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GENISOIMAGE(1)              General Commands Manual             GENISOIMAGE(1)

NAME
       genisoimage  -  create ISO9660/Joliet/HFS filesystem with optional Rock
       Ridge attributes

SYNOPSIS
       genisoimage [options] [-o filename] pathspec [pathspec ...]

DESCRIPTION
       genisoimage is a pre-mastering program to  generate  ISO9660/Joliet/HFS
       hybrid filesystems.

       genisoimage  is  capable  of generating the System Use Sharing Protocol
       records (SUSP) specified by the Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol.   This
       is  used  to  further describe the files in the ISO9660 filesystem to a
       Unix host, and provides information such as  long  filenames,  UID/GID,
       POSIX  permissions,  symbolic  links,  and  block  and character device
       files.

       If Joliet or HFS hybrid command line options are specified, genisoimage
       will create the additional filesystem metadata  needed  for  Joliet  or
       HFS.  Otherwise genisoimage will generate a pure ISO9660 filesystem.

       genisoimage  can generate a true (or shared) HFS hybrid filesystem. The
       same files are seen as HFS files when accessed from a Macintosh and  as
       ISO9660 files when accessed from other machines. HFS stands for Hierar-
       chical  File System and is the native filesystem used on Macintosh com-
       puters.

       As an alternative, genisoimage can generate  the  Apple  Extensions  to
       ISO9660 for each file. These extensions provide each file with CREATOR,
       TYPE  and  certain Finder flags when accessed from a Macintosh. See the
       HFS MACINTOSH FILE FORMATS section below.

       genisoimage takes a snapshot of a given directory tree, and generates a
       binary image which will correspond to an ISO9660 and/or HFS  filesystem
       when written to a block device.

       Each file written to the ISO9660 filesystem must have a filename in the
       8.3  format (up to 8 characters, period, up to 3 characters, all upper-
       case), even if Rock Ridge is in use.  This filename is used on  systems
       that are not able to make use of the Rock Ridge extensions (such as MS-
       DOS),  and  each  filename in each directory must be different from the
       other filenames in the same directory.  genisoimage generally tries  to
       form  correct names by forcing the Unix filename to uppercase and trun-
       cating as required, but often this yields unsatisfactory  results  when
       the truncated names are not all unique.  genisoimage assigns weightings
       to  each  filename,  and  if  two names that are otherwise the same are
       found, the name with the lower priority is renamed to include a 3-digit
       number (guaranteed to be unique).  For example, the two  files  foo.bar
       and foo.bar.~1~ could be rendered as FOO.BAR;1 and FOO000.BAR;1.

       When  used with various HFS options, genisoimage will attempt to recog-
       nise files stored in a number of Apple/Unix file formats and will  copy
       the data and resource forks as well as any relevant Finder information.
       See the HFS MACINTOSH FILE FORMATS section below for more about formats
       genisoimage supports.

       Note  that  genisoimage  is not designed to communicate with the writer
       directly.  Most writers have proprietary command sets which  vary  from
       one  manufacturer  to another, and you need a specialized tool to actu-
       ally burn the disc.  wodim is one such tool.   The  latest  version  of
       wodim is available from http://www.cdrkit.org/.

       pathspec  is  the  path  of  the  directory  tree to be copied into the
       ISO9660 filesystem.  Multiple paths can be specified,  and  genisoimage
       will  merge  the files found in all of the specified path components to
       form the filesystem image.

       If the option -graft-points has been specified, it is possible to graft
       the paths at points other than the root directory, and it  is  possible
       to graft files or directories onto the cdrom image with names different
       than  what  they have in the source filesystem.  This is easiest to il-
       lustrate with a couple of examples.  Let's start by assuming that a lo-
       cal file ../old.lis exists, and you wish to include it in the cdrom im-
       age.

              foo/bar/=../old.lis

       will include old.lis in the cdrom image at /foo/bar/old.lis, while

              foo/bar/xxx=../old.lis

       will include old.lis in the cdrom image at /foo/bar/xxx.  The same sort
       of syntax can be used with directories as well.  genisoimage will  cre-
       ate  any  directories  required such that the graft points exist on the
       cdrom image — the directories do not need  to  appear  in  one  of  the
       paths.   By  default,  any directories that are created on the fly like
       this will have permissions 0555 and appear to be owned  by  the  person
       running  genisoimage.   If  you wish other permissions or owners of the
       intermediate directories, see -uid,  -gid,  -dir-mode,  -file-mode  and
       -new-dir-mode.

       genisoimage  will  also  run  on  Windows  machines  when compiled with
       Cygnus' cygwin (available from http://www.cygwin.com/).  Therefore most
       references in this man page to Unix can be replaced with Win32.

OPTIONS
       Several options can be specified as defaults in a  .genisoimagerc  con-
       figuration  file,  as  well  as on the command line.  If a parameter is
       specified in both places, the setting from the command  line  is  used.
       For  details  on  the  format  and possible locations of this file, see
       genisoimagerc(5).

       -abstract file
              Specifies the abstract filename.  There is space for 37  charac-
              ters.  Equivalent to ABST in the .genisoimagerc file.

       -A application_id
              Specifies  a  text  string  that will be written into the volume
              header.  This should describe the application that  will  be  on
              the  disc.   There  is  space for 128 characters.  Equivalent to
              APPI in the .genisoimagerc file.

       -allow-limited-size
              When processing files larger than 2GiB which  cannot  be  easily
              represented in ISO9660, add them with a shrunk visible file size
              to  ISO9660  and  with  the correct visible file size to the UDF
              system. The result is an inconsistent filesystem and users  need
              to make sure that they really use UDF rather than ISO9660 driver
              to read a such disk. Implies enabling -udf.

       -allow-leading-dots

       -ldots Allow  ISO9660  filenames  to  begin  with a period.  Usually, a
              leading dot is replaced with an underscore in order to  maintain
              MS-DOS compatibility.
              This  violates  the  ISO9660 standard, but it happens to work on
              many systems.  Use with caution.

       -allow-lowercase
              This options allows lowercase characters to  appear  in  ISO9660
              filenames.
              This  violates  the  ISO9660 standard, but it happens to work on
              some systems.  Use with caution.

       -allow-multidot
              This options allows more than one dot to appear in ISO9660 file-
              names.  A leading dot is not affected by this option, it may  be
              allowed separately using -allow-leading-dots.
              This  violates  the  ISO9660 standard, but it happens to work on
              many systems.  Use with caution.

       -biblio file
              Specifies the bibliographic filename.  There  is  space  for  37
              characters.  Equivalent to BIBL in the .genisoimagerc file.

       -cache-inodes

       -no-cache-inodes
              Enable  or disable caching inode and device numbers to find hard
              links to files.  If genisoimage finds a hard link (a  file  with
              multiple names), the file will also be hard-linked on the CD, so
              the  file  contents only appear once.  This helps to save space.
              -cache-inodes is default on  Unix-like  operating  systems,  but
              -no-cache-inodes  is  default on some other systems such as Cyg-
              win, because it is not safe to assume  that  inode  numbers  are
              unique  on  those systems.  (Some versions of Cygwin create fake
              inode numbers using a weak hashing algorithm, which may  produce
              duplicates.)   If  two  files have the same inode number but are
              not hard links to the same file, genisoimage -cache-inodes  will
              not  behave  correctly.   -no-cache-inodes is safe in all situa-
              tions, but in that case genisoimage cannot detect hard links, so
              the resulting CD image may be larger than necessary.

       -alpha-boot alpha_boot_image
              Specifies the path and filename of the boot  image  to  be  used
              when making an Alpha/SRM bootable CD. The pathname must be rela-
              tive to the source path specified to genisoimage.

       -hppa-bootloader hppa_bootloader_image
              Specifies  the  path  and  filename of the boot image to be used
              when making an HPPA bootable CD. The pathname must  be  relative
              to  the source path specified to genisoimage.  Other options are
              required, at the very least a kernel filename and a boot command
              line.  See the HPPA NOTES section below for more information.

       -hppa-cmdline hppa_boot_command_line
              Specifies the command line to be passed to the HPPA boot  loader
              when  making  a bootable CD. Separate the parameters with spaces
              or commas. More options must be passed to  genisoimage,  at  the
              very  least a kernel filename and the boot loader filename.  See
              the HPPA NOTES section below for more information.

       -hppa-kernel-32 hppa_kernel_32

       -hppa-kernel-64 hppa_kernel_64
              Specifies the path and filename of the 32-bit and/or 64-bit ker-
              nel images to be used when making an HPPA bootable CD. The path-
              names must be relative to the source path specified to genisoim-
              age.  Other options are required, at the  very  least  the  boot
              loader  filename  and the boot command line.  See the HPPA NOTES
              section below for more information.

       -hppa-ramdisk hppa_ramdisk_image
              Specifies the path and filename of the ramdisk image to be  used
              when  making  an HPPA bootable CD. The pathname must be relative
              to the source path specified to genisoimage.  This parameter  is
              optional.   Other options are required, at the very least a ker-
              nel filename and the boot command line. See the HPPA NOTES  sec-
              tion below for more information.

       -mips-boot mips_boot_image
              Specifies  the  path  and  filename of the boot image to be used
              when making an SGI/big-endian MIPS  bootable  CD.  The  pathname
              must  be  relative  to the source path specified to genisoimage.
              This option may be specified several times, to store  up  to  15
              boot images.

       -mipsel-boot mipsel_boot_image
              Specifies  the  path  and  filename of the boot image to be used
              when making an DEC/little-endian MIPS bootable CD. The  pathname
              must be relative to the source path specified to genisoimage.

       -B img_sun4,img_sun4c,img_sun4m,img_sun4d,img_sun4e

       -sparc-boot img_sun4,img_sun4c,img_sun4m,img_sun4d,img_sun4e
              Specifies  a comma-separated list of boot images that are needed
              to make a bootable CD for SPARC systems.  Partition  0  is  used
              for  the ISO9660 image, the first image file is mapped to parti-
              tion 1.  The comma-separated list may have up to 7  fields,  in-
              cluding  empty  fields.   This  option  is  required  to  make a
              bootable CD for Sun SPARC systems.  If  -B  or  -sparc-boot  has
              been  specified,  the  first  sector of the resulting image will
              contain a Sun disk label. This disk label specifies slice 0  for
              the  ISO9660  image  and  slices 1 to 7 for the boot images that
              have been specified with this option. Byte offsets 512  to  8191
              within each of the additional boot images must contain a primary
              boot that works for the appropriate SPARC architecture. The rest
              of each of the images usually contains a UFS filesystem used for
              the primary kernel boot stage.

              The  implemented boot method is the one found with SunOS 4.x and
              SunOS 5.x.  However, it does not depend on SunOS  internals  but
              only on properties of the Open Boot prom, so it should be usable
              for any OS for SPARC systems.  For more information also see the
              NOTES section below.

              If the special filename ...  is used, the actual and all follow-
              ing  boot  partitions  are  mapped to the previous partition. If
              genisoimage is called with -G image -B ...  all boot  partitions
              are mapped to the partition that contains the ISO9660 filesystem
              image and the generic boot image that is located in the first 16
              sectors of the disc is used for all architectures.

       -G generic_boot_image
              Specifies  the path and filename of the generic boot image to be
              used when making a generic bootable CD.  The boot image will  be
              placed  on  the  first  16 sectors of the CD, before the ISO9660
              primary volume descriptor.  If this option is used together with
              -sparc-boot, the Sun disk label will overlay the first 512 bytes
              of the generic boot image.

       -b eltorito_boot_image
              Specifies the path and filename of the boot  image  to  be  used
              when  making  an El Torito bootable CD for x86 PCs. The pathname
              must be relative to the source path  specified  to  genisoimage.
              This  option  is required to make an El Torito bootable CD.  The
              boot image must be exactly 1200 kB, 1440  kB  or  2880  kB,  and
              genisoimage  will use this size when creating the output ISO9660
              filesystem.  The PC BIOS will use the image to emulate a  floppy
              disk,  so the first 512-byte sector should contain PC boot code.
              This will work, for example, if the boot image is  a  LILO-based
              boot floppy.

              If  the  boot image is not an image of a floppy, you need to add
              either -hard-disk-boot or -no-emul-boot.  If the  system  should
              not boot off the emulated disk, use -no-boot.

              If -sort has not been specified, the boot images are sorted with
              low  priority (+2) to the beginning of the medium.  If you don't
              like this, you need to specify a sort weight of 0 for  the  boot
              images.

       -eltorito-alt-boot
              Start  with a new set of El Torito boot parameters.  Up to 63 El
              Torito boot entries may be stored on a single CD.

       -hard-disk-boot
              Specifies that the boot image used to create El Torito  bootable
              CDs  is  a  hard  disk image. The image must begin with a master
              boot record that contains a single partition.

       -no-emul-boot
              Specifies that the boot image used to create El Torito  bootable
              CDs  is a "no emulation" image. The system will load and execute
              this image without performing any disk emulation.

       -no-boot
              Specifies that the created El Torito CD should be marked as  not
              bootable.  The system will provide an emulated drive for the im-
              age, but will boot off a standard boot device.

       -boot-load-seg segment_address
              Specifies the load segment address of the boot image for no-emu-
              lation El Torito CDs.

       -boot-load-size load_sectors
              Specifies the number of "virtual" (512-byte) sectors to load  in
              no-emulation mode.  The default is to load the entire boot file.
              Some BIOSes may have problems if this is not a multiple of 4.

       -boot-info-table
              Specifies  that  a  56-byte table with information of the CD-ROM
              layout will be patched in at offset 8 in the boot file.  If this
              option is given,  the  boot  file  is  modified  in  the  source
              filesystem,  so  make a copy of this file if it cannot be easily
              regenerated!  See the EL TORITO BOOT INFO TABLE  section  for  a
              description of this table.

       -C last_sess_start,next_sess_start
              This  option  is  needed  to create a CD Extra or the image of a
              second session or a  higher-level  session  for  a  multisession
              disc.   -C  takes two numbers separated by a comma. The first is
              the first sector in the last session of the disc that should  be
              appended to.  The second number is the starting sector number of
              the  new session.  The correct numbers may be retrieved by call-
              ing wodim -msinfo ...  If -C is used  in  conjunction  with  -M,
              genisoimage  will  create a filesystem image that is intended to
              be a continuation of the previous session.  If -C is used  with-
              out  -M,  genisoimage will create a filesystem image that is in-
              tended to be used for a second session on a CD Extra. This is  a
              multisession  CD  that holds audio data in the first session and
              an ISO9660 filesystem in the second session.

       -c boot_catalog
              Specifies the path and filename of the boot  catalog,  which  is
              required for an El Torito bootable CD. The pathname must be rel-
              ative  to  the  source path specified to genisoimage.  This file
              will be inserted into the output tree and  not  created  in  the
              source  filesystem,  so  be sure the specified filename does not
              conflict with an existing file, or it will be excluded.  Usually
              a name like boot.catalog is chosen.

              If  -sort  has  not been specified, the boot catalog sorted with
              low priority (+1) to the beginning of the medium.  If you  don't
              like  this,  you need to specify a sort weight of 0 for the boot
              catalog.

       -check-oldnames
              Check all filenames imported from the old session for compliance
              with the ISO9660 file naming rules.  Without this  option,  only
              names  longer than 31 characters are checked, as these files are
              a serious violation of the ISO9660 standard.

       -check-session file
              Check all old sessions for compliance  with  actual  genisoimage
              ISO9660  file  naming  rules.   This is a high-level option that
              combines -M file -C  0,0  -check-oldnames.   For  the  parameter
              file, see the description of -M.

       -copyright file
              Specifies  copyright  information,  typically  a filename on the
              disc.  There is space for 37 characters.  Equivalent to COPY  in
              the .genisoimagerc file.

       -d     Do not append a period to files that do not have one.
              This  violates  the  ISO9660 standard, but it happens to work on
              many systems.  Use with caution.

       -D     Do not use deep directory relocation, and instead just pack them
              in the way we see them.
              If ISO9660:1999 has not been selected, this violates the ISO9660
              standard, but it happens to work on many systems.  Use with cau-
              tion.

       -dir-mode mode
              Overrides the mode of directories used to create  the  image  to
              mode,  specified  as 4 digits of permission bits as in chmod(1).
              This option automatically enables Rock Ridge extensions.

       -dvd-video
              Generate a DVD-Video compliant UDF filesystem. This is  done  by
              sorting the order of the content of the appropriate files and by
              adding padding between the files if needed.  Note that the sort-
              ing  only  works  if  the  DVD-Video filenames include uppercase
              characters only.

              Note that in order to get a DVD-Video compliant  filesystem  im-
              age,  you  need to prepare a DVD-Video compliant directory tree.
              This requires a directory VIDEO_TS (all caps) in the root direc-
              tory of the resulting DVD, and  usually  another  directory  AU-
              DIO_TS.   VIDEO_TS  needs to include all needed files (filenames
              must be all caps) for a compliant DVD-Video filesystem.

       -f     Follow symbolic links when generating the filesystem.  When this
              option is not in use, symbolic links will be entered using  Rock
              Ridge if enabled, otherwise they will be ignored.

       -file-mode mode
              Overrides  the mode of regular files used to create the image to
              mode, specified as 4 digits of permission bits as  in  chmod(1).
              This option automatically enables Rock Ridge extensions.

       -gid gid
              Overrides  the  group ID read from the source files to the value
              of gid.  Specifying this option automatically enables Rock Ridge
              extensions.

       -gui   Switch the behaviour for a GUI. This currently makes the  output
              more verbose but may have other effects in the future.

       -graft-points
              Allow use of graft points for filenames. If this option is used,
              all  filenames are checked for graft points. The filename is di-
              vided at the first unescaped equal sign. All occurrences of  `\'
              and `=' characters must be escaped with `\' if -graft-points has
              been specified.

       -hide glob
              Hide any files matching glob, a shell wildcard pattern, from be-
              ing seen in the ISO9660 or Rock Ridge directory.  glob may match
              any  part of the filename or path.  If glob matches a directory,
              the contents of that directory will  be  hidden.   In  order  to
              match  a directory name, make sure the pathname does not include
              a trailing `/' character.  All the hidden files  will  still  be
              written to the output CD image file.  See also -hide-joliet, and
              README.hide.  This option may be used multiple times.

       -hide-list file
              A  file  containing a list of shell wildcards to be hidden.  See
              -hide.

       -hidden glob
              Add the hidden (existence) ISO9660 directory attribute for files
              and directories matching glob, a shell wildcard  pattern.   This
              attribute will prevent the files from being shown by some MS-DOS
              and  Windows  commands.  glob may match any part of the filename
              or path.  In order to match a  directory  name,  make  sure  the
              pathname does not include a trailing `/' character.  This option
              may be used multiple times.

       -hidden-list file
              A  file  containing  a list of shell wildcards to get the hidden
              attribute.  See -hidden.

       -hide-joliet glob
              Hide files and directories matching glob, a shell wildcard  pat-
              tern,  from  being seen in the Joliet directory.  glob may match
              any part of the filename or path.  If glob matches a  directory,
              the  contents  of  that  directory  will be hidden.  In order to
              match a directory name, make sure the pathname does not  include
              a  trailing  `/'  character.  All the hidden files will still be
              written to the output CD image file.   This  option  is  usually
              used with -hide.  See also README.hide.  This option may be used
              multiple times.

       -hide-joliet-list file
              A  file  containing  a list of shell wildcards to be hidden from
              the Joliet tree.  See -hide-joliet.

       -hide-joliet-trans-tbl
              Hide the TRANS.TBL files from the Joliet tree.  These files usu-
              ally don't make sense in the Joliet world as they list the  real
              name  and  the ISO9660 name which may both be different from the
              Joliet name.

       -hide-rr-moved
              Rename the directory RR_MOVED to .rr_moved  in  the  Rock  Ridge
              tree.  It seems to be impossible to completely hide the RR_MOVED
              directory  from the Rock Ridge tree.  This option only makes the
              visible tree less confusing for people who don't know what  this
              directory  is for.  If you need to have no RR_MOVED directory at
              all, you should use -D.  Note that if -D has been specified, the
              resulting filesystem is not ISO9660 level-1 compliant  and  will
              not be readable on MS-DOS.  See also the NOTES section.

       -input-charset charset
              Input  charset  that  defines the characters used in local file-
              names.  To get a list of valid charset names,  call  genisoimage
              -input-charset  help.  To get a 1:1 mapping, you may use default
              as charset name. The default initial values are  cp437  on  DOS-
              based systems and iso8859-1 on all other systems.  See the CHAR-
              ACTER SETS section below for more details.

       -output-charset charset
              Output  charset that defines the characters that will be used in
              Rock Ridge filenames.  Defaults to the input charset.  See CHAR-
              ACTER SETS section below for more details.

       -iso-level level
              Set the ISO9660 conformance level. Valid numbers are 1 to 4.

              With level 1, files may only consist of one  section  and  file-
              names are restricted to 8.3 characters.

              With level 2, files may only consist of one section.

              With  level 3, no restrictions (other than ISO-9660:1988) do ap-
              ply.

              With all ISO9660 levels from 1  to  3,  all  filenames  are  re-
              stricted  to  uppercase  letters,  numbers  and underscores (_).
              Filenames are limited to 31  characters,  directory  nesting  is
              limited  to  8  levels, and pathnames are limited to 255 charac-
              ters.

              Level 4 officially does not exist but  genisoimage  maps  it  to
              ISO-9660:1999, which is ISO9660 version 2.

              With  level 4, an enhanced volume descriptor with version number
              and file structure version number set to 2 is  emitted.   Direc-
              tory  nesting is not limited to 8 levels, there is no need for a
              file to contain a dot and the dot has no special meaning,  file-
              names  do  not  have version numbers, and filenames can be up to
              207 characters long, or 197 characters if Rock Ridge is used.

              When creating Version 2 images, genisoimage  emits  an  enhanced
              volume descriptor, similar but not identical to a primary volume
              descriptor.  Be  careful  not  to  use  broken  software to make
              ISO9660 images bootable by assuming a second PVD copy and patch-
              ing this putative PVD copy into an El Torito VD.

       -J     Generate Joliet directory records in addition to regular ISO9660
              filenames.  This is primarily useful when the discs  are  to  be
              used  on  Windows  machines.   Joliet filenames are specified in
              Unicode and each path component can be up to 64 Unicode  charac-
              ters  long.  Note that Joliet is not a standard — only Microsoft
              Windows and Linux  systems  can  read  Joliet  extensions.   For
              greater  portability,  consider using both Joliet and Rock Ridge
              extensions.

       -joliet-long
              Allow Joliet filenames to be up to 103 Unicode  characters,  in-
              stead  of 64.  This breaks the Joliet specification, but appears
              to work. Use with caution.

       -jcharset charset
              A combination of -J -input-charset charset.  See  the  CHARACTER
              SETS section below for more details.

       -l     Allow  full  31-character filenames.  Normally the ISO9660 file-
              name will be in an 8.3 format which is compatible  with  MS-DOS,
              even  though  the  ISO9660 standard allows filenames of up to 31
              characters.  If you use this option, the disc may  be  difficult
              to  use on a MS-DOS system, but will work on most other systems.
              Use with caution.

       -L     Outdated option; use -allow-leading-dots instead.

       -jigdo-jigdo jigdo_file
              Produce a jigdo .jigdo metadata file as well as  the  filesystem
              image.  See the JIGDO NOTES section below for more information.

       -jigdo-template template_file
              Produce  a jigdo .template file as well as the filesystem image.
              See the JIGDO NOTES section below for more information.

       -jigdo-min-file-size size
              Specify the minimum size for a file to be listed in  the  .jigdo
              file.  Default (and minimum allowed) is 1KB. See the JIGDO NOTES
              section below for more information.

       -jigdo-force-md5 path
              Specify a file pattern where files must be contained in the  ex-
              ternally-supplied  MD5  list  as supplied by -md5-list.  See the
              JIGDO NOTES section below for more information.

       -jigdo-exclude path
              Specify a file pattern where files will not  be  listed  in  the
              .jigdo file. See the JIGDO NOTES section below for more informa-
              tion.

       -jigdo-map path
              Specify a pattern mapping for the jigdo file (e.g.  Debian=/mir-
              ror/debian).   See the JIGDO NOTES section below for more infor-
              mation.

       -md5-list md5_file
              Specify a file containing the MD5sums, sizes  and  pathnames  of
              the files to be included in the .jigdo file. See the JIGDO NOTES
              section below for more information.

       -jigdo-template-compress algorithm
              Specify  a  compression algorithm to use for template date. gzip
              and bzip2 are currently supported, and gzip is the default.  See
              the JIGDO NOTES section below for more information.

       -log-file log_file
              Redirect  all  error,  warning  and  informational  messages  to
              log_file instead of the standard error.

       -m glob
              Exclude files matching glob, a shell wildcard pattern, from  be-
              ing  written to CD-ROM.  glob may match either the filename com-
              ponent or the full pathname.  This option may be  used  multiple
              times.  For example:

                   genisoimage -o rom -m '*.o' -m core -m foobar

              would exclude all files ending in `.o', or called core or foobar
              from the image.  Note that if you had a directory called foobar,
              it too (and of course all its descendants) would be excluded.

       -exclude-list file
              A file containing a list of shell wildcards to be excluded.  See
              -m.

       -max-iso9660-filenames
              Allow  ISO9660  filenames  to be up to 37 characters long.  This
              option enables -N as the extra name  space  is  taken  from  the
              space reserved for file version numbers.
              This  violates  the  ISO9660 standard, but it happens to work on
              many systems.  Although a conforming application needs  to  pro-
              vide  a  buffer  space  of at least 37 characters, discs created
              with this option may cause a buffer overflow in the reading  op-
              erating system. Use with extreme care.

       -M path

       -M device

       -dev device
              Specifies  path  to existing ISO9660 image to be merged. The al-
              ternate form takes a SCSI device specifier that  uses  the  same
              syntax  as the dev= parameter of wodim.  The output of genisoim-
              age will be a new session which should get written to the end of
              the image specified in -M.  Typically this requires multisession
              capability for the CD recorder used to write  the  image.   This
              option may only be used in conjunction with -C.

       -N     Omit version numbers from ISO9660 filenames.
              This  violates  the ISO9660 standard, but no one really uses the
              version numbers anyway.  Use with caution.

       -new-dir-mode mode
              Specify the mode, a 4-digit number as used in chmod(1),  to  use
              when  creating new directories in the filesystem image.  The de-
              fault is 0555.

       -nobak

       -no-bak
              Exclude backup files files on the ISO9660 filesystem;  that  is,
              filenames that contain the characters `~' or `#' or end in .bak.
              These are typically backup files for Unix text editors.

       -force-rr
              Do  not  use the automatic Rock Ridge attributes recognition for
              previous sessions.  This can work around  problems  with  images
              created by, e.g., NERO Burning ROM.

       -no-rr Do  not  use  the  Rock Ridge attributes from previous sessions.
              This may help to avoid problems when genisoimage  finds  illegal
              Rock Ridge signatures on an old session.

       -no-split-symlink-components
              Don't split the symlink components, but begin a new Continuation
              Area  (CE)  instead.  This  may  waste some space, but the SunOS
              4.1.4 cdrom driver has a bug in  reading  split  symlink  compo-
              nents.

              It is questionable whether this option is useful nowadays.

       -no-split-symlink-fields
              Don't  split  the  symlink  fields, but begin a new Continuation
              Area (CE) instead. This may waste  some  space,  but  the  SunOS
              4.1.4 and Solaris 2.5.1 cdrom driver have a bug in reading split
              symlink fields (a `/' can be dropped).

              It is questionable whether this option is useful nowadays.

       -o filename
              Specify  the  output  file for the the ISO9660 filesystem image.
              This can be a disk file, a tape drive, or it can correspond  di-
              rectly  to  the  device name of the optical disc writer.  If not
              specified, stdout is used.  Note that the output can also  be  a
              block  device  for  a  regular disk partition, in which case the
              ISO9660 filesystem can be mounted normally to verify that it was
              generated correctly.

       -pad   Pad the end of the whole image by 150 sectors  (300  kB).   This
              option  is  enabled by default.  If used in combination with -B,
              padding is inserted between the ISO9660 partition and  the  boot
              partitions,  such that the first boot partition starts on a sec-
              tor number that is a multiple of 16.

              The padding is needed as many operating systems (e.g. Linux) im-
              plement read-ahead bugs in their filesystem I/O. These bugs  re-
              sult  in read errors on files that are located near the end of a
              track, particularly if the disc is  written  in  Track  At  Once
              mode, or where a CD audio track follows the data track.

       -no-pad
              Do  not  pad the end by 150 sectors (300 kB) and do not make the
              the boot partitions start on a multiple of 16 sectors.

       -path-list file
              A file containing a list of pathspec directories  and  filenames
              to  be  added  to the ISO9660 filesystem. This list of pathspecs
              are processed after any that appear on the command line. If  the
              argument is -, the list is read from the standard input.

       -P     Outdated option; use -publisher instead.

       -publisher publisher_id
              Specifies  a  text  string  that will be written into the volume
              header.  This should describe the publisher of the CD-ROM,  usu-
              ally  with  a  mailing address and phone number.  There is space
              for 128 characters.  Equivalent to PUBL  in  the  .genisoimagerc
              file.

       -p preparer_id
              Specifies  a  text  string  that will be written into the volume
              header.  This should describe the preparer of the  CD-ROM,  usu-
              ally  with  a  mailing address and phone number.  There is space
              for 128 characters.  Equivalent to PREP  in  the  .genisoimagerc
              file.

       -print-size
              Print  estimated filesystem size in multiples of the sector size
              (2048 bytes) and exit. This option is needed for  Disk  At  Once
              mode  and with some CD-R drives when piping directly into wodim,
              cases where wodim needs to know the size of the filesystem image
              in advance.  Old versions  of  mkisofs  wrote  this  information
              (among  other  information)  to stderr.  As this turns out to be
              hard to parse, the number without any other information  is  now
              printed  on  stdout  too.   If  you like to write a simple shell
              script, redirect stderr and catch the number from stdout.   This
              may be done with:

                   cdblocks=` genisoimage -print-size -quiet ... `
                   genisoimage ... | wodim ... tsize=${cdblocks}s -

       -quiet This  makes  genisoimage  even less verbose.  No progress output
              will be provided.

       -R     Generate SUSP and RR records using the Rock  Ridge  protocol  to
              further describe the files on the ISO9660 filesystem.

       -r     This is like the -R option, but file ownership and modes are set
              to more useful values.  The uid and gid are set to zero, because
              they  are  usually  only  useful on the author's system, and not
              useful to the client.  All the file read bits are set  true,  so
              that  files and directories are globally readable on the client.
              If any execute bit is set for a file, set  all  of  the  execute
              bits, so that executables are globally executable on the client.
              If  any search bit is set for a directory, set all of the search
              bits, so that directories are globally searchable on the client.
              All write bits are  cleared,  because  the  filesystem  will  be
              mounted  read-only in any case.  If any of the special mode bits
              are set, clear them, because file locks  are  not  useful  on  a
              read-only  filesystem, and set-id bits are not desirable for uid
              0 or gid 0.  When used on Win32, the execute bit is set  on  all
              files. This is a result of the lack of file permissions on Win32
              and  the  Cygwin  POSIX  emulation  layer.  See also -uid, -gid,
              -dir-mode, -file-mode and -new-dir-mode.

       -relaxed-filenames
              Allows ISO9660 filenames to include all 7-bit  ASCII  characters
              except lowercase letters.
              This  violates  the  ISO9660 standard, but it happens to work on
              many systems.  Use with caution.

       -root dir
              Moves all files and directories into dir in the image.  This  is
              essentially  the  same  as using -graft-points and adding dir in
              front of every pathspec, but is easier to use.  dir may actually
              be several levels deep. It is created with the same  permissions
              as other graft points.

       -old-root dir
              This  option  is necessary when writing a multisession image and
              the previous (or even older) session was written with -root dir.
              Using a directory name not found in the previous session  causes
              genisoimage  to  abort  with  an  error.   Without  this option,
              genisoimage would not be able to find unmodified files and would
              be forced to write their data into the image once  more.   -root
              and  -old-root  are  meant to be used together to do incremental
              backups.  The initial session would e.g. use: genisoimage  -root
              backup_1  dirs.   The  next  incremental backup with genisoimage
              -root backup_2 -old-root backup_1 dirs would take another  snap-
              shot  of these directories. The first snapshot would be found in
              backup_1, the second one in backup_2, but only modified  or  new
              files need to be written into the second session.  Without these
              options,  new  files  would  be added and old ones would be pre-
              served. But old ones would be overwritten if the file was  modi-
              fied.  Recovering  the files by copying the whole directory back
              from CD would also restore files that  were  deleted  intention-
              ally.  Accessing  several older versions of a file requires sup-
              port by the operating system to choose which sessions are to  be
              mounted.

       -sort sort_file
              Sort  file  locations  on  the media. Sorting is controlled by a
              file that contains pairs of filenames and sorting offset weight-
              ing.  If the weighting is  higher,  the  file  will  be  located
              closer to the beginning of the media, if the weighting is lower,
              the  file  will be located closer to the end of the media. There
              must be only one space or tabs character  between  the  filename
              and  the  weight and the weight must be the last characters on a
              line. The filename is taken to include all the characters up to,
              but not including the last space or tab  character  on  a  line.
              This is to allow for space characters to be in, or at the end of
              a  filename.   This  option does not sort the order of the file-
              names that appear in the ISO9660 directory. It sorts  the  order
              in which the file data is written to the CD image, which is use-
              ful  in  order  to  optimize  the  data  layout  on  a  CD.  See
              README.sort for more details.

       -sparc-boot img_sun4,img_sun4c,img_sun4m,img_sun4d,img_sun4e
              See -B above.

       -sparc-label label
              Set the Sun disk label name for the Sun disk label that is  cre-
              ated with -sparc-boot.

       -split-output
              Split  the output image into several files of approximately 1 GB
              each.  This helps to create DVD-sized ISO9660 images on  operat-
              ing  systems without large file support.  wodim will concatenate
              more than one file into a single track if writing to a DVD.   To
              make  -split-output work, -o filename must be specified. The re-
              sulting output images will be named:  filename_00,  filename_01,
              filename_02....

       -stream-media-size #
              Select  streaming operation and set the media size to # sectors.
              This allows you to pipe the output of the  tar(1)  program  into
              genisoimage and to create an ISO9660 filesystem without the need
              of  an  intermediate  tar archive file.  If this option has been
              specified, genisoimage reads from stdin and creates a file  with
              the  name  STREAM.IMG.   The  maximum  size  of  the  file (with
              padding) is 200 sectors less than the specified media  size.  If
              -no-pad  has  been  specified,  the file size is 50 sectors less
              than  the  specified  media  size.   If  the  file  is  smaller,
              genisoimage will write padding. This may take awhile.

              The option -stream-media-size creates simple ISO9660 filesystems
              only  and  may  not  used  together  with multisession or hybrid
              filesystem options.

       -stream-file-name name
              Reserved for future use.

       -sunx86-boot UFS_img,,,AUX1_img
              Specifies a comma-separated list of filesystem images  that  are
              needed to make a bootable CD for Solaris x86 systems.

              Note  that  partition  1  is used for the ISO9660 image and that
              partition 2 is the whole disk, so partition 1 and 2 may  not  be
              used by external partition data.  The first image file is mapped
              to  partition  0.   There may be empty fields in the comma-sepa-
              rated list, and list entries for  partition  1  and  2  must  be
              empty.   The  maximum  number  of supported partitions is 8 (al-
              though the Solaris x86 partition table could support  up  to  16
              partitions),  so  it is impossible to specify more than 6 parti-
              tion images.  This option is required to make a bootable CD  for
              Solaris x86 systems.

              If  -sunx86-boot has been specified, the first sector of the re-
              sulting image will contain a PC fdisk label with a Solaris  type
              0x82  fdisk  partition  that  starts at offset 512 and spans the
              whole CD.  In addition, for the Solaris type 0x82  fdisk  parti-
              tion,  there  is  a  SVr4 disk label at offset 1024 in the first
              sector of the CD.  This disk label specifies  slice  0  for  the
              first  (usually  UFS type) filesystem image that is used to boot
              the PC and slice 1 for the ISO9660 image.   Slice  2  spans  the
              whole CD slice 3 ... slice 7 may be used for additional filesys-
              tem images that have been specified with this option.

              A  Solaris  x86 boot CD uses a 1024 byte sized primary boot that
              uses the  El-Torito  no-emulation  boot  mode  and  a  secondary
              generic boot that is in CD sectors 1..15.  For this reason, both
              -b bootimage -no-emul-boot and -G genboot must be specified.

       -sunx86-label label
              Set  the  SVr4  disk  label name for the SVr4 disk label that is
              created with -sunx86-boot.

       -sysid ID
              Specifies the system ID.  There  is  space  for  32  characters.
              Equivalent to SYSI in the .genisoimagerc file.

       -T     Generate a file TRANS.TBL in each directory on the CD-ROM, which
              can  be used on non-Rock Ridge-capable systems to help establish
              the correct filenames.  There is also information present in the
              file that indicates the major and minor numbers  for  block  and
              character  devices,  and  each  symlink has the name of the link
              file given.

       -table-name table_name
              Alternative translation table filename (see above). Implies  -T.
              If  you  are creating a multisession image you must use the same
              name as in the previous session.

       -ucs-level level
              Set Unicode conformance level in the  Joliet  SVD.  The  default
              level is 3.  It may be set to 1..3 using this option.

       -udf   Include  UDF  filesystem support in the generated filesystem im-
              age.  UDF support is currently in alpha status and for this rea-
              son, it is not possible to create  UDF-only  images.   UDF  data
              structures  are  currently  coupled to the Joliet structures, so
              there are many pitfalls with the current  implementation.  There
              is  no  UID/GID  support,  there is no POSIX permission support,
              there is no support for symlinks.   Note  that  UDF  wastes  the
              space from sector ~20 to sector 256 at the beginning of the disc
              in addition to the space needed for real UDF data structures.

       -uid uid
              Overrides  the  uid  read  from the source files to the value of
              uid.  Specifying this option automatically  enables  Rock  Ridge
              extensions.

       -use-fileversion
              The  option -use-fileversion allows genisoimage to use file ver-
              sion numbers from the filesystem.  If the option is  not  speci-
              fied,  genisoimage  creates a version number of 1 for all files.
              File versions are strings in the range ;1 to ;32767 This  option
              is the default on VMS.

       -U     Allows   "untranslated"   filenames,  completely  violating  the
              ISO9660 standards described above.  Enables the following flags:
              -d -l -N -allow-leading-dots -relaxed-filenames -allow-lowercase
              -allow-multidot -no-iso-translate.  Allows  more  than  one  `.'
              character  in  the  filename,  as  well as mixed-case filenames.
              This is useful on HP-UX, where the built-in cdfs filesystem does
              not recognize any extensions. Use with extreme caution.

       -no-iso-translate
              Do not translate the characters `#' and `~'  which  are  invalid
              for  ISO9660  filenames.  Although invalid, these characters are
              often used by Microsoft systems.
              This violates the ISO9660 standard, but it happens  to  work  on
              many systems.  Use with caution.

       -V volid
              Specifies  the  volume  ID  (volume name or label) to be written
              into the master  block.   There  is  space  for  32  characters.
              Equivalent to VOLI in the .genisoimagerc file.  The volume ID is
              used  as  the mount point by the Solaris volume manager and as a
              label assigned to a disc on various other platforms such as Win-
              dows and Apple Mac OS.

       -volset ID
              Specifies the volume set ID.  There is space for 128 characters.
              Equivalent to VOLS in the .genisoimagerc file.

       -volset-size #
              Sets the volume set size to #.  The volume set size is the  num-
              ber  of CDs that are in a CD volume set.  A volume set is a col-
              lection of one or more volumes, on  which  a  set  of  files  is
              recorded.

              Volume Sets are not intended to be used to create a set numbered
              CDs that are part of e.g. a Operation System installation set of
              CDs.  Volume Sets are rather used to record a big directory tree
              that  would not fit on a single volume.  Each volume of a Volume
              Set contains a description of all the directories and files that
              are recorded on the volumes where the sequence numbers are  less
              than,  or  equal to, the assigned Volume Set Size of the current
              volume.

              genisoimage currently does not support a  -volset-size  that  is
              larger than 1.

              The  option  -volset-size must be specified before -volset-seqno
              on each command line.

       -volset-seqno #
              Sets the volume set sequence number to #.  The  volume  set  se-
              quence number is the index number of the current CD in a CD set.
              The  option  -volset-size must be specified before -volset-seqno
              on each command line.

       -v     Verbose execution. If given twice on the command line, extra de-
              bug information will be printed.

       -x glob
              Identical to -m glob.

       -z     Generate  special  RRIP  records  for  transparently  compressed
              files.   This is only of use and interest for hosts that support
              transparent decompression, such as Linux 2.4.14 or  later.   You
              must  specify  -R  or -r to enable Rock Ridge, and generate com-
              pressed  files  using  the  mkzftree  utility   before   running
              genisoimage.  Note that transparent compression is a nonstandard
              Rock  Ridge  extension.   The resulting disks are only transpar-
              ently readable if used on Linux.  On other operating systems you
              will need to call mkzftree by hand to decompress the files.

HFS OPTIONS
       -hfs   Create an ISO9660/HFS hybrid CD. This option should be  used  in
              conjunction with the -map, -magic and/or the various double dash
              options given below.

       -apple Create  an  ISO9660 CD with Apple's extensions. Similar to -hfs,
              except that the Apple Extensions to ISO9660 are added instead of
              creating an HFS hybrid volume.  Former genisoimage versions  did
              include  Rock  Ridge  attributes by default if -apple was speci-
              fied. This versions of genisoimage does not do this anymore.  If
              you like to have Rock Ridge attributes, you need to specify this
              separately.

       -map mapping_file
              Use the mapping_file to set the CREATOR and TYPE information for
              a  file  based on the filename's extension. A filename is mapped
              only if it is not one of the know Apple/Unix file  formats.  See
              the HFS CREATOR/TYPE section below.

       -magic magic_file
              The  CREATOR and TYPE information is set by using a file's magic
              number (usually the first few bytes of a file).  The  magic_file
              is  only  used if a file is not one of the known Apple/Unix file
              formats, or the filename extension has  not  been  mapped  using
              -map.  See the HFS CREATOR/TYPE section below for more details.

       -hfs-creator creator
              Set the default CREATOR for all files. Must be exactly 4 charac-
              ters. See the HFS CREATOR/TYPE section below for more details.

       -hfs-type type
              Set  the  default  TYPE for all files. Must be exactly 4 charac-
              ters. See the HFS CREATOR/TYPE section below for more details.

       -probe Search the contents of files for all the known  Apple/Unix  file
              formats.   See  the HFS MACINTOSH FILE FORMATS section below for
              more about these formats.  However, the only way  to  check  for
              MacBinary  and  AppleSingle  files  is to open and read them, so
              this option may increase processing time. It is  better  to  use
              one  or  more  double dash options given below if the Apple/Unix
              formats in use are known.

       -no-desktop
              Do not create (empty) Desktop files. New HFS Desktop files  will
              be created when the CD is used on a Macintosh (and stored in the
              System  Folder).   By  default, empty Desktop files are added to
              the HFS volume.

       -mac-name
              Use the HFS filename as the  starting  point  for  the  ISO9660,
              Joliet and Rock Ridge filenames. See the HFS MACINTOSH FILENAMES
              section below for more information.

       -boot-hfs-file driver_file
              Installs the driver_file that may make the CD bootable on a Mac-
              intosh. See the HFS BOOT DRIVER section below. (Alpha).

       -part  Generate  an HFS partition table. By default, no partition table
              is generated, but some older Macintosh CD-ROM  drivers  need  an
              HFS  partition table on the CD-ROM to be able to recognize a hy-
              brid CD-ROM.

       -auto AutoStart_file
              Make the HFS CD use  the  QuickTime  2.0  Autostart  feature  to
              launch  an  application  or document. The given filename must be
              the name of a document or application located at the  top  level
              of  the  CD.  The filename must be less than 12 characters. (Al-
              pha).

       -cluster-size size
              Set the size in bytes of the cluster or allocation units  of  PC
              Exchange  files. Implies --exchange.  See the HFS MACINTOSH FILE
              FORMATS section below.

       -hide-hfs glob
              Hide glob, a shell wildcard pattern, from the HFS  volume.   The
              file  or directory will still exist in the ISO9660 and/or Joliet
              directory.  glob may match any part of the  filename.   Multiple
              globs may be excluded.  Example:

                   genisoimage -o rom -hfs -hide-hfs '*.o' -hide-hfs foobar

              would exclude all files ending in `.o' or called foobar from the
              HFS  volume.  Note that if you had a directory called foobar, it
              too (and of course all its descendants) would be excluded.   The
              glob  can also be a path name relative to the source directories
              given on the command line. Example:

                   genisoimage -o rom -hfs -hide-hfs src/html src

              would exclude just the file or directory called  html  from  the
              src  directory.   Any other file or directory called html in the
              tree will not be excluded.  Should be  used  with  -hide  and/or
              -hide-joliet.  In order to match a directory name, make sure the
              pattern   does   not  include  a  trailing  `/'  character.  See
              README.hide for more details.

       -hide-hfs-list file
              Specify a file containing a list of wildcard patterns to be hid-
              den as in -hide-hfs.

       -hfs-volid hfs_volid
              Volume name for the HFS partition. This is the name that is  as-
              signed  to  the  disc on a Macintosh and replaces the volid used
              with -V.

       -icon-position
              Use the icon position information, if it exists,  from  the  Ap-
              ple/Unix  file.   The  icons will appear in the same position as
              they would on a Macintosh desktop. Folder location and  size  on
              screen,  its scroll positions, folder View (view as Icons, Small
              Icons, etc.) are also preserved.  (Alpha).

       -root-info file
              Set the location, size on screen, scroll positions, folder  View
              etc.  for  the root folder of an HFS volume. See README.rootinfo
              for more information.  (Alpha)

       -prep-boot file
              PReP boot image file. Up to 4 are allowed. See  README.prep_boot
              for more information.  (Alpha)

       -chrp-boot
              Add CHRP boot header.

       -input-hfs-charset charset
              Input  charset that defines the characters used in HFS filenames
              when used with -mac-name.  The default charset is  cp10000  (Mac
              Roman).  See the CHARACTER SETS and HFS MACINTOSH FILENAMES sec-
              tions below for more details.

       -output-hfs-charset charset
              Output  charset that defines the characters that will be used in
              the HFS filenames. Defaults to the input charset. See the  CHAR-
              ACTER SETS section below for more details.

       -hfs-unlock
              By  default,  genisoimage  will  create  an  HFS  volume that is
              locked.  This option leaves the volume unlocked  so  that  other
              applications (e.g.  hfsutils) can modify the volume. See the HFS
              PROBLEMS/LIMITATIONS section below for warnings about using this
              option.

       -hfs-bless folder_name
              "Bless" the given directory (folder). This is usually the System
              Folder and is used in creating HFS bootable CDs. The name of the
              directory  must  be  the whole path name as genisoimage sees it.
              E.g., if the given pathspec is ./cddata and the required  folder
              is  called System Folder, the whole path name is "/cddata/System
              Folder" (remember to use quotes if the name contains spaces).

       -hfs-parms parameters
              Override certain parameters used to create the  HFS  filesystem.
              Unlikely  to  be  used  in  normal  circumstances.  See the lib-
              hfs_iso/hybrid.h source file for details.

       --cap  Look for AUFS CAP Macintosh files.  Search  for  CAP  Apple/Unix
              file  formats  only. Searching for the other possible Apple/Unix
              file formats is disabled, unless other double dash  options  are
              given.

       --netatalk
              Look for NETATALK Macintosh files

       --double
              Look for AppleDouble Macintosh files

       --ethershare
              Look for Helios EtherShare Macintosh files

       --ushare
              Look for IPT UShare Macintosh files

       --exchange
              Look for PC Exchange Macintosh files

       --sgi  Look for SGI Macintosh files

       --xinet
              Look for XINET Macintosh files

       --macbin
              Look for MacBinary Macintosh files

       --single
              Look for AppleSingle Macintosh files

       --dave Look for Thursby Software Systems DAVE Macintosh files

       --sfm  Look for Microsoft's Services for Macintosh files (NT only) (Al-
              pha)

       --osx-double
              Look for Mac OS X AppleDouble Macintosh files

       --osx-hfs
              Look for Mac OS X HFS Macintosh files

CHARACTER SETS
       genisoimage  processes filenames in a POSIX-compliant way as strings of
       8-bit characters.  To represent all codings for  all  languages,  8-bit
       characters  are  not sufficient.  Unicode or ISO-10646 define character
       codings that need at least 21 bits to represent  all  known  languages.
       They  may  be  represented with UTF-32, UTF-16 or UTF-8 coding.  UTF-32
       uses a plain 32-bit coding but seems to be uncommon.  UTF-16 is used by
       Microsoft with Win32 with the disadvantage that 16-bit  characters  are
       not compliant with the POSIX filesystem interface.

       Modern Unix operating systems may use UTF-8 coding for filenames.  Each
       32-bit  character is represented by one or more 8-bit characters.  If a
       character is coded in ISO-8859-1 (used  in  Central  Europe  and  North
       America) is maps 1:1 to a UTF-32 or UTF-16 coded Unicode character.  If
       a  character  is  coded in 7-Bit ASCII (used in USA and other countries
       with limited character set) is maps 1:1 to a UTF-32,  UTF-16  or  UTF-8
       coded Unicode character.  Character codes that cannot be represented as
       a  single  byte  in UTF-8 (if the value is > 0x7F) use escape sequences
       that map to more than one 8-bit character.

       If all operating systems used UTF-8, genisoimage would not need to  re-
       code  characters  in  filenames.   Unfortunately, Apple uses completely
       nonstandard codings and Microsoft uses a Unicode  coding  that  is  not
       compatible with the POSIX filename interface.

       For  all  non-UTF-8-coded  operating systems, the actual character that
       each byte represents depends on the character set or codepage (the name
       used by Microsoft) used by the local operating system — the  characters
       in  a  character set will reflect the region or natural language set by
       the user.

       Usually  character  codes  0x00-0x1f  are  control  characters,   codes
       0x20-0x7f  are  the  7-bit  ASCII  characters  and  (on  PCs  and Macs)
       0x80-0xff are used for other characters.

       As there are a lot more than 256  characters/symbols  in  use,  only  a
       small  subset  are  represented  in a character set. Therefore the same
       character code may represent a different character in different charac-
       ter sets. So a filename generated, say in central Europe, may not  dis-
       play  the  same  character when viewed on a machine in, say eastern Eu-
       rope.

       To make matters more complicated, different operating systems use  dif-
       ferent  character  sets  for  the  region or language. For example, the
       character code for `é' (small e with acute  accent)  may  be  character
       code 0x82 on a PC, code 0x8e on a Macintosh, code 0xe9 on a Unix system
       in western Europe, and code 0x000e9 in Unicode.

       As  long  as  not  all  operating systems and applications use the same
       character set as the basis for filenames, it may be necessary to  spec-
       ify  which  character set your filenames use in and which character set
       the filenames should appear on the CD.

       There are four options to specify the character sets you want to use:

       -input-charset
              Defines the local character set you are using on your  host  ma-
              chine.   Any  character set conversions that take place will use
              this character set as the  starting  point.  The  default  input
              character  sets  are cp437 on MS-DOS-based systems and iso8859-1
              on all other systems.  If -J is given, the  Unicode  equivalents
              of the input character set will be used in the Joliet directory.
              -jcharset is the same as -input-charset -J.

       -output-charset
              Defines  the  character  set that will be used with for the Rock
              Ridge names on the CD.  Defaults to the input character set.

       -input-hfs-charset
              Defines the HFS character set used  for  HFS  filenames  decoded
              from  any  of  the  various Apple/Unix file formats. Only useful
              when used with -mac-name.  See the HFS MACINTOSH  FILENAMES  for
              more information. Defaults to cp10000 (Mac Roman).

       -output-hfs-charset
              Defines  the HFS character set used to create HFS filenames from
              the input character set in use. In most cases this will be  from
              the  character  set  given with -input-charset.  Defaults to the
              input HFS character set.

       There are a number of character sets built in to genisoimage.  To get a
       listing, use  -input-charset  help.   This  list  doesn't  include  the
       charset  derived  from the current locale, if genisoimage is built with
       iconv support.

       Additional character sets can be read from file for any of the  charac-
       ter  set  options  by giving a filename as the argument to the options.
       The given file will only be read if its name does not match one of  the
       built-in character sets.

       The  format of the character set files is the same as the mapping files
       available from http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS.  This format is:

              Column #1 is the input byte code (in hex as 0xXX)
              Column #2 is the Unicode (in hex as 0xXXXX)
              The rest of the line is ignored.

       Any blank line, line without two (or more) columns in the above  format
       or  comments  lines (starting with the # character) are ignored without
       any warnings. Any missing input code is  mapped  to  Unicode  character
       0x0000.

       Note  that,  while  UTF-8 is supported, other Unicode encodings such as
       UCS-2/UTF-16 and UCS-4/UTF-32 are not, as POSIX operating systems  can-
       not handle them natively.

       A 1:1 character set mapping can be defined by using the keyword default
       as the argument to any of the character set options. This is the behav-
       iour of old versions of mkisofs.

       The  ISO9660  filenames generated from the input filenames are not con-
       verted from the input character set. The ISO9660  character  set  is  a
       very limited subset of the ASCII characters, so any conversion would be
       pointless.

       Any  character  that genisoimage cannot convert will be replaced with a
       `_' character.

HFS CREATOR/TYPE
       A Macintosh file has two properties associated  with  it  which  define
       which  application created the file, the CREATOR and what data the file
       contains, the TYPE.  Both are (exactly) 4 letter strings. Usually  this
       allows  a  Macintosh user to double-click on a file and launch the cor-
       rect application etc. The CREATOR and TYPE of a particular file can  be
       found by using something like ResEdit (or similar) on a Macintosh.

       The  CREATOR  and  TYPE  information  is  stored in all the various Ap-
       ple/Unix encoded files.  For other files it is  possible  to  base  the
       CREATOR and TYPE on the filename's extension using a mapping file (with
       -map)  and/or  using the magic number (usually a signature in the first
       few bytes) of a file (with -magic).  If both these options  are  given,
       their  order  on  the  command  line  is significant.  If -map is given
       first, a filename extension match is attempted before  a  magic  number
       match.  However,  if -magic is given first, a magic number match is at-
       tempted before a filename extension match.

       If a mapping or magic file is not used, or no match is found,  the  de-
       fault  CREATOR  and  TYPE for all regular files can be set by using en-
       tries  in  the  .genisoimagerc  file  or  using   -hfs-creator   and/or
       -hfs-type, otherwise the default CREATOR and TYPE are Unix and TEXT.

       The  format  of  the mapping file is the same afpfile format as used by
       aufs.  This file has five columns for the extension, file  translation,
       CREATOR,  TYPE  and Comment.  Lines starting with the `#' character are
       comment lines and are ignored. An example file would be like:

       # Example filename mapping file
       #
       # EXTN   XLate   CREATOR   TYPE     Comment
       .tif     Raw     '8BIM'    'TIFF'   "Photoshop TIFF image"
       .hqx     Ascii   'BnHq'    'TEXT'   "BinHex file"
       .doc     Raw     'MSWD'    'WDBN'   "Word file"
       .mov     Raw     'TVOD'    'MooV'   "QuickTime Movie"
       *        Ascii   'ttxt'    'TEXT'   "Text file"

       Where:

              The first column EXTN defines the Unix filename extension to  be
              mapped.  The  default  mapping  for  any filename extension that
              doesn't match is defined with the `*' character.

              The Xlate column defines the type of  text  translation  between
              the Unix and Macintosh file it is ignored by genisoimage, but is
              kept  to  be compatible with aufs(1).  Although genisoimage does
              not alter the contents of a file, if a binary file has its  TYPE
              set  as  TEXT, it may be read incorrectly on a Macintosh. There-
              fore a better choice for the default TYPE may be ????.

              The CREATOR and TYPE keywords must be 4 characters long and  en-
              closed in single quotes.

              The  comment  field is enclosed in double quotes — it is ignored
              by genisoimage, but is kept to be compatible with aufs.

       The format of the magic file is almost identical to the  magic(5)  file
       used by the file(1) command.

       This  file  has  four  tab-separated columns for the byte offset, type,
       test and message.  Lines starting with the `#'  character  are  comment
       lines and are ignored. An example file would be like:

       # Example magic file
       #
       # off   type      test       message
       0       string    GIF8       8BIM GIFf  GIF image
       0       beshort   0xffd8     8BIM JPEG  image data
       0       string    SIT!       SIT! SIT!  StuffIt Archive
       0       string    \037\235   LZIV ZIVU  standard Unix compress
       0       string    \037\213   GNUz ZIVU  gzip compressed data
       0       string    %!         ASPS TEXT  Postscript
       0       string    \004%!     ASPS TEXT  PC Postscript with a ^D to start
       4       string    moov       txtt MooV  QuickTime movie file (moov)
       4       string    mdat       txtt MooV  QuickTime movie file (mdat)

       The  format  of the file is described in magic(5).  The only difference
       here is that for each entry in the magic file, the message for the ini-
       tial offset must be be 4 characters for the CREATOR followed by 4 char-
       acters for the TYPE — white space is optional between them.  Any  other
       characters on this line are ignored.  Continuation lines (starting with
       a `>') are also ignored, i.e., only the initial offset lines are used.

       Using  -magic  may  significantly increase processing time as each file
       has to opened and read to find its magic number.

       In summary, for all files, the default CREATOR is Unix and the  default
       TYPE  is TEXT.  These can be changed by using entries in the .genisoim-
       agerc file or by using -hfs-creator and/or -hfs-type.

       If the a file is in one of the known Apple/Unix formats (and the format
       has been selected), the CREATOR and TYPE  are  taken  from  the  values
       stored in the Apple/Unix file.

       Other files can have their CREATOR and TYPE set from their filename ex-
       tension  (with  -map), or their magic number (with -magic).  If the de-
       fault match is used in the mapping file, these values override the  de-
       fault CREATOR and TYPE.

       A   full   CREATOR/TYPE   database   can  be  found  at  http://www.an-
       gelfire.com/il/szekely/.

HFS MACINTOSH FILE FORMATS
       Macintosh files have two parts called the Data and Resource fork.   Ei-
       ther  may  be empty. Unix (and many other OSs) can only cope with files
       having one part (or fork). To add to this, Macintosh files have a  num-
       ber  of  attributes  associated with them — probably the most important
       are the TYPE and CREATOR.  Again, Unix has no concept of these types of
       attributes.

       E.g., a Macintosh file may be a JPEG image where the image is stored in
       the Data fork and a desktop thumbnail stored in the Resource  fork.  It
       is usually the information in the data fork that is useful across plat-
       forms.

       Therefore  to store a Macintosh file on a Unix filesystem, a way has to
       be found to cope with the two forks and the extra attributes (which are
       referred to as the Finder info).  Unfortunately, it  seems  that  every
       software  package that stores Macintosh files on Unix has chosen a com-
       pletely different storage method.

       The Apple/Unix formats that genisoimage (partially) supports are:

       CAP AUFS format
              Data fork stored in a file. Resource fork in  subdirectory  .re-
              source with same filename as data fork. Finder info in subdirec-
              tory .finderinfo with same filename.

       AppleDouble/Netatalk
              Data  fork stored in a file. Resource fork stored in a file with
              same name prefixed with `%'. Finder info also stored in same `%'
              file.  Netatalk  uses  the  same  format,   but   the   resource
              fork/Finder  info  stored in subdirectory .AppleDouble with same
              filename as data fork.

       AppleSingle
              Data structures similar to above, except both forks  and  Finder
              info are stored in one file.

       Helios EtherShare
              Data  fork  stored in a file.  Resource fork and Finder info to-
              gether in subdirectory .rsrc with same filename as data fork.

       IPT UShare
              Like the EtherShare  format,  but  the  Finder  info  is  stored
              slightly differently.

       MacBinary
              Both forks and Finder info stored in one file.

       Apple PC Exchange
              Used  by  Macintoshes  to  store Apple files on DOS (FAT) disks.
              Data fork stored in a file. Resource fork  in  subdirectory  re-
              source.frk (or RESOURCE.FRK).  Finder info as one record in file
              finder.dat  (or  FINDER.DAT).  Separate finder.dat for each data
              fork directory.

              Note: genisoimage needs to know the native FAT cluster  size  of
              the  disk that the PC Exchange files are on (or have been copied
              from). This size is given by -cluster-size.  The cluster or  al-
              location size can be found by using the DOS utility chkdsk.

              May  not  work  with PC Exchange v2.2 or higher files (available
              with MacOS 8.1).  DOS media containing PC Exchange files  should
              be mounted as type msdos (not vfat) when using Linux.

       SGI/XINET
              Used by SGI machines when they mount HFS disks. Data fork stored
              in  a file.  Resource fork in subdirectory .HSResource with same
              filename.  Finder info as one record in file .HSancillary.  Sep-
              arate .HSancillary for each data fork directory.

       Thursby Software Systems DAVE
              Allows Macintoshes to store Apple files on  SMB  servers.   Data
              fork  stored  in  a  file.  Resource  fork  in  subdirectory re-
              source.frk.  Uses the AppleDouble format to store resource fork.

       Services for Macintosh
              Format of files stored by NT Servers on NTFS  filesystems.  Data
              fork  is  stored  as  filename.   Resource fork stored as a NTFS
              stream called filename:AFP_Resource.  The Finder info is  stored
              as  a NTFS stream called filename:Afp_AfpInfo.  NTFS streams are
              normally invisible to the user.

              Warning: genisoimage only partially supports the SFM format.  If
              an  HFS file or folder stored on the NT server contains an ille-
              gal NT character in its name, NT converts  these  characters  to
              Private Use Unicode characters.  The characters are: " * / < > ?
              \  |  and  a  space or period if it is the last character of the
              filename, character codes 0x01 to 0x1f (control characters)  and
              Apple's apple logo.

              Unfortunately, these private Unicode characters are not readable
              by  the  genisoimage NT executable. Therefore any file or direc-
              tory name containing these characters will be ignored —  includ-
              ing the contents of any such directory.

       Mac OS X AppleDouble
              When HFS/HFS+ files are copied or saved by Mac OS X on to a non-
              HFS filesystem (e.g. UFS, NFS etc.), the files are stored in Ap-
              pleDouble  format.   Data  fork  stored in a file. Resource fork
              stored in a file with same name prefixed with `._'. Finder  info
              also stored in same `._' file.

       Mac OS X HFS (Alpha)
              Not  really an Apple/Unix encoding, but actual HFS/HFS+ files on
              a Mac OS X system. Data fork stored in  a  file.  Resource  fork
              stored  in  a  pseudo  file  with  the same name with the suffix
              /rsrc.  The Finder info is only available via a Mac OS X library
              call.

              See also README.macosx.

              Only works when used on Mac OS X.

              If a file is found with a zero length resource  fork  and  empty
              finderinfo,  it is assumed not to have any Apple/Unix encoding —
              therefore a TYPE and CREATOR can be set using other methods.

       genisoimage will attempt to set the CREATOR, TYPE,  date  and  possibly
       other  flags from the finder info. Additionally, if it exists, the Mac-
       intosh filename is set from the finder info,  otherwise  the  Macintosh
       name  is  based  on the Unix filename — see the HFS MACINTOSH FILENAMES
       section below.

       When using -apple, the TYPE and CREATOR are stored in the optional Sys-
       tem Use or SUSP field in the ISO9660 Directory Record  —  in  much  the
       same  way  as the Rock Ridge attributes are. In fact to make life easy,
       the Apple extensions are added at the beginning of  the  existing  Rock
       Ridge  attributes  (i.e.,  to get the Apple extensions you get the Rock
       Ridge extensions as well).

       The Apple extensions require the resource  fork  to  be  stored  as  an
       ISO9660  associated  file.  This is just like any normal file stored in
       the ISO9660 filesystem except that the associated file flag is  set  in
       the  Directory  Record (bit 2). This file has the same name as the data
       fork (the file seen by non-Apple machines). Associated files  are  nor-
       mally ignored by other OSs

       When  using  -hfs,  the  TYPE  and  CREATOR plus other finder info, are
       stored in a separate HFS directory, not visible on the ISO9660  volume.
       The  HFS directory references the same data and resource fork files de-
       scribed above.

       In most cases, it is better to use -hfs instead of -apple, as the  lat-
       ter  imposes  the limited ISO9660 characters allowed in filenames. How-
       ever, the Apple extensions do give the advantage  that  the  files  are
       packed  on the disk more efficiently and it may be possible to fit more
       files on a CD.

HFS MACINTOSH FILENAMES
       Where possible, the HFS filename that is stored with an Apple/Unix file
       is used for the HFS part of the CD. However, not all the Apple/Unix en-
       codings store the HFS filename with the finderinfo. In these cases, the
       Unix filename is used — with escaped special characters. Special  char-
       acters include `/' and characters with codes over 127.

       AUFS  escapes  these  characters by using `:' followed by the character
       code as two hex digits. Netatalk and EtherShare have a similar  scheme,
       but uses `%' instead of a `:'.

       If genisoimage cannot find an HFS filename, it uses the Unix name, with
       any %xx or :xx characters (xx are two hex digits) converted to a single
       character  code.  If xx are not hex digits ([0-9a-fA-F]), they are left
       alone — although any remaining `:' is converted to `%', as `:'  is  the
       HFS  directory  separator. Care must be taken, as an ordinary Unix file
       with %xx or :xx will also be converted. e.g.

       This:2fFile   converted to This/File

       This:File     converted to This%File

       This:t7File   converted to This%t7File

       Although HFS filenames appear to support uppercase and  lowercase  let-
       ters,  the  filesystem is case-insensitive, i.e., the filenames aBc and
       AbC are the same. If a file is found in a directory with the  same  HFS
       name,  genisoimage  will  attempt  to  make a unique name by adding `_'
       characters to one of the filenames.

       If an HFS filename exists for a file, genisoimage can use this name  as
       the starting point for the ISO9660, Joliet and Rock Ridge filenames us-
       ing  -mac-name.   Normal  Unix files without an HFS name will still use
       their Unix name.  e.g.

       If a MacBinary (or PC Exchange) file is stored as someimage.gif.bin  on
       the Unix filesystem, but contains a HFS file called someimage.gif, this
       is  the  name  that would appear on the HFS part of the CD. However, as
       genisoimage uses the Unix name as the  starting  point  for  the  other
       names, the ISO9660 name generated will probably be SOMEIMAG.BIN and the
       Joliet/Rock Ridge would be someimage.gif.bin.  This option will use the
       HFS  filename  as the starting point and the ISO9660 name will probably
       be SOMEIMAG.GIF and the Joliet/Rock Ridge would be someimage.gif.

       -mac-name will not currently work with -T — the Unix name will be  used
       in the TRANS.TBL file, not the Macintosh name.

       The  character  set  used  to convert any HFS filename to a Joliet/Rock
       Ridge filename defaults to cp10000 (Mac Roman).  The character set used
       can be specified using -input-hfs-charset.  Other built-in HFS  charac-
       ter  sets  are:  cp10006  (MacGreek),  cp10007  (MacCyrillic),  cp10029
       (MacLatin2), cp10079 (MacIcelandandic) and cp10081 (MacTurkish).

       Note: the character codes used by HFS filenames taken from the  various
       Apple/Unix  formats  will not be converted as they are assumed to be in
       the correct Apple character set. Only the Joliet/Rock Ridge  names  de-
       rived from the HFS filenames will be converted.

       The  existing  genisoimage  code will filter out any illegal characters
       for the ISO9660 and Joliet filenames, but as genisoimage expects to  be
       dealing directly with Unix names, it leaves the Rock Ridge names as is.
       But as `/' is a legal HFS filename character, -mac-name converts `/' to
       a `_' in Rock Ridge filenames.

       If  the  Apple extensions are used, only the ISO9660 filenames will ap-
       pear on the Macintosh. However, as the Macintosh  ISO9660  drivers  can
       use Level 2 filenames, you can use options like -allow-multidot without
       problems  on  a Macintosh — still take care over the names, for example
       this.file.name will be converted to THIS.FILE i.e. only have  one  `.',
       also  filename  abcdefgh will be seen as ABCDEFGH but abcdefghi will be
       seen as ABCDEFGHI.  i.e. with a `.' at the end — don't know if this  is
       a  Macintosh  problem  or a genisoimage/mkhybrid problem. All filenames
       will be in uppercase when viewed on a Macintosh. Of course,  DOS/Win3.X
       machines will not be able to see Level 2 filenames...

HFS CUSTOM VOLUME/FOLDER ICONS
       To  give  a HFS CD a custom icon, make sure the root (top level) folder
       includes a standard Macintosh volume icon file. To give a volume a cus-
       tom icon on a Macintosh, an icon has to be  pasted  over  the  volume's
       icon  in  the  "Get  Info" box of the volume. This creates an invisible
       file called Icon\r (`\r' is the carriage return character) in the  root
       folder.

       A  custom folder icon is very similar — an invisible file called Icon\r
       exists in the folder itself.

       Probably the easiest way to create a custom icon that  genisoimage  can
       use  is to format a blank HFS floppy disk on a Mac and paste an icon to
       its "Get Info" box. If using Linux with the HFS module installed, mount
       the floppy:

              mount -t hfs /dev/fd0 /mnt/floppy

       The floppy will be mounted as a CAP filesystem by  default.   Then  run
       genisoimage using something like:

              genisoimage --cap -o output source_dir /mnt/floppy

       If  you are not using Linux, you can use hfsutils to copy the icon file
       from the floppy.  However, care has to be taken, as the icon file  con-
       tains a control character.  For example:

              hmount /dev/fd0
              hdir -a
              hcopy -m Icon^V^M icon_dir/icon

       Where  `^V^M'  is control-V followed by control-M. Then run genisoimage
       by using something like:

              genisoimage --macbin -o output source_dir icon_dir

       The procedure for creating/using custom folder icons is very similar  —
       paste  an  icon  to  folder's "Get Info" box and transfer the resulting
       Icon\r file to the relevant directory in the genisoimage source tree.

       You may want to hide the icon files from the ISO9660 and Joliet trees.

       To give a custom icon to a Joliet CD, follow the instructions found  at
       http://www.cdrfaq.org/faq03.html#S3-21-1.

HFS BOOT DRIVER
       It may be possible to make the hybrid CD bootable on a Macintosh.

       A  bootable  HFS  CD requires an Apple CD-ROM (or compatible) driver, a
       bootable HFS partition and the necessary System, Finder, etc. files.

       A driver can be obtained from any other Macintosh bootable CD-ROM using
       the  apple_driver  utility.  This  file   can   then   be   used   with
       -boot-hfs-file.

       The  HFS  partition  (i.e.  the hybrid disk in our case) must contain a
       suitable System Folder, again from another CD-ROM or disk.

       For a partition to be bootable, it must have its boot  block  set.  The
       boot  block  is  in  the  first  two  blocks of a partition. For a non-
       bootable partition the boot block is full of zeros.  Normally,  when  a
       System  file is copied to partition on a Macintosh disk, the boot block
       is filled with a number of required settings —  unfortunately  I  don't
       know the full spec for the boot block, so I'm guessing that the follow-
       ing will work.

       Therefore,  the  utility apple_driver also extracts the boot block from
       the first HFS partition it finds on the given CD-ROM and this  is  used
       for the HFS partition created by genisoimage.

       Please note: By using a driver from an Apple CD and copying Apple soft-
       ware  to  your CD, you become liable to obey Apple Computer, Inc. Soft-
       ware License Agreements.

EL TORITO BOOT INFORMATION TABLE
       When -boot-info-table is given, genisoimage will modify the  boot  file
       specified by -b by inserting a 56-byte boot information table at offset
       8  in the file.  This modification is done in the source filesystem, so
       make sure you use a copy if this file is not  easily  recreated!   This
       file  contains pointers which may not be easily or reliably obtained at
       boot time.

       The format of this table is as follows; all  integers  are  in  section
       7.3.1 ("little endian") format.

         Offset    Name           Size      Meaning
          8         bi_pvd         4 bytes   LBA of primary volume descriptor
         12        bi_file        4 bytes   LBA of boot file
         16        bi_length      4 bytes   Boot file length in bytes
         20        bi_csum        4 bytes   32-bit checksum
         24        bi_reserved    40 bytes  Reserved

              The  32-bit  checksum  is the sum of all the 32-bit words in the
              boot file starting at byte offset  64.   All  linear  block  ad-
              dresses (LBAs) are given in CD sectors (normally 2048 bytes).

HPPA NOTES
       To  make  a  bootable CD for HPPA, at the very least a boot loader file
       (-hppa-bootloader), a kernel image file (32-bit, 64-bit, or  both,  de-
       pending  on  hardware)  and a boot command line (-hppa-cmdline) must be
       specified. Some systems can boot either a 32- or a 64-bit  kernel,  and
       the  firmware  will  choose  one  if  both  are present.  Optionally, a
       ramdisk can be used for the root filesystem using -hppa-cmdline.

JIGDO NOTES
       Jigdo is a tool to help in the distribution of large files like CD  and
       DVD images; see http://atterer.org/jigdo/ for more details.  Debian CDs
       and  DVD  ISO  images are published on the web in jigdo format to allow
       end users to download them more efficiently.

       To create jigdo  and  template  files  alongside  the  ISO  image  from
       genisoimage,  you  must first generate a list of the files that will be
       used, in the following format:

         MD5sum   File size  Path
         32 chars 12 chars   to end of line

       The MD5sum must be written in standard hexadecimal notation,  the  file
       size  must  list  the size of the file in bytes, and the path must list
       the absolute path to the file. For example:

       00006dcd58ff0756c36d2efae21be376         14736  /mirror/debian/file1
       000635c69b254a1be8badcec3a8d05c1        211822  /mirror/debian/file2
       00083436a3899a09633fc1026ef1e66e         22762  /mirror/debian/file3

       Once you have this file, call genisoimage with all of your normal  com-
       mand-line  parameters.  Specify  the output filenames for the jigdo and
       template files using -jigdo-jigdo and -jigdo-template, and pass in  the
       location of your MD5 list with -md5-list.

       If there are files that you do NOT want to be added into the jigdo file
       (e.g.  if  they  are  likely  to  change  often),  specify  them  using
       -jigdo-exclude. If you want to verify some of the  files  as  they  are
       written  into  the  image,  specify them using -jigdo-force-md5. If any
       files don't match, genisoimage will then abort.  Both of these  options
       take  regular  expressions as input. It is possible to restrict the set
       of  files  that  will  be  used  further  based  on  size  —  use   the
       -jigdo-min-file-size option.

       Finally,  the jigdo code needs to know how to map the files it is given
       onto a mirror-style configuration.  Specify  how  to  map  paths  using
       -jigdo-map.   Using Debian=/mirror/debian will cause all paths starting
       with /mirror/debian to be mapped to Debian:<file> in the  output  jigdo
       file.

EXAMPLES
       To  create a vanilla ISO9660 filesystem image in the file cd.iso, where
       the directory cd_dir will become the root directory of the CD, call:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso cd_dir

       To create a CD with Rock  Ridge  extensions  of  the  source  directory
       cd_dir:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso -R cd_dir

       To  create  a  CD  with  Rock  Ridge extensions of the source directory
       cd_dir where all files have at least read permission and all files  are
       owned by root, call:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso -r cd_dir

       To  write a tar archive directly to a CD that will later contain a sim-
       ple ISO9660 filesystem with the tar archive call:

              % tar cf - . | genisoimage -stream-media-size 333000 | \
                   wodim dev=b,t,l -dao tsize=333000s -

       To create a HFS hybrid CD with the Joliet and Rock Ridge extensions  of
       the source directory cd_dir:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso -R -J -hfs cd_dir

       To  create  a  HFS hybrid CD from the source directory cd_dir that con-
       tains Netatalk Apple/Unix files:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso --netatalk cd_dir

       To create a HFS hybrid CD from the source directory cd_dir, giving  all
       files  CREATOR and TYPES based on just their filename extensions listed
       in the file "mapping".:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso -map mapping cd_dir

       To create a CD with the Apple Extensions to ISO9660,  from  the  source
       directories  cd_dir and another_dir.  Files in all the known Apple/Unix
       format are decoded and any other files are given CREATOR and TYPE based
       on their magic number given in the file magic:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso -apple -magic magic -probe \
                      cd_dir another_dir

       The following example puts different files on the CD that all have  the
       name  README,  but  have different contents when seen as a ISO9660/Rock
       Ridge, Joliet or HFS CD.

       Current directory contains:

              % ls -F
              README.hfs     README.joliet  README.Unix    cd_dir/

       The following command puts the contents of the directory cd_dir on  the
       CD  along  with the three README files — but only one will be seen from
       each of the three filesystems:

              % genisoimage -o cd.iso -hfs -J -r -graft-points \
                      -hide README.hfs -hide README.joliet \
                      -hide-joliet README.hfs -hide-joliet README.Unix \
                      -hide-hfs README.joliet -hide-hfs README.Unix \
                      README=README.hfs README=README.joliet \
                      README=README.Unix cd_dir

       i.e. the file README.hfs will be seen as README on the HFS CD  and  the
       other  two  README  files  will be hidden. Similarly for the Joliet and
       ISO9660/Rock Ridge CD.

       There are probably all sorts of strange results possible with  combina-
       tions of the hide options ...

NOTES
       genisoimage  may  safely  be installed suid root. This may be needed to
       allow genisoimage to read the previous session when creating  a  multi-
       session image.

       If  genisoimage  is creating a filesystem image with Rock Ridge attrib-
       utes and the directory nesting level of the source  directory  tree  is
       too  much  for  ISO9660, genisoimage will do deep directory relocation.
       This results in a directory called RR_MOVED in the  root  directory  of
       the CD. You cannot avoid this directory.

       Many  boot  code  options for different platforms are mutualy exclusive
       because the boot blocks cannot coexist, ie. different  platforms  share
       the  same  data locations in the image. See http://lists.debian.org/de-
       bian-cd/2006/12/msg00109.html for details.

BUGS
       Any files that have hard links to files not in the tree being copied to
       the ISO9660 filesystem will have an incorrect file reference count.

       Does not check for SUSP record(s) in `.' entry of the root directory to
       verify the existence of  Rock  Ridge  enhancements.   This  problem  is
       present  when  reading  old  sessions while adding data in multisession
       mode.

       Does not properly read relocated directories in multisession mode  when
       adding  data.   Any relocated deep directory is lost if the new session
       does not include the deep directory.

       Does not re-use RR_MOVED when doing multisession from TRANS.TBL.

       Does not create whole_name entry for RR_MOVED in multisession mode.

       There may be other bugs.  Please, report them to the maintainers.

HFS PROBLEMS/LIMITATIONS
       I have had to make several assumptions on how  I  expect  the  modified
       libhfs  routines to work, however there may be situations that either I
       haven't thought of, or come across when these assumptions fail.  There-
       fore I can't guarantee that genisoimage will work as expected (although
       I haven't had a major problem yet). Most of the HFS features work fine,
       but some are not fully tested. These are marked as Alpha above.

       Although HFS filenames appear to support uppercase and  lowercase  let-
       ters,  the  filesystem is case-insensitive, i.e., the filenames aBc and
       AbC are the same. If a file is found in a directory with the  same  HFS
       name,  genisoimage  will  attempt  to  make a unique name by adding `_'
       characters to one of the filenames.

       HFS file/directory names that share the first 31 characters  have  `_N'
       (a  decimal number) substituted for the last few characters to generate
       unique names.

       Care must be taken when "grafting" Apple/Unix files or directories (see
       above for the method and syntax involved). It is not possible to use  a
       new name for an Apple/Unix encoded file/directory. e.g. If a Apple/Unix
       encoded  file  called oldname is to added to the CD, you cannot use the
       command line:

              genisoimage -o  output.raw  -hfs  -graft-points  newname=oldname
              cd_dir

       genisoimage  will  be unable to decode oldname.  However, you can graft
       Apple/Unix encoded files or directories as long as you do  not  attempt
       to give them new names as above.

       When  creating  an HFS volume with the multisession options, -M and -C,
       only files in the  last  session  will  be  in  the  HFS  volume.  i.e.
       genisoimage cannot add existing files from previous sessions to the HFS
       volume.

       However,  if  each session is created with -part, each session will ap-
       pear as separate volumes when mounted on a Mac. In  this  case,  it  is
       worth using -V or -hfs-volid to give each session a unique volume name,
       otherwise each "volume" will appear on the Desktop with the same name.

       Symbolic  links  (as with all other non-regular files) are not added to
       the HFS directory.

       Hybrid volumes may be larger than pure ISO9660 volumes  containing  the
       same data. In some cases (e.g. DVD sized volumes) the difference can be
       significant. As an HFS volume gets bigger, so does the allocation block
       size (the smallest amount of space a file can occupy).  For a 650MB CD,
       the allocation block is 10kB, for a 4.7GB DVD it will be about 70kB.

       The  maximum number of files in an HFS volume is about 65500 — although
       the real limit will be somewhat less than this.

       The resulting hybrid volume can be accessed on a Unix machine by  using
       the hfsutils routines. However, no changes can be made to the volume as
       it  is set as locked.  The option -hfs-unlock will create an output im-
       age that is unlocked — however no changes should be made  to  the  con-
       tents of the volume (unless you really know what you are doing) as it's
       not a "real" HFS volume.

       -mac-name  will not currently work with -T — the Unix name will be used
       in the TRANS.TBL file, not the Macintosh name.

       Although genisoimage does not alter the contents of a file, if a binary
       file has its TYPE set as TEXT, it may be read incorrectly on  a  Macin-
       tosh. Therefore a better choice for the default TYPE may be ????.

       -mac-boot-file may not work at all...

       May  not work with PC Exchange v2.2 or higher files (available with Ma-
       cOS 8.1).  DOS media containing PC Exchange files should be mounted  as
       type msdos (not vfat) when using Linux.

       The  SFM  format  is  only partially supported — see HFS MACINTOSH FILE
       FORMATS section above.

       It  is  not  possible  to  use  -sparc-boot   or   -generic-boot   with
       -boot-hfs-file or -prep-boot.

       genisoimage  should  be  able to create HFS hybrid images over 4Gb, al-
       though this has not been fully tested.

SEE ALSO
       genisoimagerc(5), wodim(1), mkzftree(8), magic(5).

AUTHORS
       genisoimage is derived from mkisofs from the cdrtools 2.01.01a08  pack-
       age  from May 2006 (with few updates extracted from cdrtools 2.01.01a24
       from March 2007) from .IR http://cdrecord.berlios.de/ , but is now part
       of the cdrkit suite, maintained by Joerg Jaspert, Eduard  Bloch,  Steve
       McIntyre,  Peter  Samuelson, Christian Fromme, Ben Hutchings, and other
       contributors.   The  maintainers  can  be  contacted   at   debburn-de-
       vel@lists.alioth.debian.org,  or  see  the  cdrkit  project web site at
       http://www.cdrkit.org/.

       Eric Youngdale wrote the first versions (1993–1998) of  mkisofs.   Jörg
       Schilling  wrote  the SCSI transport library and its interface, and has
       maintained mkisofs since 1999.  James  Pearson  wrote  the  HFS  hybrid
       code, using libhfs by Robert Leslie.  Pearson, Schilling, Jungshik Shin
       and  Jaakko  Heinonen contributed to the character set conversion code.
       The cdrkit maintainers have maintained genisoimage since 2006.

       Copyright 1993-1998 by Yggdrasil Computing, Inc.
       Copyright 1996-1997 by Robert Leslie
       Copyright 1997-2001 by James Pearson
       Copyright 1999-2006 by Jörg Schilling
       Copyright 2007 by Jörg Schilling (originating few updates)
       Copyright 2002-2003 by Jungshik Shin
       Copyright 2003 by Jaakko Heinonen
       Copyright 2006 by the Cdrkit maintainers

       If you want to take part in the development  of  genisoimage,  you  may
       join the cdrkit developer mailing list by following the instructions on
       http://alioth.debian.org/mail/?group_id=31006.   The  email  address of
       the list is debburn-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org.  This  is  also  the
       address  for user support questions.  Note that cdrkit and cdrtools are
       not affiliated.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the  US  and  other
       countries.

                                  13 Dec 2006                   GENISOIMAGE(1)

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