Hi, Paul von Behren wrote: > Can xorriso burn/engrave an M-Disc? Can any other Linux SW?
Yes to both, although rarely tested. In my mailbox i find libburn user reports only for BD-R M-Discs. M-Disc is entirely a matter of drive and medium. The burn programs get the media info from the drive which presents M-Disc as DVD+R or BD-R. (Verbatim seems to sell M-Disc DVD as "DVD R" omitting the significant difference between DVD-R and DVD+R. But i remember that DVD+R was mentioned when the M-Disc technology was announced.) So if you really want to pay the price difference between M-Disc and other write-once media, then give it a try with your favorite burn program for DVD or BD. I would of course be glad if you choose xorriso or cdrskin. Please report the outcome. As said: Reports are rare. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- If the burn run looks successful, consider to run xorriso -for_backup -indev /dev/sr0 -check_media -- to get an impression of readability. If you use xorriso to create an ISO 9660 filesystem, then consider to use -for_backup to equip the data files and the overall filesystem with MD5 checksums. (With xorriso's mkisofs emulation the option begins by two dashes: --for_backup.) A xorriso run with -for_backup ... -check_media will then verify the overall checksums. But even without recorded MD5s it will check the readability of all data blocks of the written area. If you recorded MD5 and want to check the single file checksums: xorriso -for_backup -indev /dev/sr0 -check_md5_r sorry / -- This will report on stdout each file which fails to match its recorded MD5. Informational messages and pacifiers appear on stderr. The exit status of xorriso will indicate whether all was fine (0) or whether files failed the test (not 0, actually 32). This check works only if indeed MD5s were recorded by xorriso. Consider to repeat this checking regularly to get an impression how your recorded files are doing. Have a nice day :) Thomas