On Tue, Jul 10, 2007 at 06:44:14PM +0300, Penguin Lover Aleksey V. Kunitskiy
squawked:
> This DVD-R was created under windows with nero, not by me.
> I tried to set iocharset=windows-1251 but it didn't help. I know on that
> windows system is windows-1251 charset. I still see ugly names, and I haven't
> any ideas... Under windows this DVD reads OK
This I am not sure how to work with. As far as the manpage goes,
the 'iocharset' option only makes sense when mounting Joliet extended
iso9660 discs (since Joliet gives a filename mapping into unicode, the
iocharset option specifies how to translate the unicode filenames into
your current operating charset). This seems to suggest that the way
you used the 'iocharset' option is the opposite of what you intended.
Google suggests that some people have tried mounting iso9660
filesystems with the 'codepage' options (see the vfat section of
man mount), but AFAICT from the documentation, the codepage option for
iso9660 has been talked about on LKML in 2005 but not implemented.
It might be possible to read the disc properly if you run a kernel
with the default NLS set to cp1251 (I think that CLE linux, a Chinese
based fork of redhat, used that trick and set the default NLS to big5,
allowing them to read vfat and iso9660 filesystems without specifying
iocharset and/or codepage options), but to be honest, I don't know how
to work with your problem, so take my suggestions with a relatively
large grain of NaCl.
Best of luck,
W
--
Love is like 2. It has irrational roots.
~Daniel Jonathan Peng
Sortir en Pantoufles: up 214 days, 14:49
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list