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- .TH CDFS 4
- .SH NAME
- cdfs, cddb \- optical disc (CD, DVD, BD) track reader and writer file system
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B cdfs
- [
- .B -d
- .I sddev
- ] [
- .B -m
- .I mtpt
- ]
- .br
- .B "grep aux/cddb /mnt/cd/ctl | rc
- .br
- .B aux/cddb
- [
- .B -DTt
- ] [
- .B -s
- .I server
- ]
- .B query
- .I diskid
- .I ntracks
- .I track0id
- .I ...
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I Cdfs
- serves a one and a half level directory
- mounted at
- .I mtpt
- (default
- .BR /mnt/cd )
- that provides access to the tracks
- on discs placed in the disc reader or writer
- named by
- .I sddev
- (default
- .BR /dev/sdD0 ,
- see
- .IR sd (3)).
- Any MMC-compliant compact disc (CD), DVD,
- or Blu-ray disc (BD) drive should work.
- On DVDs and BDs, access to data tracks only is implemented.
- .PP
- The top level directory contains one file
- per disc track.
- The files are named
- .IR cNNN ,
- where
- .I c
- is a type character
- .RB ( a
- for audio tracks
- and
- .B d
- for data tracks)
- and
- .I NNN
- is the track number.
- .PP
- If the device can write discs
- and contains a writable disc, the top-level
- directory also contains an empty directory
- .B wd
- and, for CDs only,
- an empty directory
- .BR wa .
- Files created in these directories
- appear in the top-level directory
- as new data or audio tracks, respectively, regardless of name.
- .PP
- At any time, any number of tracks
- may be open for reading or a single track
- may be open for writing.
- Writing a disc track is a quasi-real-time operation:
- the disc writer should be kept saturated with
- new data to avoid buffer underruns,
- but modern drives will be told to cope with underruns transparently.
- To ensure saturation, copying from a file system
- stored on local disk or memory is recommended.
- .PP
- To fixate a disc (close a recordable disc by writing
- its permanent table of contents), simply
- remove the
- .B wa
- or
- .B wd
- directory.
- The directory removed selects whether
- the disc is fixated as an audio or data disc;
- since each track carries its own type information,
- very few readers care which fixation type was used.
- Rewritable discs do not require fixation.
- .PP
- The top level directory
- also contains a
- .B ctl
- file, into which control messages
- may be echoed.
- The current control messages are:
- .TF \fLquickblank
- .TP
- .B format
- Format the rewritable disc (\c
- .B -RW
- or
- .BR -RE )
- in the drive
- before initial use.
- .TP
- .B blank
- Blank the entire rewritable disc in the drive.
- .TP
- .B quickblank
- Blank only the table of contents on the rewritable
- disc in the drive.
- .\" .TP
- .\" .B closetracks
- .\" Close any open tracks on the current disc but do not finalize (fixate) the disc.
- .TP
- .B eject
- Eject the disc in the drive.
- .TP
- .B ingest
- Ingest a disc into the drive.
- .TP
- .B speed \fIkbps\fR
- Set the reading and writing speed to use,
- in units of 1,000-bytes-per-second.
- A value of
- .L best
- requests the optimal speed for the current drive and disc.
- CD
- .L 1x
- speed is 154;
- DVD
- .L 1x
- speed is 1350;
- BD
- .L 1x
- speed is 4608.
- Drives may round down the speed to one they support.
- To set reading and writing speeds separately,
- prefix the speeds with
- .B read
- or
- .BR write ,
- as in
- .B speed
- .B write
- .B 8192
- or
- .B speed
- .B read
- .B 16384
- .B write
- .BR 8192.
- Note that most drives reset the reading and writing speed
- each time a new disc is inserted.
- .PD
- .PP
- Reading the
- .B ctl
- file yields information about the drive.
- If the drive contains an audio CD, the first line
- will be an
- .B aux/cddb
- command that can be run to query
- an internet CD database
- to get a table of contents.
- Subsequent lines contain the current and maximum
- reading and writing speeds.
- Additional lines may further describe the current disc.
- .PP
- .I Aux/cddb
- takes 4 optional arguments.
- The
- .B -s
- option makes
- .I aux/cddb
- use
- .I server
- for the query instead of
- .LR freedb.freedb.org .
- The
- .B -D
- option causes the raw database response from the server to be dumped
- to standard output.
- The
- .B -t
- option causes the time of each track to be appended to the normal output.
- .B -T
- is like
- .B -t
- but prints a final line with the total time.
- .SH EXAMPLES
- Backup to a BD-R disc:
- .br
- .ne 3
- .IP
- .EX
- 9fs boot
- cdfs
- tar cf /mnt/cd/wd/x /n/boot
- .EE
- .br
- .ne 3
- .PP
- Copy the audio tracks from a CD:
- .IP
- .EX
- cdfs -d /dev/sd05
- mkdir /tmp/songs
- cp /mnt/cd/a* /tmp/songs
- .EE
- .PP
- Copy the tracks onto a blank CD inserted in the drive,
- and then fixate the disk as an audio CD.
- .IP
- .EX
- cp /tmp/songs/* /mnt/cd/wa
- rm /mnt/cd/wa
- .EE
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/cmd/cdfs
- .SH SEE ALSO
- .IR sd (3),
- .I 9660srv
- (in
- .IR dossrv (4)),
- .IR mk9660 (8)
- .PD 0
- .TF "\fLhttp://www.t10.org\fP"
- .TP
- .B http://www.t10.org
- optical disc interface standards
- .PD
- .SH BUGS
- Fixating a BD-R disc records only the first track in the disc's TOC.
- Any other tracks are still there and their data accessible via
- .IR sd (3).
- There's no need to fixate data discs, except to prevent adding new tracks.
- .PP
- Closing a just-written DVD-R track can take minutes
- while the drive burns the unused part of the track reservation
- (for the whole disc).
- Thus only a single DVD-R track can be written on a DVD-R disc;
- use other media if you need more than one track per disc.
- .PP
- There are too many combinations of optical media, each with unique quirks,
- approximately
- the cross-product of these tuples:
- (CD DVD- DVD+ BD),
- (-ROM -R -RW),
- (single-layer dual-layer),
- plus oddities like DVD-RAM.
- Triple-layer BD drives and discs are starting to appear,
- likely to be followed by quad-layer.
- .PP
- Only MMC-compliant disc readers and writers
- are supported, but it would be easy to add
- support for early CD writers if desired.
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