While this is not a mkisofs related topic, it does relate to dvdrecord. I see so many problems, and few solutions on this list that I decided to post a solution, of sorts.
I was trying to save multi gigabyte database dumps to dvd, but limitations withing mkisofs (more specifically the joliet file system) prevented me from storing these fat files in an iso image. The workaround is to save the files to a tar file directly, and save this to the DVD, sans any file system. While this does not result in a DVD that can be mounted in the normal fashion, it does result in a DVD that can be treated as a tape, and used for backups. The big win of course is that there is no 32 bit floating integer limit on the file size. To illustrate: 0.) md5sum the files of interest: md5sum /data/multiGigFile.dump | tee /data/multiGigFile.md5sum 1.) Create backup tar file: tar cf /data/multiGigFile.tar /data/multiGigFile.dump 2.) Shoot this onto the DVD using dvdrecord: dvdrecord -v -pad -dao dev=1,0,0 speed=4 /data/multiGigFile.tar 3.) Extract it again using dd. It will be bigger due to padding. dd if=/dev/cdrom of=/data/multiGigFile_restored.tar 4.) Now compare the contents, by changing to another directory, and using tar xvf /data/multiGigFile_restored.tar and then md5sum of the contents of the restored file. If the sums compare then the files should be identical (or try cmp - diff griped about memory being exhausted) So far everything has been good. I'm sure this could be streamlined with pipes, but I have the disk space, and am relatively short of RAM, so I'm leaving the files around for now. As we've seen before, it's best to compress component files _before_ placing them in the archive. I save the uncompressed md5sum file in the archive as well. The bzip2 man pages seem to imply that it has some sort of error detection, that I have not read about for gzip, so perhaps it's better for big files for that reason. -- Allan Peda Programmer, Gene Array Resource Center Rockefeller University Box 203 1230 York Ave New York, NY 10021-6399 (tel) 212-327-7064 (fax) 212-327-7065 _______________________________________________ Dvdrtools-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/dvdrtools-users