/ will be created
-r, --preserve-path
add file/s or path's content to CD-ROM preserving original path. e.g.: -r /cvs/myproj/. In this example we will find /cvs/myproj/
in CD-ROM's root
-x, --exclude-path
every file or directory matching this string will not be included
-c, --change-path
old_path will be named new_path in CD-ROM. e.g.: -c /my_home/2004_Jan/ /home/bigpaul/. Thus /home/bigpaul/ will be named
/my_home/2004_Jan/ in CD-ROM.
-l, --follow-symlink
this option allows burn to follow symbolic link directories
-m, --multisession
this option allows multisession CDs
ISO-CD OPTIONS
-n, --name
image name
AUDIO-CD OPTIONS
-a, --audio-file
mp3, ogg or wav file/s
AUTHOR
Ben Finney <ben+python@benfinney.id.au>, Gaetano Paolone <bigpaul@hacknight.org>
COPYRIGHT
This is free software: you may copy, modify, and/or distribute this work under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2 or
later as published by the Free Software Foundation. No warranty expressed or implied. See the source for details.
2009-07-22 BURN(1)