On Wed, 04 Feb 2004 18:46:50 -0800
Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Again, thanks very much. While I wish I could do this in Linux, and
> possibly will find I can one of these days, it's great to have this
> working right now.
Be sure to let others know, if you find out. :)
--
/~\ The A
Mark Knecht wrote:
How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
perhaps? That'll give you an exact (and burnable) copy of the disk.
Not a happy dd process...
Gentoo2 root # dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
dd: reading `/dev/cdrom':Input/oupuut e
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 20:05, Mental Patient wrote:
> If you're talking about backing up copy protected windows games... do
> it in windows. I know of no linux cdrecording software that properly
> reproduces subchannel data.
Well, you may be a mental patient, but you're a smart mental patient!
Mark Knecht wrote:
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 17:28, Marshal Newrock wrote:
On Tue, 3 Feb 2004, Mark Knecht wrote:
How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
perhaps? That'll give you an exact (and burnable) copy of the disk.
Not a happy dd pr
I did get warnings, but the CD still works.
I think it is warning you that there is something fishy going on, but
that it is going to proceed anyway.
Try it. Burn the CD and test it.
Larry
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 02/03/04 5:46 PM >>>
WARNING: Found L-EC error at sector 827
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mark Knecht wrote:
Hi,
I've got a number of games for which I like to keep a backup copy of the
CDs at the office. This saves me having to drag around the CDs and
forgetting then in one place or another when the fancy strikes me to play.
So far so good. This has always worked.
If you're talk
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 15:10, gabriel wrote:
> i'd suggest k3b. it's pretty damned impressive when it comes to copying cds
> regardless of copy protection. and yes, that's what it looks like is your
> problem.
And, so far, k3b looks stumped, although the program is quite
impressive, and with th
Mark writes:
> On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 17:28, Marshal Newrock wrote:
>> On Tue, 3 Feb 2004, Mark Knecht wrote:
>>> Gentoo2 root # dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
>>> dd: reading `/dev/cdrom':Input/oupuut error
>>> 3304+0 records in
>>> 3304+0 records out
>>> Gentoo2 root #
>>
>> That's correct
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 18:27, Mark Knecht wrote:
> On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 17:28, Marshal Newrock wrote:
> > On Tue, 3 Feb 2004, Mark Knecht wrote:
> >
> > > > How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
> > > > dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
> > > > perhaps? That'll give you an exac
On Wednesday 04 Feb 2004 02:27, Mark Knecht wrote:
> That's really interesting. Can you explain 'mounting on loopback'?
> What is that? I only have one Linux book (Linux in a Nutshell) and it
> doesn't have loopback in the index.
mount /mnt/tmp -t iso9660 -o loop
Peter
--
==
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 17:28, Marshal Newrock wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Feb 2004, Mark Knecht wrote:
>
> > > How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
> > > dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
> > > perhaps? That'll give you an exact (and burnable) copy of the disk.
> >
> > Not a happy dd process.
On Tue, 3 Feb 2004, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
> > dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
> > perhaps? That'll give you an exact (and burnable) copy of the disk.
>
> Not a happy dd process...
>
> Gentoo2 root # dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
> dd:
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 16:46, Mark Knecht wrote:
> Cool. So my CDRW didn't have a built in driver, so it told me to choose
> either the generic-mmc or generic-mmc-raw. Since your command said raw I
> first tried the raw driver, and then the plain driver. Both go to the
> same place and then start w
On Tue, 2004-02-03 at 15:27, Larry Meadors wrote:
> I used it for a data CD that was copy protected, and it worked.
>
> YMMV. :)
>
> I think these were the commands:
>
> cdrdao read-cd --device 2,0,0 --read-raw \
> --datafile mydata.bin -v 99 mydata.cue
>
> Then this:
>
> cdrdao write --devi
Larry Meadors wrote:
I used it for a data CD that was copy protected, and it worked.
YMMV. :)
I think these were the commands:
cdrdao read-cd --device 2,0,0 --read-raw \
--datafile mydata.bin -v 99 mydata.cue
Then this:
cdrdao write --device 2,0,0 --overburn \
-v 99 --speed 4 mydata.cue
Larr
I used it for a data CD that was copy protected, and it worked.
YMMV. :)
I think these were the commands:
cdrdao read-cd --device 2,0,0 --read-raw \
--datafile mydata.bin -v 99 mydata.cue
Then this:
cdrdao write --device 2,0,0 --overburn \
-v 99 --speed 4 mydata.cue
Larry
>>> [EMAIL PROT
i'd suggest k3b. it's pretty damned impressive when it comes to copying cds
regardless of copy protection. and yes, that's what it looks like is your
problem.
--
we live as though the world is as it should be
to show it what it can be
- angel, angel "deep down"
On February 3, 2004 0
>
> You might try cdrdao, I have used it to copy all kinds of stuff.
>
Larry,
OK, I just emerged cdrdao. Can you provide me with a suggested command
line? Looking at the options it looks like it's intended for audio CDs and
not data CDs.
Thanks in advance,
Mark
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing
> How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
> dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
> perhaps? That'll give you an exact (and burnable) copy of the disk.
Not a happy dd process...
Gentoo2 root # dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
dd: reading `/dev/cdrom':Input/oupuut error
3304+0 reco
Shoot, I don't have it installed here, but there is an ebuild for it,
and once installed, copying a CD was really easy.
Basically, you use cdrdao to create an image of the cd (a set of bin/cue
files), then use it again to write them to a blank CD.
I got it from just looking at "man cdrdao" and tr
Larry Meadors wrote:
You might try cdrdao, I have used it to copy all kinds of stuff.
Larry,
Could you please exemplify on that a little?
I have also been wanting to make copies of certain cdroms that I own,
and have had similar problems, thus having to revert to *cough *cough
Window$ and use b
Oooh, that's friggin cool. :)
Larry
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 02/03/04 3:44 PM >>>
On Tue, 03 Feb 2004 14:39:18 -0800, Mark Knecht muttered:
>I'm just using
>
> mkisofs -o EXILE_DISK_1.iso /mnt/cdrom
>
> which seems simple and straight forward, but maybe it's not good
enough?
How about just un
On Tue, 03 Feb 2004 14:39:18 -0800, Mark Knecht muttered:
>I'm just using
>
> mkisofs -o EXILE_DISK_1.iso /mnt/cdrom
>
> which seems simple and straight forward, but maybe it's not good enough?
How about just unmounting the disk and trying:
dd if=/dev/cdrom of=EXILE_DISK_1.iso
perhap
You might try cdrdao, I have used it to copy all kinds of stuff.
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 02/03/04 3:39 PM >>>
Hi,
I've got a number of games for which I like to keep a backup copy of
the
CDs at the office. This saves me having to drag around the CDs and
forgetting then in one place or another whe
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