00001 /** 00002 @author Mario Danic, Thomas Schmitt 00003 00004 @mainpage Libburnia Documentation Index 00005 00006 @section intro Introduction 00007 00008 Libburnia is an open-source project for reading, mastering and writing 00009 optical discs. 00010 For now this means CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, DVD+R, DVD-RW, DVD-R. 00011 00012 Not supported yet are dual layer media, HD-DVD, BD (blue ray). Testers for 00013 dual layer DVD+/-R are wanted, though. 00014 00015 The project comprises of several more or less interdependent parts which 00016 together strive to be a usable foundation for application development. 00017 These are libraries, language bindings, and middleware binaries which emulate 00018 classical (and valuable) Linux tools. 00019 00020 Our scope is currently Linux 2.4 and 2.6 only. For ports to other systems 00021 we would need : login on a development machine resp. a live OS on CD or DVD, 00022 advise from a system person about the equivalent of Linux sg or FreeBSD CAM, 00023 volunteers for testing of realistic use cases. 00024 00025 We have a workable code base for burning data and audio CDs and many DVD types. 00026 The burn API is quite comprehensively documented and can be used to build a 00027 presentable application. 00028 We have a functional binary which emulates the core use cases of cdrecord in 00029 order to prove that usability, and in order to allow you to explore libburn's 00030 scope by help of existing cdrecord frontends. 00031 00032 @subsection components The project components (list subject to growth, hopefully): 00033 00034 - libburn is the library by which preformatted data get onto optical media. 00035 It uses either /dev/sgN (e.g. on kernel 2.4 with ide-scsi) or 00036 /dev/srM or /dev/hdX (e.g. on kernel 2.6). 00037 libburn is the foundation of our cdrecord emulation. Its code is 00038 independent of cdrecord. Its DVD capabilities are learned from 00039 studying the code of dvd+rw-tools and MMC-5 specs. No code but only 00040 the pure SCSI knowledge has been taken from dvd+rw-tools, though. 00041 00042 - libisofs is the library to pack up hard disk files and directories into a 00043 ISO 9660 disk image. This may then be brought to CD via libburn. 00044 libisofs is to be the foundation of our upcoming mkisofs emulation. 00045 00046 - libisoburn is an add-on to libburn and libisofs which allows to grow 00047 ISO-9660 filesystem images on multi-session media as well as 00048 on overwriteable media via the same API. All media peculiarities 00049 are handled automatically. 00050 00051 - cdrskin is a limited cdrecord compatibility wrapper for libburn. 00052 cdrecord is a powerful GPL'ed burn program included in Joerg 00053 Schilling's cdrtools. cdrskin strives to be a second source for 00054 the services traditionally provided by cdrecord. Additionally it 00055 provides libburn's DVD capabilities, where only -sao is compatible 00056 with cdrecord. 00057 cdrskin does not contain any bytes copied from cdrecord's sources. 00058 Many bytes have been copied from the message output of cdrecord 00059 runs, though. 00060 See cdrskin/README for more. 00061 00062 - xorriso is an upcomming application of all three libraries which creates, 00063 loads, manipulates and writes ISO 9660 filesystem images with 00064 Rock Ridge extensions. Manipulation will not only be adding or 00065 overwriting of files but also deletion, renaming, and attribute 00066 changing. 00067 See SVN of libisoburn, man test/xorriso.1, test/compile_xorriso.sh 00068 00069 - "test" is a collection of application gestures and examples given by the 00070 authors of the library features. The burn API example of libburn 00071 is named test/libburner.c . The API for media information inquiry is 00072 demonstrated in test/telltoc.c . 00073 Explore these examples if you look for inspiration. 00074 00075 We plan to be a responsive upstream. Bear with us. 00076 00077 00078 @section using Using the libraries 00079 00080 Our build system is based on autotools. 00081 User experience tells us that you will need at least autotools version 1.7. 00082 00083 To build libburn and its subprojects it should be sufficient to go into 00084 its toplevel directory and execute 00085 00086 - ./bootstrap (needed if you downloaded from SVN) 00087 00088 - ./configure 00089 00090 - make 00091 00092 To make the libraries accessible for running resp. developing applications 00093 00094 - make install 00095 00096 Both libraries are written in C language and get built by autotools. 00097 Thus we expect them to be useable by a wide range of Linux-implemented 00098 languages and development tools. 00099 00100 00101 @section libburner Libburner 00102 00103 libburner is a minimal demo application for the library libburn 00104 (see: libburn/libburn.h) as provided on http://libburnia-project.org . 00105 It can list the available devices, can blank a CD-RW or DVD-RW and 00106 can burn to recordable CD and recordable single layer DVD. 00107 00108 It's main purpose, nevertheless, is to show you how to use libburn and also 00109 to serve the libburnia team as reference application. libburner does indeed 00110 define the standard way how above three gestures can be implemented and 00111 stay upward compatible for a good while. 00112 00113 @subsection libburner-help Libburner --help 00114 <pre> 00115 Usage: test/libburner 00116 [--drive <address>|<driveno>|"-"] [--audio] 00117 [--blank_fast|--blank_full|--format_overwrite] 00118 [--try_to_simulate] 00119 [--multi] [<one or more imagefiles>|"-"] 00120 Examples 00121 A bus scan (needs rw-permissions to see a drive): 00122 test/libburner --drive - 00123 Burn a file to drive chosen by number, leave appendable: 00124 test/libburner --drive 0 --multi my_image_file 00125 Burn a file to drive chosen by persistent address, close: 00126 test/libburner --drive /dev/hdc my_image_file 00127 Blank a used CD-RW (is combinable with burning in one run): 00128 test/libburner --drive /dev/hdc --blank_fast 00129 Blank a used DVD-RW (is combinable with burning in one run): 00130 test/libburner --drive /dev/hdc --blank_full 00131 Format a DVD-RW to avoid need for blanking before re-use: 00132 test/libburner --drive /dev/hdc --format_overwrite 00133 Burn two audio tracks (to CD only): 00134 lame --decode -t /path/to/track1.mp3 track1.cd 00135 test/dewav /path/to/track2.wav -o track2.cd 00136 test/libburner --drive /dev/hdc --audio track1.cd track2.cd 00137 Burn a compressed afio archive on-the-fly: 00138 ( cd my_directory ; find . -print | afio -oZ - ) | \ 00139 test/libburner --drive /dev/hdc - 00140 To be read from *not mounted* media via: afio -tvZ /dev/hdc 00141 </pre> 00142 libburner has two companions, telltoc and dewav, which help to perform some 00143 peripheral tasks of burning. 00144 00145 telltoc prints a table of content (sessions, tracks and leadouts), it tells 00146 about type and state of media, and also is able to provide the necessary 00147 multi-session information for program mkisofs option -C. Especially helpful 00148 are its predictions with "Write multi" and "Write modes" where availability 00149 of "TAO" indicates that tracks of unpredicted length can be written. 00150 See: test/telltoc --help. 00151 00152 dewav extracts raw byte-swapped audio data from files of format .wav (MS WAVE) 00153 or .au (SUN Audio). See example in libburner --help. 00154 00155 @subsection libburner-source Sourceode of libburner 00156 00157 Click on blue names of functions, structures, variables, etc in oder to 00158 get to the according specs of libburn API or libburner sourcecode. 00159 00160 @include libburner.c 00161 */