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readcd (1)
  • >> readcd (1) ( Linux man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
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    NAME

    readcd - read or write data Compact Discs
     
    

    SYNOPSIS

    readcd dev=device [ options ]

     

    DESCRIPTION

    Readcd is used to read or write Compact Discs.

    The device refers to scsibus/target/lun of the drive. Communication on SunOS is done with the SCSI general driver scg. Other operating systems are using a library simulation of this driver. Possible syntax is: dev= scsibus,target,lun or dev= target,lun. In the latter case, the drive has to be connected to the default SCSI bus of the machine. Scsibus, target and lun are integer numbers. Some operating systems or SCSI transport implementations may require to specify a filename in addition. In this case the correct syntax for the device is: dev= devicename:scsibus,target,lun or dev= devicename:target,lun. If the name of the device node that has been specified on such a system refers to exactly one SCSI device, a shorthand in the form dev= devicename:@ or dev= devicename:@,lun may be used instead of dev= devicename:scsibus,target,lun.

    To access remote SCSI devices, you need to prepend the SCSI device name by a remote device indicator. The remote device indicator is either REMOTE:user@host: or .BIREMOTE:host:
    A valid remote SCSI device name may be: REMOTE:user@host: to allow remote SCSI bus scanning or REMOTE:user@host:1,0,0 to access the SCSI device at host connected to SCSI bus # 1,target 0 lun 0.

    To access SCSI devices via alternate transport layers, you need to prepend the SCSI device name by a transport layer indicator. The transport layer indicator may be something like USCSI: or ATAPI:. To get a list of supported transport layers for your platform, use dev= HELP:

    To make readcd portable to all UNIX platforms, the syntax dev= devicename:scsibus,target,lun is preferred as is hides OS specific knowledge about device names from the user. A specific OS must not necessarily support a way to specify a real device file name nor a way to specify scsibus,target,lun.

    Scsibus 0 is the default SCSI bus on the machine. Watch the boot messages for more information or look into /var/adm/messages for more information about the SCSI configuration of your machine. If you have problems to figure out what values for scsibus,target,lun should be used, try the -scanbus option of cdrecord.

     

    OPTIONS

    If no options except the dev= option have been specified, readcd goes into interactive mode. Select a primary function and then follow the instructions.

    -version
    Print version information and exit.
    dev=target
    Sets the SCSI target for the drive, see notes above. A typical device specification is dev=6,0 . If a filename must be provided together with the numerical target specification, the filename is implementation specific. The correct filename in this case can be found in the system specific manuals of the target operating system. On a FreeBSD system without CAM support, you need to use the control device (e.g. /dev/rcd0.ctl). A correct device specification in this case may be dev=/dev/rcd0.ctl:@ .

    On Linux, drives connected to a parallel port adapter are mapped to a virtual SCSI bus. Different adapters are mapped to different targets on this virtual SCSI bus.

    If no dev option is present, cdrecord will try to get the device from the CDR_DEVICE environment.

    If the argument to the dev= option does not contain the characters ',', '/', '@' or ':', it is interpreted as an label name that may be found in the file /etc/cdrecord.conf (see FILES section).

    timeout=#
    Set the default SCSI command timeout value to # seconds. The default SCSI command timeout is the minimum timeout used for sending SCSI commands. If a SCSI command fails due to a timeout, you may try to raise the default SCSI command timeout above the timeout value of the failed command. If the command runs correctly with a raised command timeout, please report the better timeout value and the corresponding command to the author of the program. If no timeout option is present, a default timeout of 40 seconds is used.
    debug=#, -d
    Set the misc debug value to # (with debug=#) or increment the misc debug level by one (with -d). If you specify -dd, this equals to debug=2. This may help to find problems while opening a driver for libscg. as well as with sector sizes and sector types. Using -debug slows down the process and may be the reason for a buffer underrun.
    kdebug=#, kd=#
    Tell the scg-driver to modify the kernel debug value while SCSI commands are running.
    -silent, -s
    Do not print out a status report for failed SCSI commands.
    -v
    Increment the level of general verbosity by one. This is used e.g. to display the progress of the process.
    -V
    Increment the verbose level with respect of SCSI command transport by one. This helps to debug problems during the process, that occur in the CD-Recorder. If you get incomprehensible error messages you should use this flag to get more detailed output. -VV will show data buffer content in addition. Using -V or -VV slows down the process.
    f=file
    Specify the filename where the output should be written or the inout should be taken from. Using '-' as filename will cause readcd to use stdout resp. stdin.
    -w
    Switch to write mode. If this option is not present, readcd reads from the specified device.
    -c2scan
    Scans the whole CD or the range specified by the sectors=range for C2 errors. C2 errors are errors that are uncorrectable after the second stage of the 24/28 + 28/32 Reed Solomon correction system at audio level (2352 bytes sector size). If an audio CD has C2 errors, interpolation is needed to hide the errors. If a data CD has C2 errors, these errors are in most cases corrected by the ECC/EDC code that makes 2352 bytes out of 2048 data bytes. The ECC/EDC code should be able to correct about 100 C2 error bytes per sector.

    If you find C2 errors you may want to reduce the speed using the speed= option as C2 errors may be a result of dynamic unbalance on the medium.

    -scanbus
    Scan all SCSI devices on all SCSI busses and print the inquiry strings. This option may be used to find SCSI address of the devices on a system. The numbers printed out as labels are computed by: bus * 100 + target
    sectors=range
    Specify a sector range that should be read. The range is specified by the starting sector number, a minus sign and the ending sector number. The end sector is not included in the list, so sectors=0-0 will not read anything and may be used to check for a CD in the drive.
    speed=#
    Set the speed factor of the read or write process to #. # is an integer, representing a multiple of the audio speed. This is about 150 KB/s for CD-ROM and about 172 KB/s for CD-Audio. If no speed option is present, readcd will use maximum speed. Only MMC compliant drives will benefit from this option. The speed of non MMC drives is not changed.

    Using a lower speed may increase the readability of a CD or DVD.

    ts=#
    Set the maximum transfer size for a single SCSI command to #. The syntax for the ts= option is the same as for cdrecord fs=# or sdd bs=#.

    If no ts= option has been specified, readcd defaults to a transfer size of 256 kB. If libscg gets lower values from the operating system, the value is reduced to the maimum value that is possible with the current operating system. Sometimes, it may help to further reduce the transfer size or to enhance it, but note that it may take a long time to find a better value by experimenting with the ts= option.

    -notrunc
    Do not truncate the output file when opening it.
    -fulltoc
    Retrieve a full TOC from the current disk and print it in hex.
    -clone
    Do a clone read. Read the CD with all sub-channel data and a full TOC. The full TOC data will be put into a file with similar name as with the f= option but the suffix .toc added.
    -noerror
    Do not abort if the high level error checking in readcd found an uncorrectable error in the data stream.
    -nocorr
    Switch the drive into a mode where it ignores read errors in data sectors that are a result of uncorrectable ECC/EDC errors before reading. If readcd completes, the error recovery mode of the drive is switched back to the remembered old mode.
    retries=#
    Set the retry count for high level retries in readcd to #. The default is to do 128 retries which may be too much if you like to read a CD with many unreadable sectors.
    -overhead
    Meter the SCSI command overhead time. This is done by executing several commands 1000 times and printing the total time used. If you divide the displayed times by 1000, you get the average overhead time for a single command.
    meshpoints=#
    Print read-speed at # locations. The purpose of this option is to create a list of read speed values suitable for e.g. gnuplot. The speed values are calculated assuming that 1000 bytes are one kilobyte as documented in the SCSI standard. The ouput data created for this purpose is written to stdout.
    -factor
    Output the speed values for meshpoints=# as factor based on single speed of the current medium. This only works if readcd is able to determine the current medium type.
     

    EXAMPLES

    For all examples below, it will be assumed that the drive is connected to the primary SCSI bus of the machine. The SCSI target id is set to 2.

    To read the complete media from a CD-ROM writing the data to the file cdimage.raw:


        readcd dev=2,0 f=cdimage.raw

    To read sectors from range 150 ... 10000 from a CD-ROM writing the data to the file cdimage.raw:


        readcd dev=2,0 sectors=150-10000 f=cdimage.raw

    To write the data from the file cdimage.raw (e.g. a filesystem image from mkisofs) to a DVD-RAM, call:


        readcd dev=2,0 -w f=cdimage.raw

     

    ENVIRONMENT

    RSH
    If the RSH environment is present, the remote connection will not be created via rcmd(3) but by calling the program pointed to by RSH. Use e.g. RSH=/usr/bin/ssh to create a secure shell connection.

    Note that this forces cdrecord to create a pipe to the rsh(1) program and disallows cdrecord to directly access the network socket to the remote server. This makes it impossible to set up performance parameters and slows down the connection compared to a root initiated rcmd(3) connection.

    RSCSI
    If the RSCSI environment is present, the remote SCSI server will not be the program /opt/schily/sbin/rscsi but the program pointed to by RSCSI. Note that the remote SCSI server program name will be ignored if you log in using an account that has been created with a remote SCSI server program as login shell.
     

    FILES

     

    SEE ALSO

    cdrecord(1), mkisofs(1), scg(7), fbk(7), rcmd(3), ssh(1).

     

    NOTES

    If you don't want to allow users to become root on your system, readcd may safely be installed suid root. This allows all users or a group of users with no root privileges to use readcd. Readcd in this case will only allow access to CD-ROM type drives- To give all user access to use readcd, enter:

           chown root /usr/local/bin/readcd

           chmod 4711 /usr/local/bin/readcd

    To give a restricted group of users access to readcd enter:

           chown root /usr/local/bin/readcd

           chgrp cdburners /usr/local/bin/readcd

           chmod 4710 /usr/local/bin/readcd

    and add a group cdburners on your system.

    Never give write permissions for non root users to the /dev/scg? devices unless you would allow anybody to read/write/format all your disks.

    You should not connect old drives that do not support disconnect/reconnect to either the SCSI bus that is connected to the CD-Recorder or the source disk.

    When using readcd with the broken Linux SCSI generic driver. You should note that readcd uses a hack, that tries to emulate the functionality of the scg driver. Unfortunately, the sg driver on Linux has several severe bugs:

    *
    It cannot see if a SCSI command could not be sent at all.
    *
    It cannot get the SCSI status byte. Readcd for that reason cannot report failing SCSI commands in some situations.
    *
    It cannot get real DMA count of transfer. Readcd cannot tell you if there is an DMA residual count.
    *
    It cannot get number of bytes valid in auto sense data. Readcd cannot tell you if device transfers no sense data at all.
    *
    It fetches to few data in auto request sense (CCS/SCSI-2/SCSI-3 needs >= 18).

     

    DIAGNOSTICS

    A typical error message for a SCSI command looks like:

    readcd: I/O error. test unit ready: scsi sendcmd: no error
    CDB:  00 20 00 00 00 00
    status: 0x2 (CHECK CONDITION)
    Sense Bytes: 70 00 05 00 00 00 00 0A 00 00 00 00 25 00 00 00 00 00
    Sense Key: 0x5 Illegal Request, Segment 0
    Sense Code: 0x25 Qual 0x00 (logical unit not supported) Fru 0x0
    Sense flags: Blk 0 (not valid)
    cmd finished after 0.002s timeout 40s
    

    The first line gives information about the transport of the command. The text after the first colon gives the error text for the system call from the view of the kernel. It usually is: I/O error unless other problems happen. The next words contain a short description for the SCSI command that fails. The rest of the line tells you if there were any problems for the transport of the command over the SCSI bus. fatal error means that it was not possible to transport the command (i.e. no device present at the requested SCSI address).

    The second line prints the SCSI command descriptor block for the failed command.

    The third line gives information on the SCSI status code returned by the command, if the transport of the command succeeds. This is error information from the SCSI device.

    The fourth line is a hex dump of the auto request sense information for the command.

    The fifth line is the error text for the sense key if available, followed by the segment number that is only valid if the command was a copy command. If the error message is not directly related to the current command, the text deferred error is appended.

    The sixth line is the error text for the sense code and the sense qualifier if available. If the type of the device is known, the sense data is decoded from tables in scsierrs.c . The text is followed by the error value for a field replaceable unit.

    The seventh line prints the block number that is related to the failed command and text for several error flags. The block number may not be valid.

    The eight line reports the timeout set up for this command and the time that the command really needed to complete.

     

    BUGS

     

    CREDITS

     

    MAILING LISTS

    If you want to actively take part on the development of cdrecord, you may join the cdwriting mailing list by sending mail to:
    
            other-cdwrite-request@lists.debian.org
    
    
    and include the word subscribe in the body. The mail address of the list is:
    
            cdwrite@lists.debian.org
    

     

    AUTHOR

    Joerg Schilling
    Seestr. 110
    D-13353 Berlin
    Germany
    

    Additional information can be found on:
    http://www.fokus.fhg.de/usr/schilling/cdrecord.html

    If you have support questions, send them to:

    cdrecord-support@berlios.de
    or other-cdwrite@lists.debian.org

    If you have definitely found a bug, send a mail to:

    cdrecord-developers@berlios.de
    or schilling@fokus.fhg.de

    To subscribe, use:

    http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/cdrecord-developers
    or http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/cdrecord-support


     

    Index

    NAME
    SYNOPSIS
    DESCRIPTION
    OPTIONS
    EXAMPLES
    ENVIRONMENT
    FILES
    SEE ALSO
    NOTES
    DIAGNOSTICS
    BUGS
    CREDITS
    MAILING LISTS
    AUTHOR


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