Re: [SLUG] Re: pseudo block device piping to smb or nfs --

From: Bryan J. Smith (b.j.smith@ieee.org)
Date: Fri Sep 10 2004 - 12:21:22 EDT


On Fri, 2004-09-10 at 10:25, Levi Bard wrote:
> I write an isofs directly to the block device.

That's packet writing.

> I've used dvd+rw, dvd+r, dvd-rw, dvd-r,

On a Sony/Philips (DVD+RW) _firmware_ drive?
Or a DVD Consortium (Pioneer/Panasonic DVD-RW/RAM) _firmware_ drive?

DVD+RW and DVD Consortium firmwares are _radically_different_.
The last time I tried DVD+RW-Tools, it didn't support the latter.

> and the results are visible to dvd drives and hardware dvd players.

On newer consumer devices, yes.
- DVD-R(A) is near-100%
- DVD-R(G) is near-100%, _except_ on 1st generation DVD-ROM/players
- DVD-RW and DVD+RW are around 70%, well supported on newer devices
- DVD+R** is around 80%, well supported on newer devices, some older
- DVD-RAM is well under 10%, limited to Toshiba/Hitachi/etc...
  (DVD-RAM firmware/laser adopters)

**NOTE: Because DVD+R, like any MO, uses a pie-sector approach, instead
of a single track like any WORM, I have had some 1st and even 2nd
generation DVD-ROM/players get _damaged_ if they use a DVD+R disc. My
notebook right here, 1st generation combo DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive, was one
such victim.

You have to be careful with DVD+R, or _any_ CAV (constant angular
velocity) _writing_ MO technology. This includes using CLV CD-RW media
in a CAV CD-RW drive (which can also reduce the drive's lifetime).

Only MO has this issue, because it is pie-slice. WORM is a single, long
track, so there is no such issue with CAV v. CLV writing.

> The tools were originally written for +r[w] only, but support was soon
> added for -r[w], and has been there for a while.

Media yes. But is it still _only_ Sony/Philips firmware?

-- 
     Linux Enthusiasts call me anti-Linux.
   Windows Enthusisats call me anti-Microsoft.
 They both must be correct because I have over a
decade of experience with both in mission critical
environments, resulting in a bigotry dedicated to
 mitigating risk and focusing on technologies ...
           not products or vendors
--------------------------------------------------
Bryan J. Smith, E.I.         b.j.smith at ieee.org

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