Re: Burning an hfs filesystem without mkisofs

2004-08-23 Thread csj
On 23. August 2004 at 12:24AM +0200, Andy Polyakov [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Using Robert Leslie's hfsutils I have created on disk the HFS filesystem image hfs.img. I can mount hfs.img loopback and can read and write files to it. Now would a straight cdrecord hfs.img produce a CD that a

Re: Burning an hfs filesystem without mkisofs

2004-08-23 Thread Andy Polyakov
HFS volumes you put on CD still require Apple partition table. So the question is if hfsutils generate one. The latter kind of goes beyond the scope of discussions on this list:-) So the question now is: is thre a way to add this partition table to the hfs volume? Does the fact that you pose this

Re: Burning an hfs filesystem without mkisofs

2004-08-23 Thread Ambrose Li
On Mon, Aug 23, 2004 at 10:40:15PM +0200, Andy Polyakov wrote: Does the fact that you pose this question mean that hfsutils do not generate partition table? Once again, this kind of goes beyond the scope of discussions on this list. I mean hfsutils maintainer is probably more appropriate

Re: Burning an hfs filesystem without mkisofs

2004-08-22 Thread Andy Polyakov
Using Robert Leslie's hfsutils I have created on disk the HFS filesystem image hfs.img. I can mount hfs.img loopback and can read and write files to it. Now would a straight cdrecord hfs.img produce a CD that a Macintosh will read as an HFS volume? Why do you ask? I mean, burn it to a cd-rw and

Burning an hfs filesystem without mkisofs

2004-08-06 Thread csj
I know about the mkisofs -hfs and -apple option to create an iso/hfs hybrid cd. But can I use cdrecord WITHOUT mkisofs to create a CD with an HFS filesytem? Using Robert Leslie's hfsutils I have created on disk the HFS filesystem image hfs.img. I can mount hfs.img loopback and can read and

Re: Burning an hfs filesystem without mkisofs

2004-08-06 Thread Volker Kuhlmann
Using Robert Leslie's hfsutils I have created on disk the HFS filesystem image hfs.img. I can mount hfs.img loopback and can read and write files to it. Now would a straight cdrecord hfs.img produce a CD that a Macintosh will read as an HFS volume? Why do you ask? I mean, burn it to a