1wodim(1)                                                              wodim(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       wodim - write data to optical disk media
7

SYNOPSIS

9       wodim [options] track1...trackn
10

NOTE

12       There  may  be  similarities  and  differences between this program and
13       other disk recording application(s). See the CREDITS and  AUTHORS  sec‐
14       tions below to learn about the origin of wodim.
15
16

DESCRIPTION

18       wodim  is  used to record data or audio Compact Discs on an Orange Book
19       CD-Recorder or to write DVD media on a DVD-Recorder.
20
21       The device is the device file or label offered by the operating  system
22       to access the recorder with SCSI GENERIC (sg) interface. Note that some
23       operating systems may provide separate device nodes for  block-oriented
24       and  sg  access. For example, on older Linux systems, the sg access was
25       available through /dev/sg...  files while the block oriented access was
26       done  through associated (but not identical) /dev/hd...  and /dev/sr...
27       (or /dev/scd...  ) files.
28
29       In any case, the user running wodim needs read and write access to  the
30       particular  device file on a Linux system. It is recommended to be root
31       or install the application as suid-root, because  certain  versions  of
32       Linux  (kernel)  limit  the  set  of SCSI commands allowed for non-root
33       users. Even if usage without root identity is possible in  many  cases,
34       some  device  drivers  still  may fail, show unexplainable problems and
35       generally the problems become harder to debug.  The  risk  for  buffer-
36       underruns  is  also increased. See the PROCESS SCHEDULING PRIORITY sec‐
37       tion below for more details.
38
39       There is an alternative way of specifying the device, using the  tradi‐
40       tional  SCSI descriptions in form of devicetype:bus/target/lun specifi‐
41       cation. However, the success of this method is not guaranteed since  it
42       requires  an  adaptation  scheme for your architecture, and the numbers
43       may vary depending on the hardware-internal numbering or on  the  order
44       of hot-plug device detection. If your operating system does not provide
45       a sufficient framework for keeping this numbers persistent, don't  rely
46       on them. See -scanbus and --devices options below for details.
47
48       There  are emulated SCSI compatible device systems, using the SCSI pro‐
49       tocols transported over various hardware/media types.  The  most  known
50       examples is ATAPI ("IDE burners") or USB storage ("external USB case").
51       If the pseudo-SCSI b/t/l device address specification is  used  instead
52       of the native one, you need to prepend the "devicetype:" description to
53       the emulated "bus/target/lun" device address.
54
55       If a file /etc/wodim.conf exists, the parameter to the dev= option  may
56       also be a drive name label in that file (see FILES section).
57
58       As  a  special  exception,  the  device specification can be -1 or just
59       omitted, which invokes automatic guessing of an appropriate device  for
60       the  selected operation. However, this guessing is not available every‐
61       where and is not reliable; it is only available for the  user's  conve‐
62       nience in simple environments.
63
64       In  Track  At  Once  mode, each track corresponds to a single file that
65       contains the prepared data for that track.  If  the  argument  is  `-',
66       standard  input  is  used  for that track.  Only one track may be taken
67       from stdin.  In the other write modes, the direct file to  track  rela‐
68       tion  may  not  be implemented.  In -clone mode, a single file contains
69       all data for the whole disk.  To allow DVD writing on platforms that do
70       not implement large file support, wodim concatenates all file arguments
71       to a single track when writing to DVD media.
72
73

PROCESS SCHEDULING PRIORITY

75       Wodim tries to get higher process  priority  using  different  methods.
76       This  is important because the burn process is usually a realtime task,
77       no long delays should  occur  while  transmitting  fresh  data  to  the
78       recorder. This is especially important on systems with insufficient RAM
79       where swapping can create delays of many seconds.
80
81       A possible workaround on underpowered systems is the use of  the  burn‐
82       free or similar feature, allowing the recorder to resume.
83
84       Root  permissions are usually required to get higher process scheduling
85       priority.
86
87       On SVr4 compliant systems, wodim uses the real time class  to  get  the
88       highest  scheduling  priority  that is possible (higher than all kernel
89       processes).  On systems with POSIX real time scheduling wodim uses real
90       time  scheduling  too,  but  may not be able to gain a priority that is
91       higher than all kernel processes.
92
93       In order to be able to use the SCSI transport subsystem of the OS,  run
94       at  highest priority and lock itself into core wodim either needs to be
95       run as root, needs to be installed suid root  or  must  be  called  via
96       RBACs pfexec mechanism.
97
98

GENERAL OPTIONS

100       General options must be before any track file name or track option.
101
102       -version
103              Print version information and exit.
104
105       -v     Increment  the  level of general verbosity by one.  This is used
106              e.g. to display the progress of the writing process.
107
108       -V     Increment the verbose level in respect of SCSI command transport
109              by  one.   This  helps  to  debug  problems  during  the writing
110              process, that occur in the CD/DVD-Recorder.  If you  get  incom‐
111              prehensible  error messages you should use this flag to get more
112              detailed output.  -VV will show data buffer content in addition.
113              Using -V or -VV slows down the process and may be the reason for
114              a buffer underrun.
115
116       debug=#, -d
117              Set the misc debug value to # (with debug=#)  or  increment  the
118              misc  debug  level  by  one  (with -d). If you specify -dd, this
119              equals to debug=2.  This may help to find problems while opening
120              a  driver  for  libusal  as well as with sector sizes and sector
121              types.  Using -debug slows down the process and may be the  rea‐
122              son for a buffer underrun.
123
124       kdebug=#, kd=#
125              Tell the usal-driver to modify the kernel debug value while SCSI
126              commands are running.
127
128       -silent, -s
129              Do not print out a status report for failed SCSI commands.
130
131       -force Force to continue on some errors. Be  careful  when  using  this
132              option.   wodim  implements several checks that prevent you from
133              doing unwanted things like  damaging  CD-RW  media  by  improper
134              drives.  Many  of the sanity checks are disabled when the -force
135              option is used.
136
137              This option also implements some tricks that will allow  you  to
138              blank bad CD-RW disks.
139
140       -immed Tell  wodim  to  set  the  SCSI  IMMED  flag in certain commands
141              (load/eject/blank/close_track/close_session).  This can be  use‐
142              ful  on  broken systems with ATAPI harddisk and CD/DVD writer on
143              the same bus  or  with  SCSI  systems  that  don't  use  discon‐
144              nect/reconnect.   These  systems  will  freeze while blanking or
145              fixating a CD/DVD or while a DVD writer is filling up a  session
146              to the minimum amount (approx. 800 MB).  Setting the -immed flag
147              will request the command to return immediately while the  opera‐
148              tion proceeds in background, making the bus usable for the other
149              devices and avoiding the system freeze.  This is an experimental
150              feature  which  may  work  or not, depending on the model of the
151              CD/DVD writer.  A correct solution would be to set up a  correct
152              cabling but there seem to be notebooks around that have been set
153              up the wrong way by the manufacturer.  As it  is  impossible  to
154              fix this problem in notebooks, the -immed option has been added.
155
156              A  second  experimental  feature  of  the -immed flag is to tell
157              wodim to try to wait short times while  writing  to  the  media.
158              This  is  expected  to free the IDE bus if the CD/DVD writer and
159              the data source are connected to the same  IDE  cable.  In  this
160              case,  the  CD/DVD  writer would otherwise usually block the IDE
161              bus for nearly all the time making it impossible to  fetch  data
162              from the source drive. See also minbuf= and -v option.
163
164              Use  both  features  at  your own risk.  If it turns out that it
165              would make sense to have a separate option for the wait feature,
166              write to the author and convince him.
167
168       minbuf=value
169              The  #  minbuf= option allows to define the minimum drive buffer
170              fill ratio for the experimental ATAPI wait mode that is intended
171              to  free  the IDE bus to allow hard disk and CD/DVD writer to be
172              on the same IDE cable.  As the wait mode  currently  only  works
173              when the verbose option -v has been specified, wodim implies the
174              verbose option in case the -immed or minbuf=  option  have  been
175              specified.   Valid  values for minbuf= are between 25 and 95 for
176              25%...95% minimum drive buffer fill ratio.
177
178       -dummy The CD/DVD-Recorder will go through all steps of  the  recording
179              process,  but the laser is turned off during this procedure.  It
180              is recommended to run several tests before actually writing to a
181              Compact  Disk  or Digital Versatile Disk, if the timing and load
182              response of the system is not known.
183
184       -clone Tells wodim to handle images  created  by  readom  -clone.   The
185              -clone  may only be used in conjunction with with the -raw96r or
186              with the -raw16 option.  Using -clone together with  -raw96r  is
187              preferred as it allows to write all subchannel data.  The option
188              -raw16 should only be used with drives that do  not  support  to
189              write in -raw96r mode.
190
191       -dao
192
193       -sao   Set  SAO  (Session At Once) mode which is usually called Disk At
194              Once mode.  This currently only works with MMC drives that  sup‐
195              port  Session  At  Once mode.  Note that wodim needs to know the
196              size of each track in advance for this mode (see the genisoimage
197              -print-size  option  and  the EXAMPLES section for more informa‐
198              tion).
199
200       -tao   Set TAO (Track At Once) writing mode.  This is the default write
201              mode  in  previous wodim versions.  With most drives, this write
202              mode is required for multi session recording.
203
204       -raw   Set RAW writing mode.  Using this option  defaults  to  -raw96r.
205              Note  that wodim needs to know the size of each track in advance
206              for this mode (see the genisoimage -print-size  option  and  the
207              EXAMPLES section for more information).
208
209       -raw96r
210              Select Set RAW writing mode with 2352 byte sectors plus 96 bytes
211              of raw P-W subchannel data resulting in a sector  size  of  2448
212              bytes.   This is the preferred raw writing mode as it gives best
213              control over the CD writing process.  If you find  any  problems
214              with  the  layout  of  a  disk or with sub channel content (e.g.
215              wrong times on the display when playing the CD) and  your  drive
216              supports  to write in -raw96r or -raw16 mode, you should give it
217              a try. There are several  CD  writers  with  bad  firmware  that
218              result in broken disks when writing in TAO or SAO mode.  Writing
219              data disks in raw mode needs significantly more  CPU  time  than
220              other  write  modes. If your CPU is too slow, this may result in
221              buffer underruns.  Note that wodim needs to  know  the  size  of
222              each track in advance for this mode (see the genisoimage -print-
223              size option and the EXAMPLES section for more information).
224
225       -raw96p
226              Select Set RAW writing mode with 2352 byte sectors plus 96 bytes
227              of packed P-W subchannel data resulting in a sector size of 2448
228              bytes.  This is the less preferred raw writing mode  as  only  a
229              few  recorders  support it and some of these recorders have bugs
230              in the firmware implementation.  Don't use  this  mode  if  your
231              recorder  supports -raw96r or -raw16.  Writing data disks in raw
232              mode needs significantly more CPU time than other  write  modes.
233              If  your  CPU  is too slow, this may result in buffer underruns.
234              Note that wodim needs to know the size of each track in  advance
235              for  this  mode  (see the genisoimage -print-size option and the
236              EXAMPLES section for more information).
237
238       -raw16 Select Set RAW writing mode with 2352 byte sectors plus 16 bytes
239              of P-Q subchannel data resulting in a sector size of 2368 bytes.
240              If a recorder does not support -raw96r, this  is  the  preferred
241              raw  writing  mode.   It  does  not  allow  to  write CD-Text or
242              CD+Graphics but it is the only raw  writing  mode  in  cheap  CD
243              writers.   As  these  cheap writers in most cases do not support
244              -dao mode.  Don't  use  this  mode  if  your  recorder  supports
245              -raw96r.   Writing  data  disks  in raw mode needs significantly
246              more CPU time than other write modes. If your CPU is  too  slow,
247              this  may  result in buffer underruns.  Note that wodim needs to
248              know the size of each track in advance for this  mode  (see  the
249              genisoimage -print-size option and the EXAMPLES section for more
250              information).
251
252       -multi Allow multi session CDs to  be  made.  This  flag  needs  to  be
253              present on all sessions of a multi session disk, except you want
254              to create a session that will be the last session on the  media.
255              The  fixation  will  be  done  in  a way that allows the CD/DVD-
256              Recorder to append additional sessions later. This  is  done  by
257              generation  a  TOC  with a link to the next program area. The so
258              generated media is  not  100%  compatible  to  manufactured  CDs
259              (except  for  CDplus).   Use only for recording of multi session
260              CDs.  If this option is present, the default track type  is  CD-
261              ROM  XA mode 2 form 1 and the sector size is 2048 bytes.  The XA
262              sector subheaders will be created by the drive.  The Sony drives
263              have  no hardware support for CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1.  You have
264              to specify the -data option in order  to  create  multi  session
265              disks  on  these drives.  As long as wodim does not have a coder
266              for converting data sectors to audio sectors, you need to  force
267              CD-ROM  sectors  by  including  the  -data option if you like to
268              record a multisession disk in SAO mode.  Not  all  drives  allow
269              multisession CDs in SAO mode.
270
271       -msinfo
272              Retrieve  multi  session info in a form suitable for genisoimage
273              and print it to standard output. See msifile= option for another
274              version.
275
276              This  option  makes  only sense with a CD that contains at least
277              one closed session and is appendable (not finally  closed  yet).
278              Some  drives  create  error messages if you try to get the multi
279              session info for a disk that is not suitable for this operation.
280
281       msifile=filename
282              Like -msinfo option but also stores the multi session info in  a
283              file.
284
285       -toc   Retrieve  and  print  out  the  table of content or PMA of a CD.
286              With this option, wodim will work with CD-R drives and with  CD-
287              ROM drives.
288
289       -atip  Retrieve  and  print  out the ATIP (absolute Time in Pre-groove)
290              info of a CD/DVD recordable or CD/DVD re-writable  media.   With
291              this  option,  wodim  will try to retrieve the ATIP info. If the
292              actual drive does not support to read the ATIP info, it  may  be
293              that  only  a reduced set of information records or even nothing
294              is displayed. Only a limited number of MMC compliant drives sup‐
295              port to read the ATIP info.
296
297              If  wodim  is  able  to  retrieve the lead-in start time for the
298              first session, it will try to decode and print the  manufacturer
299              info  from  the media.  DVD media does not have ATIP information
300              but there is equivalent prerecorded information that is read out
301              and printed.
302
303       -fix   The  disk  will only be fixated (i.e. a TOC for a CD-Reader will
304              be written).  This may be used, if for some reason the disk  has
305              been  written  but  not  fixated. This option currently does not
306              work with old TEAC drives (CD-R50S and CD-R55S).
307
308       -nofix Do not fixate the disk after writing the  tracks.  This  may  be
309              used  to  create  an audio disk in steps. An un-fixated disk can
310              usually not be used on a non CD-writer type drive but there  are
311              audio CD players that will be able to play such a disk.
312
313       -waiti Wait for input to become available on standard input before try‐
314              ing to open the SCSI driver. This allows wodim to read its input
315              from  a  pipe  even  when writing additional sessions to a multi
316              session disk.  When writing another session to a  multi  session
317              disk,  genisoimage needs to read the old session from the device
318              before writing output.  This cannot be done if wodim  opens  the
319              SCSI driver at the same time.
320
321       -load  Load  the  media  and  exit. This only works with a tray loading
322              mechanism but seems to be  useful  when  using  the  Kodak  disk
323              transporter.
324
325       -lock  Load  the  media, lock the door and exit. This only works with a
326              tray loading mechanism but seems to be  useful  when  using  the
327              Kodak disk transporter.
328
329       -eject Eject  disk  after  doing the work.  Some devices (e.g. Philips)
330              need to eject the medium before creating a  new  disk.  Doing  a
331              -dummy  test and immediately creating a real disk would not work
332              on these devices.
333
334       speed=#
335              Set the speed factor of the writing process to #.  # is an inte‐
336              ger,  representing a multiple of the audio speed.  This is about
337              150 KB/s for CD-ROM,  about  172 KB/s  for  CD-Audio  and  about
338              1385 kB/s  for  DVD media.  If no speed option is present, wodim
339              will try to get a drive  specific  speed  value  from  the  file
340              /etc/wodim.conf  and  if  it cannot find one, it will try to get
341              the speed value from the CDR_SPEED environment  and  later  from
342              the  CDR_SPEED=  entry  in  /etc/wodim.conf.   If no speed value
343              could be found, wodim uses a drive specific default speed.   The
344              default for all new (MMC compliant) drives is to use the maximum
345              supported by the drive.  If you use speed=0 with a MMC compliant
346              drive,  wodim will switch to the lowest possible speed for drive
347              and medium.  If you are using an old (non MMC)  drive  that  has
348              problems with speed=2 or speed=4, you should try speed=0.
349
350       blank=type
351              Blank  a  CD-RW  and  exit  or blank a CD-RW before writing. The
352              blanking type may be one of:
353
354              help        Display a list of possible blanking types.
355
356              all         Blank the entire disk. This may take a long time.
357
358              fast        Minimally blank the disk. This  results  in  erasing
359                          the PMA, the TOC and the pregap.
360
361              track       Blank a track.
362
363              unreserve   Unreserve a reserved track.
364
365              trtail      Blank the tail of a track.
366
367              unclose     Unclose last session.
368
369              session     Blank the last session.
370       Not  all  drives support all blanking types. It may be necessary to use
371       blank=all if a drive reports a specified command as being invalid.   If
372       used  together  with  the -force flag, this option may be used to blank
373       CD-RW disks that otherwise cannot be blanked. Note that you may need to
374       specify  blank=all  because  some drives will not continue with certain
375       types of bad CD-RW disks. Note also that wodim does  its  best  if  the
376       -force  flag  is  used  but  it finally depends on the drive's firmware
377       whether the blanking operation will succeed or not.
378
379       -format
380              Format a CD-RW/DVD-RW/DVD+RW disc.  Formatting is currently only
381              implemented  for DVD+RW media.  A 'maiden' DVD+RW media needs to
382              be formatted before you may write  to  it.   However,  as  wodim
383              autodetects  the  need for formatting in this case and auto for‐
384              mats the medium before it starts writing, the -format option  is
385              only needed if you like to forcibly reformat a DVD+RW medium.
386
387       fs=#   Set the FIFO (ring buffer) size to #.  You may use the same syn‐
388              tax as in dd(1), sdd(1) or star(1).  The number representing the
389              size  is taken in bytes unless otherwise specified.  If a number
390              is followed directly by the letter `b', `k', `m',  `s'  or  `f',
391              the  size  is  multiplied by 512, 1024, 1024*1024, 2048 or 2352.
392              If the size consists of numbers separated by `x' or `*',  multi‐
393              plication  of the two numbers is performed.  Thus fs=10x63k will
394              specify a FIFO size of 630 kBytes.
395
396              The size specified by the fs= argument includes the shared  mem‐
397              ory that is needed for administration. This is at least one page
398              of memory.  If no fs= option is present, wodim will try  to  get
399              the  FIFO  size  value  from  the CDR_FIFOSIZE environment.  The
400              default FIFO size is currently 4 MB.
401
402              The FIFO is used to increase buffering for the real time writing
403              process.  It allows to run a pipe from genisoimage directly into
404              wodim.  If the FIFO is active and a pipe from  genisoimage  into
405              wodim  is  used to create a CD, wodim will abort prior to do any
406              modifications on the disk if genisoimage dies before  it  starts
407              writing.  The recommended FIFO size is between 4 and 128 MBytes.
408              As a rule of thumb, the FIFO size should be at  least  equal  to
409              the  size  of  the internal buffer of the CD/DVD-Recorder and no
410              more than half of the physical amount of RAM  available  in  the
411              machine.   If  the  FIFO size is big enough, the FIFO statistics
412              will print a FIFO empty count of zero and the FIFO min  fill  is
413              not  below  20%.   It  is not wise to use too much space for the
414              FIFO. If you need more than 8 MB to write a CD at a  speed  less
415              than  20x  from  an  image  on  a  local  file system on an idle
416              machine, your machine is either underpowered, has hardware prob‐
417              lems  or is mis-configured.  If you like to write DVDs or CDs at
418              higher speed, it makes sense to use at least 16 MB for the FIFO.
419
420              On old and small machines, you need to be more careful with  the
421              FIFO  size.   If  your  machine has less than 256 MB of physical
422              RAM, you should not set up a FIFO size that is more than  32 MB.
423              The sun4c architecture (e.g. a Sparcstation-2) has only MMU page
424              table  entries  for  16 MBytes  per  process.  Using  more  than
425              14 MBytes  for  the  FIFO may cause the operating system in this
426              case to spend much time to constantly  reload  the  MMU  tables.
427              Newer machines from Sun do not have this MMU hardware problem. I
428              have no information on PC-hardware reflecting this problem.
429
430              Old Linux systems for non x86 platforms have broken  definitions
431              for the shared memory size. You need to fix them and rebuild the
432              kernel or manually tell wodim to use a smaller FIFO.
433
434              If you have buffer underruns or similar problems  (like  a  con‐
435              stantly empty drive buffer) and observe a zero fifo empty count,
436              you have hardware problems that prevents the data  from  flowing
437              fast  enough  from the kernel memory to the drive. The FIFO size
438              in this case is sufficient, but you should check for  a  working
439              DMA setup.
440
441       ts=#   Set  the  maximum  transfer size for a single SCSI command to #.
442              The syntax for the ts= option is the same as for wodim  fs=#  or
443              sdd bs=#.
444
445              If  no ts= option has been specified, wodim defaults to a trans‐
446              fer size of 63 kB. If libusal gets lower values from the operat‐
447              ing  system,  the  value is reduced to the maximum value that is
448              possible with the current operating system.  Sometimes,  it  may
449              help  to  further reduce the transfer size or to enhance it, but
450              note that it may take a long time to  find  a  better  value  by
451              experimenting with the ts= option.
452
453       dev=target
454              Sets  the  SCSI target for the CD/DVD-Recorder, see notes above.
455              A typical device specification is dev=6,0 .  A filename or  vir‐
456              tual device name can be passed instead of the symbolic SCSI num‐
457              bers.  The correct device/filename in this case can be found  in
458              the  system specific manuals of the target operating system.  On
459              a FreeBSD system without CAM support, you need to use  the  con‐
460              trol  device (e.g.  /dev/rcd0.ctl).  A correct device specifica‐
461              tion in this case may be dev=/dev/rcd0.ctl:@ .
462
463              On Linux and Windows 2000/XP, drives are accessible  with  their
464              device  (or  drive) names or with the symbolic SCSI numbers (not
465              recommended, mapping is  not  stable  and  could  be  completely
466              removed in the future).
467
468              If  no  dev  option is present, wodim will try to get the device
469              from the CDR_DEVICE environment.
470
471              If the argument to the dev= option does not contain the  charac‐
472              ters  ',',  '/',  '@' or ':', it is interpreted as an label name
473              that may be found in the file /etc/wodim.conf  (see  FILES  sec‐
474              tion).
475
476       gracetime=#
477              Set  the grace time before starting to write to # seconds.  Val‐
478              ues below 2 seconds are not recommended to give  the  kernel  or
479              volume management a chance to learn the new state.
480
481       timeout=#
482              Set  the  default  SCSI command timeout value to # seconds.  The
483              default SCSI command timeout is the  minimum  timeout  used  for
484              sending  SCSI  commands.  If a SCSI command fails due to a time‐
485              out, you may try to raise the default SCSI command timeout above
486              the  timeout  value  of the failed command.  If the command runs
487              correctly with a raised command timeout, please report the  bet‐
488              ter timeout value and the corresponding command to the author of
489              the program.  If no timeout option is present, a default timeout
490              of 40 seconds is used.
491
492       driver=name
493              Allows the user to manually select a driver for the device.  The
494              reason for the existence of the driver=name option is  to  allow
495              users  to  use  wodim  with drives that are similar to supported
496              drives but not known directly by wodim.  All drives  made  after
497              1997  should be MMC standard compliant and thus supported by one
498              of the MMC drivers.  It is most unlikely that wodim is unable to
499              find  the  right  driver  automatically.   Use  this option with
500              extreme care. If a wrong driver is used for a device, the possi‐
501              bility of creating corrupted disks is high.  The minimum problem
502              related to a wrong driver is that the speed= or -dummy will  not
503              work.
504
505              The following driver names are supported:
506
507              help   To  get  a list of possible drivers together with a short
508                     description.
509
510              mmc_cd The generic SCSI-3/mmc  CD-ROM  driver  is  auto-selected
511                     whenever  wodim finds a MMC compliant drive that does not
512                     identify itself to support writing at all, or  that  only
513                     identifies  to  support  media  or write modes not imple‐
514                     mented in wodim.
515
516              mmc_cd_dvd
517                     The generic SCSI-3/mmc  CD/DVD  driver  is  auto-selected
518                     whenever  wodim  finds  a  MMC-2 or MMC-3 compliant drive
519                     that seems to support more than one medium type  and  the
520                     tray  is  open  or no medium could be found to select the
521                     right driver.  This  driver  tries  to  close  the  tray,
522                     checks  the medium found in the tray and then branches to
523                     the driver that matches the current medium.
524
525              mmc_cdr
526                     The generic SCSI-3/mmc CD-R/CD-RW driver is auto-selected
527                     whenever  wodim find a MMC compliant drive that only sup‐
528                     ports to write CDs or a multi system drive that  contains
529                     a CD as the current medium.
530
531              mmc_cdr_sony
532                     The generic SCSI-3/mmc CD-R/CD-RW driver is auto-selected
533                     whenever wodim would otherwise select the mmc_cdr  driver
534                     but   the   device   seems  to  be  made  by  Sony.   The
535                     mmc_cdr_sony is definitely needed for the Sony CDU 928 as
536                     this drive does not completely implement the MMC standard
537                     and some of the MMC SCSI commands have to be replaced  by
538                     Sony  proprietary commands. It seems that all Sony drives
539                     (even newer ones) still implement  the  Sony  proprietary
540                     SCSI  commands  so it has not yet become a problem to use
541                     this driver for all Sony drives. If you find a newer Sony
542                     drive that does not work with this driver, please report.
543
544              mmc_dvd
545                     The  generic  SCSI-3/mmc-2  DVD-R/DVD-RW  driver is auto-
546                     selected whenever wodim finds a MMC-2 or MMC-3  compliant
547                     drive  that  supports  to  write  DVDs and an appropriate
548                     medium is loaded.  There is no Track At Once mode for DVD
549                     writers.
550
551              mmc_dvdplus
552                     The  generic  SCSI-3/mmc-3  DVD+R/DVD+RW  driver is auto-
553                     selected whenever one of the DVD+ media  types  that  are
554                     incompatible to each other is found.  It checks media and
555                     then branches to the  driver  that  matches  the  current
556                     medium.
557
558              mmc_dvdplusr
559                     The  generic  SCSI-3/mmc-3  DVD+R driver is auto-selected
560                     whenever a  DVD+R  medium  is  found  in  an  appropriate
561                     writer.   Note  that  for  unknown  reason,  the DVD-Plus
562                     alliance does not like that there is  a  simulation  mode
563                     for  DVD+R  media.  The author of wodim tries to convince
564                     manufacturers to implement a simulation  mode  for  DVD+R
565                     and  implement  support.   DVD+R  only supports one write
566                     mode that is somewhere between Track At Once  and  Packet
567                     writing;  this  mode  is  selected  in  wodim  via  a the
568                     -dao/-sao option.
569
570              mmc_dvdplusrw
571                     The generic SCSI-3/mmc-3 DVD+RW driver  is  auto-selected
572                     whenever  a  DVD+RW  medium  is  found  in an appropriate
573                     writer.  As DVD+RW media needs to be formatted before its
574                     first  use,  wodim auto-detects this media state and per‐
575                     forms a format before it starts to write.  Note that  for
576                     unknown  reason, the DVD-Plus alliance does not like that
577                     there is a simulation mode nor  a  way  to  erase  DVD+RW
578                     media.  DVD+RW only supports one write mode that is close
579                     to Packet writing; this mode is selected in wodim  via  a
580                     the -dao/-sao option.
581
582              cw_7501
583                     The  driver  for  Matsushita/Panasonic  CW-7501  is auto-
584                     selected when wodim finds this old pre MMC drive.   wodim
585                     supports all write modes for this drive type.
586
587              kodak_pcd_600
588                     The  driver for Kodak PCD-600 is auto-selected when wodim
589                     finds this old pre MMC drive which  has  been  the  first
590                     high  speed  (6x)  CD  writer for a long time. This drive
591                     behaves similar to the Philips CDD-521 drive.
592
593              philips_cdd521
594                     The driver for  Philips  CDD-521  is  auto-selected  when
595                     wodim  finds  a Philips CDD-521 drive (which is the first
596                     CD writer ever made) or one of the other drives that  are
597                     known  to  behave  similar  to  this  drive.  All Philips
598                     CDD-521 or similar drives  (see  other  drivers  in  this
599                     list) do not support Session At Once recording.
600
601              philips_cdd521_old
602                     The  driver for Philips old CDD-521 is auto-selected when
603                     wodim finds a Philips  CDD-521  with  very  old  firmware
604                     which has some known limitations.
605
606              philips_cdd522
607                     The  driver  for  Philips  CDD-522  is auto-selected when
608                     wodim finds a Philips CDD-522 which is the  successor  of
609                     the  521  or one of its variants with Kodak label.  wodim
610                     does not support Session At  Once  recording  with  these
611                     drives.
612
613              philips_dumb
614                     The  driver  for Philips CDD-521 with pessimistic assump‐
615                     tions is never auto-selected.  It may  be  used  by  hand
616                     with drives that behave similar to the Philips CDD-521.
617
618              pioneer_dws114x
619                     The  driver  for  Pioneer  DW-S114X is auto-selected when
620                     wodim finds one of the old non MMC CD writers  from  Pio‐
621                     neer.
622
623              plasmon_rf4100
624                     The  driver  for  Plasmon  RF  4100 is auto-selected when
625                     wodim finds this specific variant of the Philips CDD-521.
626
627              ricoh_ro1060c
628                     The driver for Ricoh RO-1060C is auto-selected when wodim
629                     finds this drive. There is no real support for this drive
630                     yet.
631
632              ricoh_ro1420c
633                     The driver for Ricoh RO-1420C is auto-selected when wodim
634                     finds  a  drive with this specific variant of the Philips
635                     CDD-521 command set.
636
637              scsi2_cd
638                     The generic SCSI-2 CD-ROM driver is  auto-selected  when‐
639                     ever  wodim  finds  a pre MMC drive that does not support
640                     writing or a pre MMC writer  that  is  not  supported  by
641                     wodim.
642
643              sony_cdu924
644                     The  driver  for  Sony CDU-924 / CDU-948 is auto-selected
645                     whenever wodim finds one of the old pre  MMC  CD  writers
646                     from Sony.
647
648              teac_cdr50
649                     The  driver for Teac CD-R50S, Teac CD-R55S, JVC XR-W2010,
650                     Pinnacle RCD-5020 is auto-selected whenever  one  of  the
651                     drives  is found that is known to the non MMC command set
652                     used by TEAC and JVC.  Note that  many  drives  from  JVC
653                     will not work because they do not correctly implement the
654                     documented command set and JVC has been unwilling to  fix
655                     or  document  the bugs.  There is no support for the Ses‐
656                     sion At Once write mode yet.
657
658              tyuden_ew50
659                     The driver for Taiyo Yuden EW-50  is  auto-selected  when
660                     wodim  finds  a  drive  with this specific variant of the
661                     Philips CDD-521 command set.
662
663              yamaha_cdr100
664                     The driver for Yamaha CDR-100 / CDR-102 is  auto-selected
665                     when  wodim  finds one of the old pre MMC CD writers from
666                     Yamaha.  There is no support  for  the  Session  At  Once
667                     write mode yet.
668
669              cdr_simul
670                     The simulation CD-R driver allows to run timing and speed
671                     tests with parameters that match the behavior of CD writ‐
672                     ers.
673
674              dvd_simul
675                     The  simulation  DVD-R  driver  allows  to run timing and
676                     speed tests with parameters that match  the  behavior  of
677                     DVD writers.
678
679              There  are two special driver entries in the list: cdr_simul and
680              dvd_simul.  These driver entries are  designed  to  make  timing
681              tests  at  any speed or timing tests for drives that do not sup‐
682              port the -dummy option.   The  simulation  drivers  implement  a
683              drive  with  a  buffer  size of 1 MB that can be changed via the
684              CDR_SIMUL_BUFSIZE environment variable.  The  simulation  driver
685              correctly  simulates  even  a buffer underrun condition.  If the
686              -dummy option is present, the simulation is not aborted in  case
687              of a buffer underrun.
688
689       driveropts=option list
690              Set  driver  specific options. The options are specified a comma
691              separated  list.   To  get  a  list   of   valid   options   use
692              driveropts=help  together  with  the -checkdrive option.  If you
693              like to set driver options without running a typical wodim task,
694              you need to use the -setdropts option in addition, otherwise the
695              command line parser in wodim will  complain.   Currently  imple‐
696              mented driver options are:
697
698              burnfree
699                     Turn  the  support  for  Buffer Underrun Free writing on.
700                     This only works for drives that support  Buffer  Underrun
701                     Free  technology, which is available on most drives manu‐
702                     factured in this millennium.  This may be  called:  Sanyo
703                     BURN-Proof, Ricoh Just-Link, Yamaha Lossless-Link or sim‐
704                     ilar.
705
706                     This option is deprecated and is mentioned here for docu‐
707                     mentation purposes only. The BURN-Free feature is enabled
708                     by default if the drive supports  it.   However,  use  of
709                     BURN-Free  may cause decreased burning quality. Therefore
710                     it can be useful to disable it for certain purposes,  eg.
711                     when creating a master copy for mass CD production.
712
713              noburnfree
714                     Turn the support for Buffer Underrun Free writing off.
715
716              varirec=value
717                     Turn  on  the Plextor VariRec writing mode. The mandatory
718                     parameter value is the laser power offset  and  currently
719                     may  be  selected from -2, -1, 0, 1, 2.  In addition, you
720                     need to set the write  speed  to  4  in  order  to  allow
721                     VariRec to work.
722
723              gigarec=value
724                     Manage  the  Plextor  GigaRec writing mode. The mandatory
725                     parameter value is the disk capacity  ratio  compared  to
726                     normal  recording and currently may be selected from 0.6,
727                     0.7, 0.8, 1.0, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4.  If values < 1.0 are  used,
728                     then  the effect is similar to the Yamaha Audio Master Q.
729                     R.  feature. If values > 1.0  are  used,  then  the  disk
730                     capacity is increased.
731
732                     Not  all drives support all GigaRec values.  When a drive
733                     uses the GigaRec feature, the write speed is  limited  to
734                     8x.
735
736              audiomaster
737                     Turn on the Yamaha Audio Master Q. R.  feature which usu‐
738                     ally should result in high quality  CDs  that  have  less
739                     reading  problems  in  Hi-Fi  players.  As this is imple‐
740                     mented as a variant of the Session at Once write mode, it
741                     will  only work if you select SAO write mode and there is
742                     no need to turn it off.  The Audio Master mode will  work
743                     with  a limited speed but may also be used with data CDs.
744                     In Audio Master mode, the pits on the CD will be  written
745                     larger  then  usual  so  the  capacity  of  the medium is
746                     reduced when turning this feature on.   A  74  minute  CD
747                     will  only  have a capacity of 63 minutes if Audio Master
748                     is active and the capacity of a  80  minute  CD  will  be
749                     reduced to 68 minutes.
750
751              forcespeed
752                     Normally,  modern  drives know the highest possible speed
753                     for different media and may reduce the speed in order  to
754                     grant best write quality.  This technology may be called:
755                     Plextor PowerRec, Ricoh Just-Speed, Yamaha Optimum  Write
756                     Speed  Control  or  similar.   Some drives (e.g. Plextor,
757                     Ricoh and Yamaha) allow to force the  drive  to  use  the
758                     selected  speed  even  if  the  medium is so bad that the
759                     write quality would be poor. This  option  tells  such  a
760                     drive  to  force  to use the selected speed regardless of
761                     the medium quality.
762
763                     Use this option with extreme care and note that the drive
764                     should  know better which medium will work at full speed.
765                     The default is to turn forcespeed off, regardless of  the
766                     defaults of the drive.
767
768              noforcespeed
769                     Turn off the force speed feature.
770
771              speedread
772                     Some  ultra  high  speed  drives  such  as 48x and faster
773                     drives from Plextor limit  the  read  speed  for  unknown
774                     media  to  e.g.  40x  in order to avoid damaged disks and
775                     drives.  Using this option tells the drive  to  read  any
776                     media  as  fast as possible.  Be very careful as this may
777                     cause the media to break  in  the  drive  while  reading,
778                     resulting in a damaged media and drive!
779
780              nospeedread
781                     Turn off unlimited read speed.
782
783              singlesession
784                     Turn  the  drive  into a single session only drive.  This
785                     allows to read defective or non-compliant (illegal) media
786                     with  extremely  non-standard additional (broken/illegal)
787                     TOC entries in the TOC from the second or higher session.
788                     Some of these disks become usable if only the information
789                     from the first session is used.  You need to enable  Sin‐
790                     gle Session mode before you insert the defective disk!
791
792              nosinglesession
793                     Turn off single session mode. The drive will again behave
794                     as usual.
795
796              hidecdr
797                     Hide the fact that a medium might be a recordable medium.
798                     This  allows to make CD-Rs look like CD-ROMs and applica‐
799                     tions believe that the media in the drive is not a CD-R.
800
801              nohidecdr
802                     Turn off hiding CD-R media.
803
804              tattooinfo
805                     Use this option together with -checkdrive to retrieve the
806                     image  size  information  for the Yamaha DiskT@2 feature.
807                     The images always have a line length of 3744 pixel.  Line
808                     number  0 (radius 0) is mapped to the center of the disk.
809                     If you know the inner and outer radius you will  be  able
810                     to  create  a  pre  distorted image that later may appear
811                     undistorted on the disk.
812
813              tattoofile=name
814                     Use this option together with  -checkdrive  to  write  an
815                     image  prepared  for  the  Yamaha  DiskT@2 feature to the
816                     medium.  The file must be a file with raw image B&W  data
817                     (one byte per pixel) in a size as retrieved by a previous
818                     call to tattoofile=name .   If  the  size  of  the  image
819                     equals  the  maximum  possible  size  (3744 x 320 pixel),
820                     wodim will use the first part of  the  file.  This  first
821                     part  then  will  be written to the leftover space on the
822                     CD.
823
824                     Note that the image must be mirrored to be readable  from
825                     the pick up side of the CD.
826
827       -setdropts
828              Set  the  driveropts  specified  by  driveropts=option list, the
829              speed of the drive and the dummy flag  and  exit.   This  allows
830              wodim  to  set  drive  specific parameters that are not directly
831              used by wodim like e.g.  single session mode, hide cdr and simi‐
832              lar.  It is needed in case that driveropts=option list should be
833              called without planning to run a typical wodim task.
834
835       -checkdrive
836              Checks if a driver for the current drive is  present  and  exit.
837              If the drive is a known drive, wodim uses exit code 0.
838
839       -prcap Print  the drive capabilities for SCSI-3/mmc compliant drives as
840              obtained from mode page 0x2A. Values marked  with  kB  use  1000
841              bytes  as  kilo-byte,  values  marked  with KB use 1024 bytes as
842              Kilo-byte.
843
844       -inq   Do an inquiry for the drive, print the inquiry info and exit.
845
846       -scanbus
847              Scan all SCSI devices on all SCSI busses and print  the  inquiry
848              strings.  This  option  may  be used to find SCSI address of the
849              CD/DVD-Recorder on a system. If some device types are invisible,
850              try  using  dev=ATA:  or similar option to give a hint about the
851              device type you are looking for.  The  numbers  printed  out  as
852              labels  are  computed  by: bus * 100 + target.  On platforms and
853              device systems without persistent  SCSI  number  management  the
854              results are not reliable. Use the .B --devices option instead.
855
856       --devices
857              Look  for  useable  devices using the system specific functions,
858              eg. probing with usual device nodes in /dev/*, and  display  the
859              detections using symbolic device names in OS specific syntax.
860
861       -reset Try to reset the SCSI bus where the CD recorder is located. This
862              works not on all operating systems.
863
864       -abort Try to send an abort sequence to the drive.  If  you  use  wodim
865              only,  this should never be needed; but other software may leave
866              a drive in an unusable condition.  Calling wodim -reset  may  be
867              needed if a previous write has been interrupted and the software
868              did not tell the drive that it will not continue to write.
869
870       -overburn
871              Allow wodim to write more than the official size  of  a  medium.
872              This  feature  is  usually called overburning and depends on the
873              fact that most blank media may hold more space than the official
874              size.  As  the official size of the lead-out area on the disk is
875              90 seconds (6750 sectors) and a disk usually works if there  are
876              at least 150 sectors of lead out, all media may be overburned by
877              at least 88 seconds (6600 sectors).  Most CD recorders  only  do
878              overburning  in  SAO  or RAW mode. Known exceptions are TEAC CD-
879              R50S, TEAC CD-R55S and the Panasonic CW-7502.   Some  drives  do
880              not  allow  to  overburn as much as you might like and limit the
881              size of a CD to e.g. 76 minutes. This  problem  may  be  circum‐
882              vented  by writing the CD in RAW mode because this way the drive
883              has no chance to find the size before starting to  burn.   There
884              is  no  guarantee  that  your drive supports overburning at all.
885              Make a test to check if your drive implements the feature.
886
887       -ignsize
888              Ignore the known size of the medium. This option should be  used
889              with  extreme  care, it exists only for debugging purposes don't
890              use it for other reasons.  It is not needed to write disks  with
891              more than the nominal capacity.  This option implies -overburn.
892
893       -useinfo
894              Use  *.inf  files to overwrite audio options.  If this option is
895              used, the pregap size information is read from  the  *.inf  file
896              that  is  associated  with the file that contains the audio data
897              for a track.
898
899              If used together with the -audio option, wodim may  be  used  to
900              write  audio  CDs from a pipe from icedax if you call wodim with
901              the *.inf files as track parameter list instead of  using  audio
902              files.   The  audio  data  is read from stdin in this case.  See
903              EXAMPLES section below.  wodim first verifies that stdin is  not
904              connected  to  a  terminal  and  runs some heuristic consistency
905              checks on the *.inf files and then sets the track  lengths  from
906              the information in the *.inf files.
907
908              If  you like to write from stdin, make sure that wodim is called
909              with a large enough FIFO size, reduce the write speed to a value
910              below  the  read  speed of the source drive and switch the burn-
911              free option for the recording drive on.
912
913       defpregap=#
914              Set the default pre-gap size for all tracks except track  number
915              1.   This  option currently only makes sense with the TEAC drive
916              when creating track-at-once disks without the 2  second  silence
917              before each track.
918              This option may go away in future.
919
920       -packet
921              Set Packet writing mode.  This is an experimental interface.
922
923       pktsize=#
924              Set  the packet size to #, forces fixed packet mode.  This is an
925              experimental interface.
926
927       -noclose
928              Do not close the current track, useful only when in packet writ‐
929              ing mode.  This is an experimental interface.
930
931       mcn=med_cat_nr
932              Set the Media Catalog Number of the CD to med_cat_nr.
933
934       -text  Write CD-Text information based on information taken from a file
935              that contains ascii information for  the  text  strings.   wodim
936              supports  CD-Text  information based on the content of the *.inf
937              files created by icedax and CD-Text  information  based  on  the
938              content  from  a  CUE  sheet file.  If a CUE sheet file contains
939              both (binary CDTEXTFILE and text based SONGWRITER) entries, then
940              the information based on the CDTEXTFILE entry will win.
941
942              You need to use the -useinfo option in addition in order to tell
943              wodim to read the *.inf files or cuefile=filename  in  order  to
944              tell wodim to read a CUE sheet file in addition.  If you like to
945              write your own CD-Text information, edit the *.inf files or  the
946              CUE sheet file with a text editor and change the fields that are
947              relevant for CD-Text.
948
949       textfile=filename
950              Write CD-Text based on information  found  in  the  binary  file
951              filename.   This  file must contain information in a data format
952              defined in the SCSI-3 MMC-2 standard and in the  Red  Book.  The
953              four  byte  size  header that is defined in the SCSI standard is
954              optional and allows to make the recognition of correct data less
955              ambiguous.   This  is the best option to be used to copy CD-Text
956              data from existing CDs that already carry  CD-Text  information.
957              To  get  data in a format suitable for this option use wodim -vv
958              -toc  to  extract  the  information   from   disk.    If   both,
959              textfile=filename  and  CD-Text  information from *.inf or *.cue
960              files are present, textfile=filename will  overwrite  the  other
961              information.
962
963       cuefile=filename
964              Take  all  recording related information from a CDRWIN compliant
965              CUE sheet file.  No track files are allowed when this option  is
966              present and the option -dao is currently needed in addition.
967
968

TRACK OPTIONS

970       Track options may be mixed with track file names.
971
972       isrc=ISRC_number
973              Set  the  International  Standard  Recording Number for the next
974              track to ISRC_number.
975
976       index=list
977              Sets an index list for the next track.  In index list is a comma
978              separated  list  of  numbers that are counting from index 1. The
979              first entry in this list must contain a 0, the following numbers
980              must  be an ascending list of numbers (counting in 1/75 seconds)
981              that represent the start of the indices. An index  list  in  the
982              form: 0,7500,15000 sets index 1 to the start of the track, index
983              2 100 seconds from the start of the track and index 3  200  sec‐
984              onds from the start of the track.
985
986       -audio If  this  flag  is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
987              CD-DA (similar to Red Book) audio format.  The  file  with  data
988              for this tracks should contain stereo, 16-bit digital audio with
989              44100 samples/s.  The byte order should be  the  following:  MSB
990              left,  LSB  left,  MSB right, LSB right, MSB left and so on. The
991              track should be a multiple of 2352 bytes. It is not possible  to
992              put  the  master  image  of an audio track on a raw disk because
993              data will be read in multiple of 2352 bytes during the recording
994              process.
995
996              If a filename ends in .au or .wav the file is considered to be a
997              structured audio data file.  wodim assumes that the file in this
998              case  is  a Sun audio file or a Microsoft .WAV file and extracts
999              the audio data from the files by  skipping  over  the  non-audio
1000              header  information.   In  all other cases, wodim will only work
1001              correctly if the audio data stream does  not  have  any  header.
1002              Because many structured audio files do not have an integral num‐
1003              ber of blocks (1/75th second) in length, it is  often  necessary
1004              to specify the -pad option as well.  wodim recognizes that audio
1005              data in a .WAV file is  stored  in  Intel  (little-endian)  byte
1006              order,  and  will  automatically  byte-swap  the  data if the CD
1007              recorder requires big-endian data.  wodim will reject any  audio
1008              file  that  does  not  match the Red Book requirements of 16-bit
1009              stereo samples in PCM coding at 44100 samples/second.
1010
1011              Using other structured audio data formats as input to wodim will
1012              usually  work  if  the  structure  of  the data is the structure
1013              described above (raw pcm data in big-endian byte  order).   How‐
1014              ever,  if  the  data  format  includes a header, you will hear a
1015              click at the start of a track.
1016
1017              If neither -data nor -audio have been specified, wodim  defaults
1018              to -audio for all filenames that end in .au or .wav and to -data
1019              for all other files.
1020
1021       -swab  If this flag is present, audio data is assumed to  be  in  byte-
1022              swapped  (little-endian)  order.   Some types of CD-Writers e.g.
1023              Yamaha, Sony and the new SCSI-3/mmc drives require audio data to
1024              be presented in little-endian order, while other writers require
1025              audio data to be presented  in  the  big-endian  (network)  byte
1026              order  normally used by the SCSI protocol.  wodim knows if a CD-
1027              Recorder needs audio data in big- or  little-endian  order,  and
1028              corrects the byte order of the data stream to match the needs of
1029              the recorder.  You only need the -swab flag if your data  stream
1030              is in Intel (little-endian) byte order.
1031
1032              Note  that the verbose output of wodim will show you if swapping
1033              is necessary to make the byte order of the input  data  fit  the
1034              required byte order of the recorder.  wodim will not show you if
1035              the -swab flag was actually present for a track.
1036
1037       -data  If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks  are  written  in
1038              CD-ROM  mode 1 (Yellow Book) format. The data size is a multiple
1039              of 2048 bytes.  The file  with  track  data  should  contain  an
1040              ISO-9660  or  Rock  Ridge  filesystem image (see genisoimage for
1041              more details). If the track data is  an  ufs  filesystem  image,
1042              fragment  size  should be set to 2 KB or more to allow CD-drives
1043              with 2 KB sector size to be used for reading.
1044
1045              -data is the default, if no other flag is present and  the  file
1046              does not appear to be of one of the well known audio file types.
1047
1048              If  neither -data nor -audio have been specified, wodim defaults
1049              to -audio for all filenames that end in .au or .wav and to -data
1050              for all other files.
1051
1052       -mode2 If  this  flag  is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
1053              CD-ROM mode 2 format. The data size is a multiple of 2336 bytes.
1054
1055       -xa    If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks  are  written  in
1056              CD-ROM  XA  mode 2 form 1 format. The data size is a multiple of
1057              2048 bytes.  The XA sector sub headers will be  created  by  the
1058              drive.  With this option, the write mode is the same as with the
1059              -multi option.
1060
1061       -xa1   If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks  are  written  in
1062              CD-ROM  XA  mode 2 form 1 format. The data size is a multiple of
1063              2056 bytes.  The XA sector sub headers are part of the user data
1064              and  have  to  be  supplied by the application that prepares the
1065              data to be written.
1066
1067       -xa2   If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks  are  written  in
1068              CD-ROM  XA  mode 2 form 2 format. The data is a multiple of 2324
1069              bytes.  The XA sector sub headers will be created by the drive.
1070
1071       -xamix If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in  a
1072              way  that  allows a mix of CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1/2 format. The
1073              data size is a multiple of 2332 bytes.  The XA sector sub  head‐
1074              ers  are  part  of  the user data and have to be supplied by the
1075              application that prepares the data to be written.  The  CRC  and
1076              the  P/Q  parity  ECC/EDC  information  (depending on the sector
1077              type) have to be supplied by the application that  prepares  the
1078              data to be written.
1079
1080       -cdi   If  this  flag  is  present, the TOC type for the disk is set to
1081              CDI.  This only makes sense with XA disks.
1082
1083       -isosize
1084              Use the ISO-9660 file system size as the size of the next track.
1085              This  option  is  needed  if you want wodim to directly read the
1086              image of a track from a raw disk partition or from a TAO  master
1087              CD. In the first case the option -isosize is needed to limit the
1088              size of the CD to the size of the ISO filesystem.  In the second
1089              case the option -isosize is needed to prevent wodim from reading
1090              the two run out blocks that are appended by each CD-recorder  in
1091              track  at once mode. These two run out blocks cannot be read and
1092              would cause a buffer underrun that would cause a defective copy.
1093              Do  not  use  this option on files created by genisoimage and in
1094              case wodim reads the track data from stdin.  In the first  case,
1095              you  would prevent wodim from writing the amount of padding that
1096              has been appended by genisoimage and in the latter case, it will
1097              not work because stdin is not seekable.
1098
1099              If  -isosize  is  used for a track, wodim will automatically add
1100              padding for this track as if the -pad option has been  used  but
1101              the  amount  of  padding may be less than the padding written by
1102              genisoimage.  Note that if you use -isosize on a track that con‐
1103              tains Sparc boot information, the boot information will be lost.
1104
1105              Note  also that this option cannot be used to determine the size
1106              of a file system if the multi session option is present.
1107
1108       -pad   If the track is a data track, 15 sectors of zeroed data will  be
1109              added  to  the  end  of this and each subsequent data track.  In
1110              this case, the -pad option is superseded by the padsize= option.
1111              It  will  remain however as a shorthand for padsize=15s.  If the
1112              -pad option refers to an audio track, wodim will pad  the  audio
1113              data  to be a multiple of 2352 bytes.  The audio data padding is
1114              done with binary zeroes which is equal to absolute silence.
1115
1116              -pad remains valid until disabled by -nopad.
1117
1118       padsize=#
1119              Set the amount of data to be appended as  padding  to  the  next
1120              track  to  #.   Opposed  to the behavior of the -pad option, the
1121              value for padsize= is reset to zero for each new  track.   wodim
1122              assumes  a  sector  size  of 2048 bytes for the padsize= option,
1123              independent from the real sector size and independent  from  the
1124              write  mode.  The megabytes mentioned in the verbose mode output
1125              however are counting the output sector size which is  e.g.  2448
1126              bytes when writing in RAW/RAW96 mode.  See fs= option for possi‐
1127              ble arguments.  To pad the equivalent of 20 minutes on a CD, you
1128              may  write  padsize=20x60x75s.  Use this option if your CD-drive
1129              is not able to read the last sectors of a track or if  you  want
1130              to  be  able  to read the CD on a Linux system with the ISO-9660
1131              filesystem read ahead bug.  If an empty file is used  for  track
1132              data,  this option may be used to create a disk that is entirely
1133              made of padding.  This may e.g. be used to  find  out  how  much
1134              overburning is possible with a specific media.
1135
1136       -nopad Do not pad the following tracks - the default.
1137
1138       -shorttrack
1139              Allow all subsequent tracks to violate the Red Book track length
1140              standard which requires a minimum track  length  of  4  seconds.
1141              This  option  is  only useful when used in SAO or RAW mode.  Not
1142              all drives support this  feature.  The  drive  must  accept  the
1143              resulting CUE sheet or support RAW writing.
1144
1145       -noshorttrack
1146              Re-enforce the Red Book track length standard. Tracks must be at
1147              least 4 seconds.
1148
1149       pregap=#
1150              Set the  pre-gap size for the next track.  This option currently
1151              only makes sense with the TEAC drive when creating track-at-once
1152              disks without the 2 second silence before each track.
1153              This option may go away in future.
1154
1155       -preemp
1156              If this flag is present, all TOC entries  for  subsequent  audio
1157              tracks  will  indicate that the audio data has been sampled with
1158              50/15 microsec pre-emphasis.  The data, however is not  modified
1159              during  the  process  of  transferring  from file to disk.  This
1160              option has no effect on data tracks.
1161
1162       -nopreemp
1163              If this flag is present, all TOC entries  for  subsequent  audio
1164              tracks  will indicate that the audio data has been mastered with
1165              linear data - this is the default.
1166
1167       -copy  If this flag is present, all TOC entries  for  subsequent  audio
1168              tracks of the resulting CD will indicate that the audio data has
1169              permission to be copied  without  limit.   This  option  has  no
1170              effect on data tracks.
1171
1172       -nocopy
1173              If  this  flag  is present, all TOC entries for subsequent audio
1174              tracks of the resulting CD will indicate that the audio data has
1175              permission to be copied only once for personal use - this is the
1176              default.
1177
1178       -scms  If this flag is present, all TOC entries  for  subsequent  audio
1179              tracks of the resulting CD will indicate that the audio data has
1180              no permission to be copied anymore.
1181
1182       tsize=#
1183              If the master image for the next track has been stored on a  raw
1184              disk,  use  this  option  to specify the valid amount of data on
1185              this disk. If the image of the next track is stored in a regular
1186              file,  the size of that file is taken to determine the length of
1187              this track.  If the track contains an ISO 9660 filesystem  image
1188              use the -isosize option to determine the length of that filesys‐
1189              tem image.
1190              In Disk at Once mode and with some drives that use the TEAC pro‐
1191              gramming  interface,  even in Track at Once mode, wodim needs to
1192              know the size of each track before starting to write  the  disk.
1193              wodim  now  checks this and aborts before starting to write.  If
1194              this happens you will need to run genisoimage -print-size before
1195              and  use  the  output  (with `s' appended) as an argument to the
1196              tsize= option of wodim (e.g. tsize=250000s).
1197              See fs= option for possible arguments.
1198
1199

EXAMPLES

1201       For all examples below, it will be assumed that the CD/DVD-Recorder  is
1202       connected to the primary SCSI bus of the machine. The SCSI target id is
1203       set to 2.
1204
1205       To record a pure CD-ROM at double speed, using data from the file cdim‐
1206       age.raw:
1207
1208           wodim -v speed=2 dev=2,0 cdimage.raw
1209
1210       To  create  an  image  for a ISO 9660 filesystem with Rock Ridge exten‐
1211       sions:
1212
1213           genisoimage -R -o cdimage.raw /home/joerg/master/tree
1214
1215       To check the resulting file before writing to CD on Solaris:
1216
1217           mount -r -F fbk -o type=hsfs /dev/fbk0:cdimage.raw /mnt
1218
1219       On Linux:
1220
1221           mount cdimage.raw -r -t iso9660 -o loop /mnt
1222
1223       Go on with:
1224           ls -lR /mnt
1225           umount /mnt
1226
1227       If the overall speed of the system is sufficient and the  structure  of
1228       the  filesystem  is not too complex, wodim will run without creating an
1229       image of the ISO 9660 filesystem. Simply run the pipeline:
1230
1231           genisoimage -R /master/tree | wodim -v fs=6m speed=2 dev=2,0 -
1232
1233       The recommended minimum FIFO  size  for  running  this  pipeline  is  4
1234       MBytes.  As the default FIFO size is 4 MB, the fs= option needs only be
1235       present if you want to use a different FIFO size.  If  your  system  is
1236       loaded,  you  should  run  genisoimage  in the real time class too.  To
1237       raise the priority of genisoimage replace the command
1238
1239           genisoimage -R /master/tree
1240       by
1241           priocntl -e -c RT -p 59 genisoimage -R /master/tree
1242
1243       on Solaris and by
1244
1245           nice --18 genisoimage -R /master/tree
1246
1247       on systems that  don't  have  UNIX  International  compliant  real-time
1248       scheduling.
1249
1250       wodim  runs at priority 59 on Solaris, you should run genisoimage at no
1251       more than priority 58. On other systems, you should run genisoimage  at
1252       no less than nice --18.
1253
1254       Creating  a CD-ROM without file system image on disk has been tested on
1255       a Sparcstation-2 with a Yamaha CDR-400. It did work up  to  quad  speed
1256       when  the machine was not loaded.  A faster machine may be able to han‐
1257       dle quad speed also in the loaded case.
1258
1259       To record a pure CD-DA (audio) at single speed, with  each  track  con‐
1260       tained in a file named track01.cdaudio, track02.cdaudio, etc:
1261
1262           wodim -v speed=1 dev=/dev/cdrw -audio track*.cdaudio
1263
1264       To  check  if  it will be ok to use double speed for the example above.
1265       Use the dummy write option:
1266
1267           wodim -v -dummy speed=2 dev=/dev/cdrw -audio track*.cdaudio
1268
1269       To record a mixed-mode CD with an ISO 9660 filesystem from  cdimage.raw
1270       on  the first track, the other tracks being audio tracks from the files
1271       track01.cdaudio, track02.cdaudio, etc:
1272
1273           wodim -v dev=2,0 cdimage.raw -audio track*.cdaudio
1274
1275       To handle drives that need to know the size of a track before  starting
1276       to write, first run
1277
1278           genisoimage -R -q -print-size /master/tree
1279
1280       and then run
1281
1282           genisoimage -R /master/tree | wodim speed=2 dev=2,0 tsize=XXXs -
1283
1284       where XXX is replaced by the output of the previous run of genisoimage.
1285
1286       To copy an audio CD in the most accurate way, first run
1287
1288           icedax dev=/dev/cdrom -vall cddb=0 -B -Owav
1289
1290       and then run
1291
1292           wodim dev=/dev/cdrw -v -dao -useinfo -text  *.wav
1293
1294       This  will  try  to  copy track indices and to read CD-Text information
1295       from disk.  If there is no CD-Text information, icedax will try to  get
1296       the information from freedb.org instead.
1297
1298       To copy an audio CD from a pipe (without intermediate files), first run
1299
1300           icedax dev=1,0 -vall cddb=0 -info-only
1301
1302       and then run
1303
1304           icedax dev=1,0 -no-infofile -B -Oraw - | \
1305           wodim dev=2,0 -v -dao -audio -useinfo -text *.inf
1306
1307       This  will  get  all  information  (including track size info) from the
1308       *.inf files and then read the audio data from stdin.
1309
1310       If you like to write from stdin, make sure that wodim is called with  a
1311       large  enough  FIFO  size  (e.g.  fs=128m), reduce the write speed to a
1312       value below the read speed of the source drive  (e.g.   speed=12),  and
1313       get a CD/DVD drive with BURN-Free feature if it is not available yet.
1314
1315       To  set  drive  options without writing a CD (e.g. to switch a drive to
1316       single session mode), run
1317
1318           wodim dev=1,0 -setdropts driveropts=singlesession
1319
1320       If you like to do this when no CD is in the drive, call
1321
1322           wodim dev=1,0 -force -setdropts driveropts=singlesession
1323
1324       To copy a CD in clone mode, first read the master CD using:
1325
1326           readom dev=b,t,l -clone f=somefile
1327
1328       or (in case the CD contains many sectors that are unreadable by  inten‐
1329       tion) by calling:
1330
1331           readom dev=1,0 -clone -nocorr f=somefile
1332
1333       will  create  the  files  somefile and somefile.toc.  Then write the CD
1334       using:
1335
1336           wodim dev=1,0 -raw96r -clone -v somefile
1337
1338
1339

ENVIRONMENT

1341       CDR_DEVICE
1342              This may either hold a device identifier that is suitable to the
1343              open  call  of the SCSI transport library or a label in the file
1344              /etc/wodim.conf.
1345
1346       CDR_SPEED
1347              Sets the default  speed  value  for  writing  (see  also  speed=
1348              option).
1349
1350       CDR_FIFOSIZE
1351              Sets the default size of the FIFO (see also fs=# option).
1352
1353       CDR_FORCERAWSPEED
1354              If  this  environment  variable  is set, wodim will allow you to
1355              write at the full RAW encoding  speed  a  single  CPU  supports.
1356              This  will  create  high potential of buffer underruns. Use with
1357              care.
1358
1359       CDR_FORCESPEED
1360              If this environment variable is set, wodim  will  allow  you  to
1361              write  at  the  full DMA speed the system supports.  There is no
1362              DMA reserve for reading the data that  is  to  be  written  from
1363              disk.   This will create high potential of buffer underruns. Use
1364              with care.
1365
1366       RSH    If the RSH environment is present, the  remote  connection  will
1367              not be created via rcmd(3) but by calling the program pointed to
1368              by RSH.  Use e.g.  RSH=/usr/bin/ssh to  create  a  secure  shell
1369              connection.
1370
1371              Note  that this forces wodim to create a pipe to the rsh(1) pro‐
1372              gram and disallows wodim to directly access the  network  socket
1373              to  the  remote server.  This makes it impossible to set up per‐
1374              formance parameters and slows down the connection compared to  a
1375              root initiated rcmd(3) connection.
1376
1377       RSCSI  If the RSCSI environment is present, the remote SCSI server will
1378              not  be  the  program  /opt/schily/sbin/rscsi  but  the  program
1379              pointed  to  by RSCSI.  Note that the remote SCSI server program
1380              name will be ignored if you log in using  an  account  that  has
1381              been created with a remote SCSI server program as login shell.
1382
1383

FILES

1385       /etc/wodim.conf
1386              Default   values  can  be  set  for  the  following  options  in
1387              /etc/wodim.conf.  For example: CDR_FIFOSIZE=8m or CDR_SPEED=2
1388
1389              CDR_DEVICE
1390                     This may either hold a device identifier that is suitable
1391                     to the open call of the SCSI transport library or a label
1392                     in the file /etc/wodim.conf that  allows  to  identify  a
1393                     specific drive on the system.
1394
1395              CDR_SPEED
1396                     Sets the default speed value for writing (see also speed=
1397                     option).
1398
1399              CDR_FIFOSIZE
1400                     Sets the default size of the FIFO (see also fs=# option).
1401
1402              CDR_MAXFIFOSIZE
1403                     Sets the maximum size of the FIFO (see also fs=# option).
1404
1405              Any other keyword (label) is an identifier (symbolic name) for a
1406              specific drive
1407                     on  the  system.   Such an identifier may not contain the
1408                     characters ',', '/', '@' or ':'.
1409
1410                     Each line that follows a label contains a whitespace sep‐
1411                     arated  list  of items.  Currently, four items are recog‐
1412                     nized: the  drive's  target  specification,  the  default
1413                     speed  that  should  be  used for this drive, the default
1414                     FIFO size that should be used for this  drive  and  drive
1415                     specific  options.  The values for speed and fifosize may
1416                     be set to -1 to tell wodim to use  the  global  defaults.
1417                     target  can  be  -1 to use the auto-guessing of the drive
1418                     (see above).
1419
1420                     The value for driveropts may be omitted or set to  ""  if
1421                     no  driveropts  are  used.   A typical line may look this
1422                     way:
1423
1424                     plex760= 0,5,0 12   50m  varirec=1
1425
1426                     pioneer= /dev/hdd   -1   -1
1427
1428                     This tells wodim that a drive named plex760 is at scsibus
1429                     0, target 5, lun 0 and should be used with speed 12 and a
1430                     FIFO size of 50 MB. It also  uses  some  device  specific
1431                     parameter.   A  second  drive  may  is accessible via the
1432                     device file /dev/hdd and uses the default speed  and  the
1433                     default FIFO size.
1434
1435

SEE ALSO

1437       icedax(1), readom(1), genisoimage(1), ssh(1).
1438
1439

NOTES

1441       On  Solaris  you  need to stop the volume management if you like to use
1442       the USCSI fallback SCSI transport code. Even things like wodim -scanbus
1443       will not work if the volume management is running.
1444
1445       Disks  made  in  Track  At  Once  mode are not suitable as a master for
1446       direct mass production by CD manufacturers.  You will need the disk  at
1447       once option to record such disks.  Nevertheless the disks made in Track
1448       At Once will normally be read in all CD  players.  Some  old  audio  CD
1449       players  however  may  produce  a  two  second  click between two audio
1450       tracks.
1451
1452       The minimal size of a track is 4 seconds or 300 sectors. If  you  write
1453       smaller  tracks,  the CD-Recorder will add dummy blocks. This is not an
1454       error, even though the SCSI-error message looks this way.
1455
1456       The Yamaha CDR-400 and all new SCSI-3/mmc conforming  drives  are  sup‐
1457       ported in single and multi-session.
1458
1459       You should run several tests in all supported speeds of your drive with
1460       the -dummy option turned on if you are using wodim on an  unknown  sys‐
1461       tem.  Writing a CD is a real-time process.  NFS, CIFS and other network
1462       file systems won't always deliver constantly the needed data rates.  If
1463       you  want to use wodim with CD-images that are located on a NFS mounted
1464       filesystem, be sure that the FIFO size is big enough.  If you  want  to
1465       make sure that buffer underruns are not caused by your source disk, you
1466       may use the command
1467
1468           wodim -dummy dev=2,0 padsize=600m /dev/null
1469
1470       to create a disk that is entirely made of dummy data.
1471
1472       There are also cases where you either need to be root or install  wodim
1473       executable with suid-root permissions. First, if you are using a device
1474       manufactured before 1999 which requires a non-MMC  driver,  you  should
1475       run  wodim  in  dummy  mode  before writing data. If you find a problem
1476       doing this, please report it to the cdrkit maintainers (see below).
1477
1478       Second, certain functionality may be unusable because of  Linux's  SCSI
1479       command  filtering.  When  using wodim for anything except of pure data
1480       writing, you should also test the process  in  dummy  mode  and  report
1481       trouble to the contact address below.
1482
1483       If  you  still want to run wodim with root permissions, you can set the
1484       permissions of the executable to suid-root. See the additional notes of
1485       your  system/program  distribution  or README.suidroot which is part of
1486       the cdrkit source.
1487
1488       You should not connect old drives that do not support disconnect/recon‐
1489       nect to either the SCSI bus that is connected to the CD-Recorder or the
1490       source disk.
1491
1492       A Compact Disc can have no more than 99 tracks.
1493
1494       When creating a disc with both audio and data tracks, the  data  should
1495       be  on  track  1  otherwise  you should create a CDplus disk which is a
1496       multi session disk with the first session containing the  audio  tracks
1497       and the following session containing the data track.
1498
1499       Many  operating  systems  are  not able to read more than a single data
1500       track, or need special software to do so.
1501
1502       If you have more information or  SCSI  command  manuals  for  currently
1503       unsupported CD/DVD/BR/HD-DVD-Recorders, please contact the cdrkit main‐
1504       tainers (see below).
1505
1506       Many CD recorders have bugs and often require a firmware update to work
1507       correctly.  If  you  experience  problems  which  cannot  be  solved or
1508       explained by the notes above, please look for instructions on the home‐
1509       page of the particular manufacturer.
1510
1511       Some  bugs  will  force  you to power cycle the device or to reboot the
1512       machine.
1513
1514       The FIFO percent output is computed just after a block of data has been
1515       written  to  the  CD/DVD-Recorder. For this reason, there will never be
1516       100% FIFO fill ratio while the FIFO is in streaming mode.
1517
1518

DIAGNOSTICS

1520       You have 4 seconds to abort wodim start after you see the message:
1521
1522       Starting to write CD at speed %d in %s mode for %s  session.   In  most
1523       shells you can do that by pressing Ctrl-C.
1524
1525       A typical error message for a SCSI command looks like:
1526
1527              wodim: I/O error. test unit ready: scsi sendcmd: no error
1528              CDB:  00 20 00 00 00 00
1529              status: 0x2 (CHECK CONDITION)
1530              Sense Bytes: 70 00 05 00 00 00 00 0A 00 00 00 00 25 00 00 00 00 00
1531              Sense Key: 0x5 Illegal Request, Segment 0
1532              Sense Code: 0x25 Qual 0x00 (logical unit not supported) Fru 0x0
1533              Sense flags: Blk 0 (not valid)
1534              cmd finished after 0.002s timeout 40s
1535
1536       The  first  line  gives information about the transport of the command.
1537       The text after the first colon gives the error text for the system call
1538       from  the  view  of  the  kernel. It usually is: I/O error unless other
1539       problems happen. The next words contain a  short  description  for  the
1540       SCSI  command  that fails. The rest of the line tells you if there were
1541       any problems for the transport of the command over the SCSI bus.  fatal
1542       error  means that it was not possible to transport the command (i.e. no
1543       device present at the requested SCSI address).
1544
1545       The second line prints the SCSI command descriptor block for the failed
1546       command.
1547
1548       The  third  line  gives information on the SCSI status code returned by
1549       the command, if the transport of the command succeeds.  This  is  error
1550       information from the SCSI device.
1551
1552       The fourth line is a hex dump of the auto request sense information for
1553       the command.
1554
1555       The fifth line is the error text for the sense key if  available,  fol‐
1556       lowed  by  the  segment  number that is only valid if the command was a
1557       copy command. If the error message is not directly related to the  cur‐
1558       rent command, the text deferred error is appended.
1559
1560       The sixth line is the error text for the sense code and the sense qual‐
1561       ifier if available.  If the type of the device is known, the sense data
1562       is  decoded  from  tables  in scsierrs.c .  The text is followed by the
1563       error value for a field replaceable unit.
1564
1565       The seventh line prints the block number that is related to the  failed
1566       command  and  text for several error flags. The block number may not be
1567       valid.
1568
1569       The eight line reports the timeout set up for this command and the time
1570       that the command really needed to complete.
1571
1572       The following message is not an error:
1573
1574              Track 01: Total bytes read/written: 2048/2048 (1 sectors).
1575              wodim: I/O error. flush cache: scsi sendcmd: no error
1576              CDB:  35 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
1577              status: 0x2 (CHECK CONDITION)
1578              Sense Bytes: F0 00 05 80 00 00 27 0A 00 00 00 00 B5 00 00 00 00 00
1579              Sense Key: 0x5 Illegal Request, Segment 0
1580              Sense Code: 0xB5 Qual 0x00 (dummy data blocks added) Fru 0x0
1581              Sense flags: Blk -2147483609 (valid)
1582              cmd finished after 0.002s timeout 40s
1583
1584       It  simply notifies, that a track that is smaller than the minimum size
1585       has been expanded to 300 sectors.
1586

BUGS

1588       netscsid does not work properly and is generally  unmaintained.  It  is
1589       probably  not compatible with rscsi from cdrtools either. Good bugfixes
1590       are welcome, talk to Cdrkit maintainers.
1591
1592       cuefile support is very limited, only one file is allowed.  For  volun‐
1593       teers, see TODO file in the source.
1594
1595       Specifying an audio file multiple times causes corruption of the second
1596       track (effectively no data plus minimum padding).
1597
1598       Some of the bugs may be fixed in Joerg Schilling's cdrtools. See  there
1599       for details, URL attached below.
1600
1601

CREDITS

1603       Joerg Schilling (schilling@fokus.fhg.de)
1604                      For writing cdrecord and libscg which represent the most
1605                      parts of wodim's code.
1606
1607       Bill Swartz    (Bill_Swartz@twolf.com)
1608                      For helping me with the TEAC driver support
1609
1610       Aaron Newsome  (aaron.d.newsome@wdc.com)
1611                      For letting me develop Sony support on his drive
1612
1613       Eric Youngdale (eric@andante.jic.com)
1614                      For supplying mkisofs
1615
1616       Gadi Oxman     (gadio@netvision.net.il)
1617                      For tips on the ATAPI standard
1618
1619       Finn Arne Gangstad  (finnag@guardian.no)
1620                      For the first FIFO implementation.
1621
1622       Dave Platt     (dplatt@feghoot.ml.org)
1623                      For creating the experimental  packet  writing  support,
1624                      the  first implementation of CD-RW blanking support, the
1625                      first .wav file decoder and  many  nice  discussions  on
1626                      cdrecord.
1627
1628       Chris P. Ross (cross@eng.us.uu.net)
1629                      For the first implementation of a BSDI SCSI transport.
1630
1631       Grant R. Guenther   (grant@torque.net)
1632                      For creating the first parallel port transport implemen‐
1633                      tation for Linux.
1634
1635       Kenneth D. Merry (ken@kdm.org)
1636                      for providing the CAM port  for  FreeBSD  together  with
1637                      Michael Smith (msmith@freebsd.org)
1638
1639       Heiko Eiszfeldt (heiko@hexco.de)
1640                      for  making  libedc_ecc  available  (needed to write RAW
1641                      data sectors).
1642
1643

MAILING LISTS

1645       If you want to actively take part on the development of wodim, you  may
1646       join the developer mailing list via this URL:
1647
1648       https://alioth.debian.org/mail/?group_id=31006
1649
1650       The mail address of the list is: debburn-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org
1651
1652

AUTHORS

1654       wodim  is  currently  maintained  as  part of the cdrkit project by its
1655       developers. Most of the code and this manual page was originally  writ‐
1656       ten by:
1657
1658       Joerg Schilling
1659       Seestr. 110
1660       D-13353 Berlin
1661       Germany
1662
1663       This application is derived from "cdrecord" as included in the cdrtools
1664       package [1] created by Joerg Schilling, who deserves most of the credit
1665       for  its  success.  However, he is not involved into the development of
1666       this spinoff and therefore he shall not be  held  responsible  for  any
1667       problems  caused by it. Do not refer to this application as "cdrecord",
1668       do not try to get support for wodim by contacting the original authors.
1669
1670       Additional information can be found on:
1671       https://alioth.debian.org/projects/debburn/
1672
1673       If you have support questions, send them to
1674
1675       debburn-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org
1676
1677       If you have definitely found a bug, send a mail to this list or to
1678
1679       submit@bugs.debian.org
1680
1681       writing at least a short description into  the  Subject  and  "Package:
1682       cdrkit" in the first line of the mail body.
1683

SOURCES

1685       [1] Cdrtools 2.01.01a08 from May 2006, http://cdrecord.berlios.de
1686
1687
1688
1689
1690                                  Version 2.0                         wodim(1)
Impressum