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+.\" @(#)wodim.1 06/12/18 Copyright 2006 Cdrkit maintainers
+.\" derived from:
+.\" @(#)cdrecord.1 1.106 06/02/09 Copyright 1996 J. Schilling
+.\"
+.\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2
+.\" as published by the Free Software Foundation.
+.\"
+.\" The GNU General Public License's references to "object code"
+.\" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any
+.\" document formatting or typesetting system, including
+.\" intermediate and printed output.
+.\"
+.\" This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
+.\"
+.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
+.\" this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software
+.\" Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+.\"
+.if t .ds a \v'-0.55m'\h'0.00n'\z.\h'0.40n'\z.\v'0.55m'\h'-0.40n'a
+.if t .ds o \v'-0.55m'\h'0.00n'\z.\h'0.45n'\z.\v'0.55m'\h'-0.45n'o
+.if t .ds u \v'-0.55m'\h'0.00n'\z.\h'0.40n'\z.\v'0.55m'\h'-0.40n'u
+.if t .ds A \v'-0.77m'\h'0.25n'\z.\h'0.45n'\z.\v'0.77m'\h'-0.70n'A
+.if t .ds O \v'-0.77m'\h'0.25n'\z.\h'0.45n'\z.\v'0.77m'\h'-0.70n'O
+.if t .ds U \v'-0.77m'\h'0.30n'\z.\h'0.45n'\z.\v'0.77m'\h'-0.75n'U
+.if t .ds s \\(*b
+.if t .ds S SS
+.if n .ds a ae
+.if n .ds o oe
+.if n .ds u ue
+.if n .ds s sz
+.if t .ds m \\(*m
+.if n .ds m micro
+.TH wodim 1 "Version 2.0" "" ""
+.SH NAME
+wodim \- write data to optical disk media
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+.B wodim
+.RI [ options "] " track1 .\|.\|. trackn
+.SH NOTE
+There may be similarities and differences between this program and other disk recording application(s). See the
+.B CREDITS
+and
+.B AUTHORS
+sections below to learn about the origin of
+.B wodim.
+
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+.B wodim
+is used to record data or audio Compact Discs on an Orange Book
+CD-Recorder or to write DVD media on a DVD-Recorder.
+.PP
+The
+.I device
+is the device file or label offered by the operating system to access the
+recorder with SCSI GENERIC (sg) interface. Note that some operating systems may
+provide separate device nodes for block\-oriented and sg access. For example, on
+older
+.I Linux
+systems, the sg access was available through
+.IR /dev/sg...
+files while the block oriented access was done through associated (but not identical)
+.IR /dev/hd...
+and
+.IR /dev/sr...
+(or
+.IR /dev/scd...
+) files.
+.PP
+In any case, the user running
+.B wodim
+needs read and write access to the particular device file on a Linux system. It
+is recommended to be root or install the application as suid-root, because
+certain versions of Linux (kernel) limit the set of SCSI commands allowed for
+non-root users. Even if usage without root identity is possible in many cases,
+some device drivers still may fail, show unexplainable problems and generally
+the problems become harder to debug. The risk for buffer-underruns is also
+increased. See the
+.IR "PROCESS SCHEDULING PRIORITY"
+section below for more details.
+.PP
+There is an alternative way of specifying the device, using the traditional SCSI descriptions in form of
+.IR devicetype:bus/target/lun
+specification. However, the success of this method is not guaranteed since it
+requires an adaptation scheme for your architecture, and the numbers may vary
+depending on the hardware-internal numbering or on the order of hot-plug device
+detection. If your operating system does not provide a sufficient framework for
+keeping this numbers persistent, don't rely on them. See
+.B \-scanbus
+and
+.B \-\-devices
+options below for details.
+.PP
+There are emulated SCSI compatible device systems, using the SCSI protocols
+transported over various hardware/media types. The most known examples is ATAPI
+("IDE burners") or USB storage ("external USB case"). If the pseudo-SCSI b/t/l
+device address specification is used instead of the native one, you need to
+prepend the "devicetype:" description to the emulated "bus/target/lun" device
+address.
+.PP
+If a file /etc/wodim.conf exists, the parameter to the
+.B dev=
+option may also be a drive name label in that file (see FILES section).
+.PP
+As a special exception, the device specification can be
+.IR -1
+or just omitted, which invokes automatic guessing of an appropriate device for
+the selected operation. However, this guessing is not available everywhere and
+is not reliable; it is only available for the user's convenience in simple
+environments.
+.PP
+In
+.I Track At Once
+mode, each
+.I track
+corresponds to a single file that contains the prepared data for that track.
+If the argument is
+.RB ` \- ',
+standard input is used for that track.
+Only one track may be taken from
+.IR stdin .
+In the other write modes, the direct file to track relation may not be implemented.
+In
+.B \-clone
+mode, a single file contains all data for the whole disk.
+To allow DVD writing on platforms that do not implement large file support,
+.B wodim
+concatenates all file arguments to a single track when writing to DVD media.
+
+.SH "PROCESS SCHEDULING PRIORITY"
+.PP
+Wodim tries to get higher process priority using different methods. This is
+important because the burn process is usually a realtime task, no long delays
+should occur while transmitting fresh data to the recorder. This is especially
+important on systems with insufficient RAM where swapping can create delays of
+many seconds.
+.PP
+A possible workaround on underpowered systems is the use of the burnfree or
+similar feature, allowing the recorder to resume.
+.PP
+Root permissions are usually required to get higher process scheduling priority.
+.PP
+On
+.B SVr4
+compliant systems,
+.B wodim
+uses the real time class to get the highest scheduling priority that is
+possible (higher than all kernel processes).
+On systems with
+.B POSIX real time scheduling
+wodim uses real time scheduling too,
+but may not be able to gain a priority that is higher than all kernel processes.
+.PP
+In order to be able to use the SCSI transport subsystem of the OS, run at highest
+priority and lock itself into core
+.B
+wodim
+either needs to be run as root, needs to be installed suid root or
+must be called via
+.B RBACs
+pfexec mechanism.
+
+.SH "GENERAL OPTIONS
+.PP
+General options must be before any track file name or track option.
+.TP
+.B \-version
+Print version information and exit.
+.TP
+.B \-v
+Increment the level of general verbosity by one.
+This is used e.g. to display the progress of the writing process.
+.TP
+.B \-V
+Increment the verbose level in respect of SCSI command transport by one.
+This helps to debug problems
+during the writing process, that occur in the CD/DVD-Recorder.
+If you get incomprehensible error messages you should use this flag
+to get more detailed output.
+.B \-VV
+will show data buffer content in addition.
+Using
+.B \-V
+or
+.B \-VV
+slows down the process and may be the reason for a buffer underrun.
+.TP
+.BI debug= "#, " -d
+Set the misc debug value to # (with debug=#) or increment
+the misc debug level by one (with -d). If you specify
+.I -dd,
+this equals to
+.BI debug= 2.
+This may help to find problems while opening a driver for libusal
+as well as with sector sizes and sector types.
+Using
+.B \-debug
+slows down the process and may be the reason for a buffer underrun.
+.TP
+.BR kdebug= "#, " kd= #
+Tell the
+.BR usal -driver
+to modify the kernel debug value while SCSI commands are running.
+.TP
+.BR \-silent ", " \-s
+Do not print out a status report for failed SCSI commands.
+.TP
+.B \-force
+Force to continue on some errors. Be careful when using this option.
+.B wodim
+implements several checks that prevent you from doing unwanted things
+like damaging CD-RW media by improper drives. Many of the sanity checks are
+disabled when the
+.B \-force
+option is used.
+.sp
+This option also implements some tricks that will allow
+you to blank bad CD-RW disks.
+.TP
+.B \-immed
+Tell wodim to set the
+.B "SCSI IMMED"
+flag in certain commands
+(load/eject/blank/close_track/close_session).
+This can be useful
+on broken systems with ATAPI harddisk and CD/DVD writer on the same bus or
+with SCSI systems that don't use disconnect/reconnect.
+These systems will freeze while blanking or fixating a CD/DVD or while a DVD
+writer is filling up a session to the minimum amount (approx. 800 MB).
+Setting the
+.B \-immed
+flag will request the command to return immediately
+while the operation proceeds in background, making
+the bus usable for the other devices and avoiding the system freeze.
+This is an experimental feature which may work or not, depending on the model
+of the CD/DVD writer.
+A correct solution would be to set up a correct cabling but there seem to be
+notebooks around that have been set up the wrong way by the manufacturer.
+As it is impossible to fix this problem in notebooks, the
+.B \-immed
+option has been added.
+.sp
+A second experimental feature of the
+.B \-immed
+flag is to tell wodim to try to wait short times while writing to the
+media. This is expected to free the IDE bus if the CD/DVD writer and the
+data source are connected to the same IDE cable. In this case, the CD/DVD
+writer would otherwise usually block the IDE bus for nearly all the time
+making it impossible to fetch data from the source drive. See also
+.B minbuf=
+and
+.B \-v
+option.
+.sp
+Use both features at your own risk.
+If it turns out that it would make sense to have a separate option
+for the wait feature, write to the author and convince him.
+.TP
+.BI minbuf= value
+The #
+.B minbuf=
+option allows to define the minimum drive buffer fill ratio for the
+experimental ATAPI wait mode that is intended to free the IDE bus
+to allow hard disk and CD/DVD writer to be on the same IDE cable.
+As the wait mode currently only works when the verbose option
+.B \-v
+has been specified,
+.B wodim
+implies the verbose option in case the
+.B \-immed
+or
+.B minbuf=
+option have been specified.
+Valid values for
+.B minbuf=
+are between 25 and 95 for 25%.\|.\|.95% minimum drive buffer fill ratio.
+.TP
+.B \-dummy
+The CD/DVD-Recorder will go through all steps of the recording process,
+but the laser is turned off during this procedure.
+It is recommended to run several tests before actually writing to a
+Compact Disk or Digital Versatile Disk,
+if the timing and load response of the system is not known.
+.TP
+.B \-clone
+Tells
+.B wodim
+to handle images created by
+.IR "readom \-clone" .
+The
+.B \-clone
+may only be used in conjunction with with the
+.B \-raw96r
+or with the
+.B \-raw16
+option.
+Using
+.B \-clone
+together with
+.B \-raw96r
+is preferred as it allows to write all subchannel data.
+The option
+.B \-raw16
+should only be used with drives that do not support to write in
+.B \-raw96r
+mode.
+.TP
+.B \-dao
+.TP
+.B \-sao
+Set
+.B "SAO (Session At Once)
+mode which is usually called
+.BR "Disk At Once " mode.
+This currently only works with MMC drives that support
+.B "Session At Once
+mode.
+Note that wodim needs to know the size of each track in advance for this mode
+(see the
+.B "genisoimage \-print-size"
+option and the
+.I EXAMPLES
+section for more information).
+.TP
+.B \-tao
+Set
+.B "TAO (Track At Once) writing mode.
+This is the default write mode in previous
+.B wodim
+versions.
+With most drives, this write mode is required for multi session recording.
+.TP
+.B \-raw
+Set
+.B "RAW writing mode.
+Using this option defaults to
+.BR \-raw96r .
+Note that wodim needs to know the size of each track in advance for this mode
+(see the
+.B "genisoimage \-print-size"
+option and the
+.I EXAMPLES
+section for more information).
+.TP
+.B \-raw96r
+Select
+Set
+.B "RAW writing mode
+with 2352 byte sectors plus 96 bytes of raw P-W subchannel data resulting
+in a sector size of 2448 bytes.
+This is the preferred raw writing mode as it gives best control over the
+CD writing process.
+If you find any problems with the layout of a disk or with sub channel
+content (e.g. wrong times on the display when playing the CD) and your drive
+supports to write in
+.B \-raw96r
+or
+.B \-raw16
+mode, you should give it a try. There are several CD writers with bad firmware
+that result in broken disks when writing in TAO or SAO mode.
+Writing data disks in raw mode needs significantly more CPU time than other
+write modes. If your CPU is too slow, this may result in buffer underruns.
+Note that wodim needs to know the size of each track in advance for this mode
+(see the
+.B "genisoimage \-print-size"
+option and the
+.I EXAMPLES
+section for more information).
+.TP
+.B \-raw96p
+Select
+Set
+.B "RAW writing mode
+with 2352 byte sectors plus 96 bytes of packed P-W subchannel data resulting
+in a sector size of 2448 bytes.
+This is the less preferred raw writing mode as only a few recorders support
+it and some of these recorders have bugs in the firmware implementation.
+Don't use this mode if your recorder supports
+.B \-raw96r
+or
+.BR \-raw16 .
+Writing data disks in raw mode needs significantly more CPU time than other
+write modes. If your CPU is too slow, this may result in buffer underruns.
+Note that wodim needs to know the size of each track in advance for this mode
+(see the
+.B "genisoimage \-print-size"
+option and the
+.I EXAMPLES
+section for more information).
+.TP
+.B \-raw16
+Select
+Set
+.B "RAW writing mode
+with 2352 byte sectors plus 16 bytes of P-Q subchannel data resulting
+in a sector size of 2368 bytes.
+If a recorder does not support
+.BR \-raw96r ,
+this is the preferred raw writing mode.
+It does not allow to write
+.I CD-Text
+or
+.I CD+Graphics
+but it is the only raw writing mode in cheap CD writers.
+As these cheap writers in most cases do not support
+.B \-dao
+mode.
+Don't use this mode if your recorder supports
+.BR \-raw96r .
+Writing data disks in raw mode needs significantly more CPU time than other
+write modes. If your CPU is too slow, this may result in buffer underruns.
+Note that wodim needs to know the size of each track in advance for this mode
+(see the
+.B "genisoimage \-print-size"
+option and the
+.I EXAMPLES
+section for more information).
+.TP
+.B \-multi
+Allow multi session CDs to be made. This flag needs to be present
+on all sessions of a multi session disk,
+except you want to create a session that will be
+the last session on the media.
+The fixation will be done in a way that allows the CD/DVD-Recorder to
+append additional sessions later. This is done by generation a TOC
+with a link to the next program area. The so generated media is not
+100% compatible to manufactured CDs (except for CDplus).
+Use only for recording of multi session CDs.
+If this option is present, the default track type is
+.BR "CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1"
+and the sector size is 2048 bytes.
+The XA sector subheaders will be created by the drive.
+The
+.I Sony
+drives have no hardware support for
+.BR "CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1" .
+You have to specify the
+.B \-data
+option in order to create multi session disks on these drives.
+As long as wodim does not have a coder for converting data sectors
+to audio sectors, you need to force
+.B CD-ROM
+sectors by including the
+.B \-data
+option if you like to record a multisession disk in SAO mode.
+Not all drives allow multisession CDs in SAO mode.
+.TP
+.B \-msinfo
+Retrieve multi session info in a form suitable for
+.B genisoimage
+and print it to standard output. See
+.B msifile=
+option for another version.
+.sp
+This option makes only sense with a CD that contains at least
+one closed session and is appendable (not finally closed yet).
+Some drives create error messages if you try to get the multi
+session info for a disk that is not suitable for this operation.
+.TP
+.BR msifile= filename
+Like
+.B \-msinfo
+option but also stores the multi session info in a file.
+.TP
+.B \-toc
+Retrieve and print out the table of content or PMA of a CD.
+With this option,
+.B wodim
+will work with CD-R drives and with CD-ROM drives.
+.TP
+.B \-atip
+Retrieve and print out the ATIP (absolute Time in Pre-groove) info of a CD/DVD
+recordable or CD/DVD re-writable media.
+With this option,
+.B wodim
+will try to retrieve the ATIP info. If the actual drive does not support
+to read the ATIP info, it may be that only a reduced set of information
+records or even nothing is displayed. Only a limited number of MMC compliant
+drives support to read the ATIP info.
+.sp
+If
+.B wodim
+is able to retrieve the lead-in start time for the first session, it will try to
+decode and print the manufacturer info from the media.
+DVD media does not have ATIP information but there is equivalent prerecorded
+information that is read out and printed.
+.TP
+.B \-fix
+The disk will only be fixated (i.e. a TOC for a CD-Reader will be written).
+This may be used, if for some reason the disk has been written but not
+fixated. This option currently does not work with old TEAC drives (CD-R50S and
+CD-R55S).
+.TP
+.B \-nofix
+Do not fixate the disk after writing the tracks. This may be used
+to create an audio disk in steps. An un-fixated disk can usually not be used
+on a non CD-writer type drive but there are audio CD players that will
+be able to play such a disk.
+.TP
+.B \-waiti
+Wait for input to become available on standard input before trying to open
+the SCSI driver. This allows
+.B wodim
+to read its input from a pipe even
+when writing additional sessions to a multi session disk.
+When writing another session to a multi session disk,
+.B genisoimage
+needs to read the old session from the device before writing output.
+This cannot be done if
+.B wodim
+opens the SCSI driver at the same time.
+.TP
+.B \-load
+Load the media and exit. This only works with a tray loading mechanism
+but seems to be useful when using the Kodak disk transporter.
+.TP
+.B \-lock
+Load the media, lock the door and exit. This only works with a tray loading mechanism
+but seems to be useful when using the Kodak disk transporter.
+.TP
+.B \-eject
+Eject disk after doing the work.
+Some devices (e.g. Philips) need to eject the medium before creating a new
+disk. Doing a \-dummy test and immediately creating a real disk would not
+work on these devices.
+.TP
+.BR speed= #
+Set the speed factor of the writing process to #.
+# is an integer, representing a multiple of the audio speed.
+This is about 150\ KB/s for CD-ROM, about 172\ KB/s for CD-Audio and about 1385\ kB/s
+for DVD media.
+If no
+.I speed
+option is present,
+.B wodim
+will try to get a drive specific speed value from the file
+.B /etc/wodim.conf
+and if it cannot find one, it will try to get the speed value from the
+.B CDR_SPEED
+environment and later from the
+.B CDR_SPEED=
+entry in
+.BR /etc/wodim.conf .
+If no speed value could be found, wodim uses a drive specific default speed.
+The default for all new (MMC compliant) drives is to use the maximum supported by the drive.
+If you use
+.I "speed=0"
+with a MMC compliant drive,
+.B wodim
+will switch to the lowest possible speed for drive and medium.
+If you are using an old (non MMC) drive that has problems with
+.I "speed=2
+or
+.IR "speed=4" ,
+you should try
+.IR "speed=0" .
+.TP
+.BI blank= type
+Blank a CD-RW and exit or blank a CD-RW before writing. The blanking type may be one of:
+.RS
+.TP 12
+help
+Display a list of possible blanking types.
+.TP
+all
+Blank the entire disk. This may take a long time.
+.TP
+fast
+Minimally blank the disk. This results in erasing the PMA, the TOC and the pregap.
+.TP
+track
+Blank a track.
+.TP
+unreserve
+Unreserve a reserved track.
+.TP
+trtail
+Blank the tail of a track.
+.TP
+unclose
+Unclose last session.
+.TP
+session
+Blank the last session.
+.RE
+Not all drives support all blanking types. It may be necessary to use
+.B "blank=all
+if a drive reports a specified command as being invalid.
+If used together with the
+.B \-force
+flag, this option may be used to blank CD-RW disks that otherwise cannot be
+blanked. Note that you may need to specify
+.BI blank= all
+because some drives will not continue with certain types of bad CD-RW
+disks. Note also that
+.B wodim
+does its best if the
+.B \-force
+flag is used but it finally depends on the drive's firmware
+whether the blanking operation will succeed or not.
+.TP
+.B \-format
+Format a CD-RW/DVD-RW/DVD+RW disc.
+Formatting is currently only implemented for DVD+RW media.
+A 'maiden' DVD+RW media needs to
+be formatted before you may write to it.
+However, as
+.B wodim
+autodetects the need for formatting in this case and auto formats the medium
+before it starts writing, the
+.B \-format
+option is only needed if you like to forcibly reformat a DVD+RW medium.
+.TP
+.BR fs= #
+Set the FIFO (ring buffer) size to #.
+You may use the same syntax as in
+.BR dd (1),
+.BR sdd (1)
+or
+.BR star (1).
+The number representing the size is taken in bytes unless otherwise specified.
+If a number is followed directly by the letter `b', `k', `m', `s' or `f',
+the size is multiplied by 512, 1024, 1024*1024, 2048 or 2352.
+If the size consists of numbers separated by `x' or `*', multiplication of the
+two numbers is performed.
+Thus
+.I "fs=10x63k
+will specify a FIFO size of 630\ kBytes.
+.sp
+The size specified by the
+.I fs=
+argument includes the shared memory that is needed for administration. This
+is at least one page of memory.
+If no
+.IR fs =
+option is present,
+.B wodim
+will try to get the FIFO size value from the
+.B CDR_FIFOSIZE
+environment.
+The default FIFO size is currently 4 MB.
+.sp
+The FIFO is used to increase buffering for the real time writing process.
+It allows to run a pipe from
+.B genisoimage
+directly into
+.BR wodim .
+If the FIFO is active and a pipe from
+.B genisoimage
+into
+.B wodim
+is used to create a CD,
+.B wodim
+will abort prior to do any modifications on the disk if
+.B genisoimage
+dies before it starts writing.
+The recommended FIFO size is between 4 and 128\ MBytes.
+As a rule of thumb, the FIFO size should be at least equal to the size
+of the internal buffer of the CD/DVD-Recorder and no more than half of
+the physical amount of RAM available in the machine.
+If the FIFO size is big enough, the FIFO statistics will print a FIFO
+empty count of zero and the FIFO min fill is not below 20%.
+It is not wise to use too much space for the FIFO. If you need more
+than 8 MB to write a CD at a speed less than 20x from an image on a
+local file system on an idle machine, your machine is either underpowered,
+has hardware problems or is mis-configured.
+If you like to write DVDs or CDs at higher speed, it makes sense
+to use at least 16\ MB for the FIFO.
+.sp
+On old and small machines, you need to be more careful with the FIFO size.
+If your machine has less than 256\ MB of physical RAM, you should not
+set up a FIFO size that is more than 32\ MB.
+The sun4c architecture (e.g. a Sparcstation-2) has only MMU page table entries
+for 16\ MBytes per process. Using more than 14\ MBytes for the FIFO
+may cause the operating system in this case to spend much time to constantly
+reload the MMU tables. Newer machines from Sun do not have this MMU
+hardware problem. I have no information on PC-hardware reflecting
+this problem.
+.sp
+Old Linux systems for non x86 platforms have broken definitions for
+the shared memory size. You need to fix them and rebuild the kernel
+or manually tell
+.B wodim
+to use a smaller FIFO.
+.sp
+If you have buffer underruns or similar problems (like a constantly empty
+drive buffer) and observe a zero
+.IR "fifo empty count" ,
+you have hardware problems that prevents the data from flowing fast enough
+from the kernel memory to the drive. The FIFO size in this case is sufficient,
+but you should check for a working DMA setup.
+.TP
+.BR ts= #
+Set the maximum transfer size for a single SCSI command to #.
+The syntax for the
+.B ts=
+option is the same as for wodim fs=# or sdd bs=#.
+.sp
+If no
+.B ts=
+option has been specified,
+.B wodim
+defaults to a transfer size of 63\ kB. If libusal gets lower values from the
+operating system, the value is reduced to the maximum value that is possible
+with the current operating system.
+Sometimes, it may help to further reduce the transfer size or to enhance it,
+but note that it may take a long time to find a better value by experimenting
+with the
+.B ts=
+option.
+.TP
+.BI dev= target
+Sets the SCSI target for the CD/DVD-Recorder, see notes above.
+A typical device specification is
+.BI dev= 6,0
+\&.
+A filename or virtual device name can be passed instead of the symbolic SCSI
+numbers. The correct device/filename in this case can be found in the system
+specific manuals of the target operating system.
+On a
+.I FreeBSD
+system without
+.I CAM
+support, you need to use the control device (e.g.
+.IR /dev/rcd0.ctl ).
+A correct device specification in this case may be
+.BI dev= /dev/rcd0.ctl:@
+\&.
+.sp
+On Linux and Windows 2000/XP, drives are accessible with their device (or
+drive) names or with the symbolic SCSI numbers (not recommended, mapping is not
+stable and could be completely removed in the future).
+.sp
+If no
+.I dev
+option is present,
+.B wodim
+will try to get the device from the
+.B CDR_DEVICE
+environment.
+.sp
+If the argument to the
+.B dev=
+option does not contain the characters ',', '/', '@' or ':',
+it is interpreted as an label name that may be found in the file
+/etc/wodim.conf (see FILES section).
+.TP
+.BI gracetime= #
+Set the grace time before starting to write to
+.IR # " seconds.
+Values below 2 seconds are not recommended to give the kernel or volume
+management a chance to learn the new state.
+.TP
+.BI timeout= #
+Set the default SCSI command timeout value to
+.IR # " seconds.
+The default SCSI command timeout is the minimum timeout used for sending
+SCSI commands.
+If a SCSI command fails due to a timeout, you may try to raise the
+default SCSI command timeout above the timeout value of the failed command.
+If the command runs correctly with a raised command timeout,
+please report the better timeout value and the corresponding command to
+the author of the program.
+If no
+.I timeout
+option is present, a default timeout of 40 seconds is used.
+.TP
+.BI driver= name
+Allows the user to manually select a driver for the device.
+The reason for the existence of the
+.BI driver= name
+option is to allow users to use
+.B wodim
+with drives that are similar to supported drives but not known
+directly by
+.BR wodim .
+All drives made after 1997 should be MMC standard compliant and
+thus supported by one of the MMC drivers.
+It is most unlikely that
+.B wodim
+is unable to find the right driver automatically.
+Use this option with extreme care. If a wrong driver is used for a
+device, the possibility of creating corrupted disks is high.
+The minimum problem related to a wrong driver is that the
+.B speed=
+or
+.B \-dummy
+will not work.
+.br
+.RS
+.ne 8
+.PP
+The following driver names are supported:
+.TP
+.B help
+To get a list of possible drivers together with a short description.
+.TP
+.B mmc_cd
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc CD-ROM driver is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+finds a MMC compliant drive that does not identify itself to support writing at
+all, or that only identifies to support media or write modes not implemented in
+.BR wodim .
+.TP
+.B mmc_cd_dvd
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc CD/DVD driver is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+finds a MMC-2 or MMC-3 compliant drive that seems to support more than
+one medium type and the tray is open or no medium could be found to select the
+right driver.
+This driver tries to close the tray, checks the medium found in the tray and then
+branches to the driver that matches the current medium.
+.TP
+.B mmc_cdr
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc CD-R/CD-RW driver is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+find a MMC compliant drive that only supports to write CDs or a multi system
+drive that contains a CD as the current medium.
+.TP
+.B mmc_cdr_sony
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc CD-R/CD-RW driver is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+would otherwise select the
+.B mmc_cdr
+driver but the device seems to be made by Sony.
+The
+.B mmc_cdr_sony
+is definitely needed for the Sony CDU 928 as this drive does not completely
+implement the MMC standard and some of the MMC SCSI commands have to be
+replaced by Sony proprietary commands. It seems that all Sony drives (even
+newer ones) still implement the Sony proprietary SCSI commands so it has
+not yet become a problem to use this driver for all Sony drives. If you find
+a newer Sony drive that does not work with this driver, please report.
+.TP
+.B mmc_dvd
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc-2 DVD-R/DVD-RW driver is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+finds a MMC-2 or MMC-3 compliant drive that supports to write DVDs and
+an appropriate medium is loaded.
+There is no Track At Once mode for DVD writers.
+.TP
+.B mmc_dvdplus
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc-3 DVD+R/DVD+RW driver is auto-selected whenever
+one of the DVD+ media types that are incompatible to each other is found.
+It checks media and then
+branches to the driver that matches the current medium.
+.TP
+.B mmc_dvdplusr
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc-3 DVD+R driver is auto-selected whenever
+a DVD+R medium is found in an appropriate writer.
+Note that for unknown reason, the DVD-Plus alliance does not
+like that there is a simulation mode for DVD+R media.
+The author of
+.B wodim
+tries to convince manufacturers to implement a simulation mode for DVD+R
+and implement support.
+DVD+R only supports one write mode that is somewhere between Track At Once
+and Packet writing; this mode is selected in
+.B wodim
+via a the
+.BR \-dao / \-sao
+option.
+.TP
+.B mmc_dvdplusrw
+The generic SCSI-3/mmc-3 DVD+RW driver is auto-selected whenever
+a DVD+RW medium is found in an appropriate writer.
+As DVD+RW media needs to be formatted before its first use, wodim
+auto-detects this media state and performs a format before it starts
+to write.
+Note that for unknown reason, the DVD-Plus alliance does not
+like that there is a simulation mode nor a way to erase DVD+RW media.
+DVD+RW only supports one write mode that is close to
+Packet writing; this mode is selected in
+.B wodim
+via a the
+.BR \-dao / \-sao
+option.
+.TP
+.B cw_7501
+The driver for Matsushita/Panasonic CW-7501 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds this old pre MMC drive.
+.B wodim
+supports all write modes for this drive type.
+.TP
+.B kodak_pcd_600
+The driver for Kodak PCD-600 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds this old pre MMC drive which has been the first high speed (6x)
+CD writer for a long time. This drive behaves similar to the
+Philips CDD-521 drive.
+.TP
+.B philips_cdd521
+The driver for Philips CDD-521 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds a Philips CDD-521 drive (which is the first CD writer ever made)
+or one of the other drives that are known to behave similar to this
+drive.
+All Philips CDD-521 or similar drives (see other drivers in this list)
+do not support Session At Once recording.
+.TP
+.B philips_cdd521_old
+The driver for Philips old CDD-521 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds a Philips CDD-521 with very old firmware which has some known limitations.
+.TP
+.B philips_cdd522
+The driver for Philips CDD-522 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds a Philips CDD-522 which is the successor of the 521 or one of its variants
+with Kodak label.
+.B wodim
+does not support Session At Once recording with these drives.
+.TP
+.B philips_dumb
+The driver for Philips CDD-521 with pessimistic assumptions is never auto-selected.
+It may be used by hand with drives that behave similar to the Philips CDD-521.
+.TP
+.B pioneer_dws114x
+The driver for Pioneer DW-S114X is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds one of the old non MMC CD writers from Pioneer.
+.TP
+.B plasmon_rf4100
+The driver for Plasmon RF 4100 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds this specific variant of the Philips CDD-521.
+.TP
+.B ricoh_ro1060c
+The driver for Ricoh RO-1060C is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds this drive. There is no real support for this drive yet.
+.TP
+.B ricoh_ro1420c
+The driver for Ricoh RO-1420C is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds a drive with this specific variant of the Philips CDD-521 command set.
+.TP
+.B scsi2_cd
+The generic SCSI-2 CD-ROM driver is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+finds a pre MMC drive that does not support writing or a pre MMC writer that is
+not supported by
+.BR wodim .
+.TP
+.B sony_cdu924
+The driver for Sony CDU-924 / CDU-948 is auto-selected whenever
+.B wodim
+finds one of the old pre MMC CD writers from Sony.
+.TP
+.B teac_cdr50
+The driver for Teac CD-R50S, Teac CD-R55S, JVC XR-W2010, Pinnacle RCD-5020
+is auto-selected whenever one of the drives is found that is known to the
+non MMC command set used by TEAC and JVC.
+Note that many drives from JVC will not work because they do not correctly implement
+the documented command set and JVC has been unwilling to fix or document the
+bugs.
+There is no support for the Session At Once write mode yet.
+.TP
+.B tyuden_ew50
+The driver for Taiyo Yuden EW-50 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds a drive with this specific variant of the Philips CDD-521 command set.
+.TP
+.B yamaha_cdr100
+The driver for Yamaha CDR-100 / CDR-102 is auto-selected when
+.B wodim
+finds one of the old pre MMC CD writers from Yamaha.
+There is no support for the Session At Once write mode yet.
+.TP
+.B cdr_simul
+The simulation CD-R driver allows to run timing and speed tests
+with parameters that match the behavior of CD writers.
+.TP
+.B dvd_simul
+The simulation DVD-R driver allows to run timing and speed tests
+with parameters that match the behavior of DVD writers.
+.PP
+
+.sp
+There are two special driver entries in the list:
+.B cdr_simul
+and
+.BR dvd_simul .
+These driver entries are designed to make timing tests at any speed
+or timing tests for drives that do not support the
+.B \-dummy
+option.
+The simulation drivers implement a drive with a buffer size of 1\ MB
+that can be changed via the
+.B CDR_SIMUL_BUFSIZE
+environment variable.
+The simulation driver correctly simulates even a buffer underrun condition.
+If the
+.B \-dummy
+option is present, the simulation is not aborted in case of a buffer underrun.
+.RE
+.TP
+.BI driveropts= "option list"
+Set driver specific options. The options are specified a comma separated list.
+To get a list of valid options use
+.BI driveropts= help
+together with the
+.I \-checkdrive
+option.
+If you like to set driver options without running a typical
+.B wodim
+task, you need to use the
+.B \-setdropts
+option in addition, otherwise the command line parser in
+.B wodim
+will complain.
+Currently implemented driver options are:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B burnfree
+Turn the support for Buffer Underrun Free writing on.
+This only works for drives that support Buffer Underrun Free technology, which
+is available on most drives manufactured in this millennium.
+This may be called:
+.BR "Sanyo BURN-Proof" ,
+.BR "Ricoh Just-Link" ,
+.B "Yamaha Lossless-Link"
+or similar.
+.sp
+This option is deprecated and is mentioned here for documentation purposes
+only. The BURN-Free feature is enabled by default if the drive supports it.
+However, use of BURN-Free may cause decreased burning quality. Therefore it can
+be useful to disable it for certain purposes, eg. when creating a master copy
+for mass CD production.
+.TP
+.B noburnfree
+Turn the support for Buffer Underrun Free writing off.
+.TP
+.BI varirec= value
+Turn on the
+.B "Plextor VariRec"
+writing mode. The mandatory parameter
+.I value
+is the laser power offset and currently may be selected from
+-2, -1, 0, 1, 2.
+In addition, you need to set the write speed to 4 in order to allow
+.B "VariRec"
+to work.
+.TP
+.BI gigarec= value
+Manage the
+.B "Plextor GigaRec"
+writing mode. The mandatory parameter
+.I value
+is the disk capacity ratio compared to normal recording and currently may be selected from
+0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 1.0, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4.
+If values < 1.0 are used, then the effect is similar to the
+.B "Yamaha Audio Master Q. R."
+feature. If values > 1.0 are used, then the disk capacity is
+increased.
+.sp
+Not all drives support all
+.B GigaRec
+values.
+When a drive uses the
+.B GigaRec
+feature, the write speed is limited to 8x.
+.TP
+.B audiomaster
+Turn on the
+.B "Yamaha Audio Master Q. R."
+feature which usually should result in high quality CDs that
+have less reading problems in Hi-Fi players.
+As this is implemented as a variant of the
+Session at Once write mode, it will only work if you select
+SAO write mode and there is no need to turn it off.
+The
+.B "Audio Master"
+mode will work with a limited speed but
+may also be used with data CDs. In
+.B "Audio Master"
+mode, the pits on the CD will be written larger then usual so the capacity
+of the medium is reduced when turning this feature on.
+A 74 minute CD will only have a capacity of 63 minutes if
+.B "Audio Master"
+is active and the capacity of a 80 minute CD will be reduced to 68 minutes.
+.TP
+.B forcespeed
+Normally, modern drives know the highest possible speed for different
+media and may reduce the speed in order to grant best write quality.
+This technology may be called:
+.BR "Plextor PowerRec" ,
+.BR "Ricoh Just-Speed" ,
+.B "Yamaha Optimum Write Speed Control"
+or similar.
+Some drives (e.g. Plextor, Ricoh and Yamaha) allow to force the drive to
+use the selected speed even if the medium is so bad that the
+write quality would be poor. This option tells such a drive to
+force to use the selected speed regardless of the medium quality.
+.sp
+Use this option with extreme care and note that the drive should know better
+which medium will work at full speed.
+The default is to turn
+.B forcespeed
+off, regardless of the defaults of the drive.
+.TP
+.B noforcespeed
+Turn off the
+.B "force speed
+feature.
+.TP
+.B speedread
+Some ultra high speed drives such as 48x and faster drives from Plextor
+limit the read speed for unknown media to e.g. 40x in order to avoid
+damaged disks and drives.
+Using this option tells the drive to read any media as fast as possible.
+Be very careful as this may cause the media to break in the drive
+while reading, resulting in a damaged media and drive!
+.TP
+.B nospeedread
+Turn off unlimited read speed.
+.TP
+.B singlesession
+Turn the drive into a single session only drive.
+This allows to read defective or non-compliant (illegal) media with extremely
+non-standard additional (broken/illegal) TOC entries in the TOC from the second
+or higher session. Some of these disks become
+usable if only the information from the first session is used.
+You need to enable Single Session mode before you insert the defective disk!
+.TP
+.B nosinglesession
+Turn off single session mode. The drive will again behave as usual.
+.TP
+.B hidecdr
+Hide the fact that a medium might be a recordable medium.
+This allows to make CD-Rs look like CD-ROMs and applications believe
+that the media in the drive is not a CD-R.
+.TP
+.B nohidecdr
+Turn off hiding CD-R media.
+.TP
+.B tattooinfo
+Use this option together with
+.B \-checkdrive
+to retrieve the image size information for the
+.B "Yamaha DiskT@2
+feature. The images always have a line length of 3744 pixel.
+Line number 0 (radius 0) is mapped to the center of the disk.
+If you know the inner and outer radius you will be able to create a
+pre distorted image that later may appear undistorted on the disk.
+.TP
+.BI tattoofile= name
+Use this option together with
+.B \-checkdrive
+to write an image prepared for the
+.B "Yamaha DiskT@2
+feature to the medium.
+The file must be a file with raw image B&W data (one byte per pixel)
+in a size as retrieved by a previous call to
+.BI tattoofile= name
+\&.
+If the size of the image equals the maximum possible size
+(3744 x 320 pixel),
+.B wodim
+will use the first part of the file. This first part then will
+be written to the leftover space on the CD.
+.sp
+Note that the image must be mirrored to be readable from the pick up
+side of the CD.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B \-setdropts
+Set the driveropts specified by
+.BI driveropts= "option list" ,
+the
+.B speed
+of the drive and the
+.B dummy
+flag and exit.
+This allows wodim to set drive specific parameters that are not directly
+used by
+.B wodim
+like e.g.
+.BR "single session mode" ", " "hide cdr"
+and similar.
+It is needed in case that
+.BI driveropts= "option list"
+should be called without planning to run a typical
+.B wodim
+task.
+.TP
+.B \-checkdrive
+Checks if a driver for the current drive is present and exit.
+If the drive is a known drive,
+.B wodim
+uses exit code 0.
+.TP
+.B \-prcap
+Print the drive capabilities for SCSI-3/mmc compliant drives
+as obtained from mode page 0x2A. Values marked with
+.I kB
+use 1000 bytes as kilo-byte, values marked with
+.I KB
+use 1024 bytes as Kilo-byte.
+.TP
+.B \-inq
+Do an inquiry for the drive, print the inquiry info and exit.
+.TP
+.B \-scanbus
+Scan all SCSI devices on all SCSI busses and print the inquiry
+strings. This option may be used to find SCSI address of the
+CD/DVD-Recorder on a system. If some device types are invisible, try using
+.B dev=ATA:
+or similar option to give a hint about the device type you are looking for.
+The numbers printed out as labels are computed by:
+.B "bus * 100 + target.
+On platforms and device systems without persistent SCSI number management the
+results are not reliable. Use the .B \-\-devices option instead.
+.TP
+.B \-\-devices
+Look for useable devices using the system specific functions, eg. probing with
+usual device nodes in /dev/*, and display the detections using symbolic device
+names in OS specific syntax.
+.TP
+.B \-reset
+Try to reset the SCSI bus where the CD recorder is located. This works not
+on all operating systems.
+.TP
+.B \-abort
+Try to send an
+.B abort
+sequence to the drive.
+If you use
+.B wodim
+only, this should never be needed; but other software may leave a drive
+in an unusable condition.
+Calling
+.B "wodim \-reset
+may be needed if a previous write has been interrupted and the software did
+not tell the drive that it will not continue to write.
+.TP
+.B \-overburn
+Allow
+.B wodim
+to write more than the official size of a medium. This feature is usually
+called
+.I overburning
+and depends on the fact that most blank media may hold more space than the
+official size. As the official size of the lead-out area on the disk is
+90 seconds (6750 sectors) and a disk usually works if there are at least
+150 sectors of lead out, all media may be overburned by at least 88 seconds
+(6600 sectors).
+Most CD recorders only do overburning in
+.B SAO
+or
+.B RAW
+mode. Known exceptions are TEAC CD-R50S, TEAC CD-R55S and the Panasonic
+CW-7502.
+Some drives do not allow to overburn as much as you might like and limit
+the size of a CD to e.g. 76 minutes. This problem may be circumvented by
+writing the CD in RAW mode because this way the drive has no chance to find
+the size before starting to burn.
+There is no guarantee that your drive supports overburning at all.
+Make a test to check if your drive implements the feature.
+.TP
+.B \-ignsize
+Ignore the known size of the medium. This option should be used with extreme
+care, it exists only for debugging purposes don't use it for other reasons.
+It is not needed to write disks with more than the nominal capacity.
+This option implies
+.BR \-overburn .
+.TP
+.B \-useinfo
+Use
+.B "*.inf
+files to overwrite audio options.
+If this option is used, the pregap size information is read from
+the
+.B "*.inf
+file that is associated with the file that contains the audio
+data for a track.
+.sp
+If used together with the
+.B \-audio
+option,
+.B wodim
+may be used to write audio CDs from a pipe from
+.B icedax
+if you call
+.B wodim
+with the
+.B *.inf
+files as track parameter list instead of using audio files.
+The audio data is read from
+.B stdin
+in this case.
+See
+.B EXAMPLES
+section below.
+.B wodim
+first verifies that
+.B stdin
+is not connected to a terminal and runs some heuristic consistency checks
+on the
+.B *.inf
+files and then sets the track lengths from the information in
+the
+.B *.inf
+files.
+.sp
+If you like to write from
+.BR stdin ,
+make sure that wodim is called with a large enough FIFO size, reduce the write
+speed to a value below the read speed of the source drive and switch the burn-free
+option for the recording drive on.
+.TP
+.BR defpregap= #
+Set the default pre-gap size for all tracks except track number 1.
+This option currently only makes sense with the TEAC drive when
+creating track-at-once disks without the 2 second silence before each track.
+.br
+This option may go away in future.
+.TP
+.B \-packet
+Set
+.B "Packet writing mode.
+This is an experimental interface.
+.TP
+.BR pktsize= #
+Set the packet size to #, forces fixed packet mode.
+This is an experimental interface.
+.TP
+.B \-noclose
+Do not close the current track, useful only when in packet writing mode.
+This is an experimental interface.
+.TP
+.BI mcn= med_cat_nr
+Set the
+.B "Media Catalog Number
+of the CD to
+.IR med_cat_nr .
+.TP
+.B \-text
+Write CD-Text information
+based on information taken from a file that contains ascii information
+for the text strings.
+.B wodim
+supports CD-Text information based on the content of the
+.B *.inf
+files created by
+.B icedax
+and CD-Text information based on the content from a
+.B "CUE sheet
+file.
+If a
+.B "CUE sheet
+file contains both (binary CDTEXTFILE and text based SONGWRITER)
+entries, then the information based on the CDTEXTFILE entry will win.
+.sp
+You need to use the
+.B \-useinfo
+option in addition in order to tell
+.B wodim
+to read the
+.B "*.inf
+files or
+.BI cuefile= filename
+in order to tell
+.B wodim
+to read a
+.B CUE sheet
+file in addition.
+If you like to write your own CD-Text information,
+edit the
+.B *.inf
+files or the
+.B "CUE sheet
+file with a text editor and change the fields
+that are relevant for CD-Text.
+.TP
+.BI textfile= filename
+Write CD-Text based on information found in the binary file
+.IR filename .
+This file must contain information in a data format defined in the
+SCSI-3 MMC-2 standard and in the Red Book. The four byte size header that is
+defined in the SCSI standard is optional and allows to make the recognition of
+correct data less ambiguous.
+This is the best option to be used to copy CD-Text data from existing CDs
+that already carry CD-Text information. To get data in a format suitable
+for this option use
+.B wodim \-vv \-toc
+to extract the information from disk.
+If both,
+.BI textfile= filename
+and CD-Text information from
+.B *.inf
+or
+.B *.cue
+files are present,
+.BI textfile= filename
+will overwrite the other information.
+.TP
+.BI cuefile= filename
+Take all recording related information from a CDRWIN compliant
+.B "CUE sheet
+file.
+No track files are allowed when this option is present and the option
+.B \-dao
+is currently needed in addition.
+
+.SH "TRACK OPTIONS
+.PP
+Track options may be mixed with track file names.
+.TP
+.BI isrc= ISRC_number
+Set the
+.B "International Standard Recording Number
+for the next track to
+.IR ISRC_number .
+.TP
+.BI index= list
+Sets an index list for the next track.
+In index list is a comma separated list of numbers that are counting
+from index 1. The first entry in this list must contain a 0, the following
+numbers must be an ascending list of numbers (counting in 1/75 seconds) that
+represent the start of the indices. An index list in the form:
+0,7500,15000 sets index 1 to the start of the track, index 2 100 seconds from
+the start of the track and index 3 200 seconds from the start of the track.
+.TP
+.B \-audio
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
+.B "CD-DA
+(similar to Red Book) audio format.
+The file with data for this tracks should
+contain stereo, 16-bit digital audio with 44100 samples/s.
+The byte order should be the following: MSB left, LSB left,
+MSB right, LSB right, MSB left and so on. The track should be a multiple of
+2352 bytes. It is not possible to put the master image of an audio track
+on a raw disk because
+data will be read in multiple of 2352 bytes during the recording process.
+.sp
+If a filename ends in
+.I .au
+or
+.I .wav
+the file is considered to be a structured audio data file.
+.B wodim
+assumes that the file in this case is a Sun audio file or a
+Microsoft .WAV file
+and extracts the audio data from the files by skipping over the
+non-audio header information.
+In all other cases, wodim will only work correctly if the
+audio data stream does not have any header.
+Because many structured audio files do not have an integral
+number of blocks (1/75th second) in length,
+it is often necessary to specify the
+.B \-pad
+option as well.
+.B wodim
+recognizes that audio data in a .WAV file is stored in Intel
+(little-endian) byte order, and will automatically byte-swap the data
+if the CD recorder requires big-endian data.
+.B wodim
+will reject any audio file that does not match the Red Book requirements
+of 16-bit stereo samples in PCM coding at 44100 samples/second.
+.sp
+Using other structured audio data formats as input to
+.B wodim
+will usually work if the structure of the data is the
+structure described above (raw pcm data in big-endian byte order).
+However, if the data format includes a header,
+you will hear a click at the start of a track.
+.TP
+.I " "
+If neither
+.I \-data
+nor
+.I \-audio
+have been specified,
+.B wodim
+defaults to
+.I \-audio
+for all filenames that end in
+.I .au
+or
+.I .wav
+and to
+.I \-data
+for all other files.
+.TP
+.B \-swab
+If this flag is present, audio data is assumed to be in byte-swapped
+(little-endian) order. Some types of CD-Writers e.g. Yamaha, Sony and the
+new SCSI-3/mmc drives require audio data to be presented in
+little-endian order,
+.\" (which is the order in which it's actually recorded on the CD) ????
+while other writers require audio data to be
+presented in the big-endian (network) byte order normally used by the
+SCSI protocol.
+.B wodim
+knows if a CD-Recorder needs audio data in big- or little-endian order,
+and corrects the byte order of the data stream to match the needs
+of the recorder.
+You only need the
+.I \-swab
+flag if your data stream is in Intel (little-endian) byte order.
+.sp
+Note that the verbose output of
+.B wodim
+will show you if swapping is necessary to make the byte order of
+the input data fit the required byte order of the recorder.
+.B wodim
+will not show you if the
+.I \-swab
+flag was actually present for a track.
+.TP
+.B \-data
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
+.B "CD-ROM mode 1
+(Yellow Book) format. The data size is a multiple of 2048 bytes.
+The file with track data should contain an
+.BR ISO-9660 " or " "Rock Ridge
+filesystem image (see
+.B genisoimage
+for more details). If the track data is an
+.B ufs
+filesystem image, fragment size should be set to 2\ KB or more to allow
+CD-drives with 2\ KB sector size to be used for reading.
+.TP
+.I " "
+.I \-data
+is the default, if no other flag is present and the file does not
+appear to be of one of the well known audio file types.
+.TP
+.I " "
+If neither
+.I \-data
+nor
+.I \-audio
+have been specified,
+.B wodim
+defaults to
+.I \-audio
+for all filenames that end in
+.I .au
+or
+.I .wav
+and to
+.I \-data
+for all other files.
+.TP
+.B \-mode2
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
+.B "CD-ROM mode 2
+format. The data size is a multiple of 2336 bytes.
+.TP
+.B \-xa
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
+.B "CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1
+format. The data size is a multiple of 2048 bytes.
+The XA sector sub headers will be created by the drive.
+With this option, the write mode is the same as with the
+.B \-multi
+option.
+.TP
+.B \-xa1
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
+.B "CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1
+format. The data size is a multiple of 2056 bytes.
+The XA sector sub headers are part of the user data and have to be
+supplied by the application that prepares the data to be written.
+.TP
+.B \-xa2
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in
+.B "CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 2
+format. The data is a multiple of 2324 bytes.
+The XA sector sub headers will be created by the drive.
+.TP
+.B \-xamix
+If this flag is present, all subsequent tracks are written in a way
+that allows a mix of
+.B "CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1/2
+format. The data size is a multiple of 2332 bytes.
+The XA sector sub headers are part of the user data and have to be
+supplied by the application that prepares the data to be written.
+The CRC and the P/Q parity ECC/EDC information (depending on the sector
+type) have to be supplied by the application that prepares the data to be written.
+.TP
+.B \-cdi
+If this flag is present, the TOC type for the disk is set to
+.BR CDI .
+This only makes sense with XA disks.
+.TP
+.B \-isosize
+Use the
+.B "ISO-9660
+file system size as the size of the next track.
+This option is needed if you want
+.B wodim
+to directly read the image of a track from
+a raw disk partition or from a
+.I TAO
+master CD. In the first case the option
+.B \-isosize
+is needed to limit the size of the CD to the size of the ISO filesystem.
+In the second case the option
+.B \-isosize
+is needed to prevent
+.B wodim
+from reading the two run out blocks that are appended by each CD-recorder
+in track at once mode. These two run out blocks cannot be read and would
+cause a buffer underrun that would cause a defective copy.
+Do not use this option on files created by
+.B genisoimage
+and in case
+.B wodim
+reads the track data from
+.IR stdin .
+In the first case, you would prevent
+.B wodim
+from writing the amount of padding that has been appended by
+.B genisoimage
+and in the latter case, it will not work because
+.I stdin
+is not seekable.
+.sp
+If
+.B \-isosize
+is used for a track,
+.B wodim
+will automatically add padding for this track as if the
+.B \-pad
+option has been used but the amount of padding may be less than the padding
+written by
+.BR genisoimage .
+Note that if you use
+.B \-isosize
+on a track that contains Sparc boot information, the boot information will
+be lost.
+.sp
+Note also that
+this option cannot be used to determine the size of a file system
+if the multi session option is present.
+.TP
+.B \-pad
+If the track is a data track, 15 sectors of zeroed data
+will be added to the end of this and each subsequent data track.
+In this case, the
+.B \-pad
+option is superseded by the
+.B padsize=
+option. It will remain however as a shorthand for
+.BI padsize= 15s.
+If the
+.I \-pad
+option refers to an audio track,
+.B wodim
+will pad the audio data to be a multiple of 2352 bytes.
+The audio data padding is done with binary zeroes which is
+equal to absolute silence.
+.sp
+.B \-pad
+remains valid until disabled by
+.BR \-nopad .
+.TP
+.BR padsize= #
+Set the amount of data to be appended as padding to the next track to #.
+Opposed to the behavior of the
+.B \-pad
+option, the value for
+.I padsize=
+is reset to zero for each new track.
+wodim assumes a sector size of 2048 bytes for the
+.I padsize=
+option, independent from the real
+sector size and independent from the write mode.
+The megabytes mentioned in the verbose mode output however are counting
+the output sector size which is e.g. 2448 bytes when writing in RAW/RAW96
+mode.
+See
+.BR fs =
+option for possible arguments.
+To pad the equivalent of 20 minutes on a CD, you may write
+.BR padsize= 20x60x75s.
+Use this option if your CD-drive is not able to read the last sectors of
+a track or if you want to be able to read the CD
+on a
+.B Linux
+system with the ISO-9660 filesystem read ahead bug.
+If an empty file is used for track data,
+this option may be used to create a disk that is entirely made of padding.
+This may e.g. be used to find out how much overburning is possible with a
+specific media.
+.TP
+.B \-nopad
+Do not pad the following tracks \- the default.
+.TP
+.B \-shorttrack
+Allow all subsequent tracks to violate the Red Book track length standard
+which requires a minimum track length of 4 seconds.
+This option is only useful when used in SAO or RAW mode.
+Not all drives support this feature. The drive must accept the
+resulting CUE sheet or support RAW writing.
+.TP
+.B \-noshorttrack
+Re-enforce the Red Book track length standard. Tracks must be
+at least 4 seconds.
+.TP
+.BR pregap= #
+Set the pre-gap size for the next track.
+This option currently only makes sense with the TEAC drive when
+creating track-at-once disks without the 2 second silence before each track.
+.br
+This option may go away in future.
+.TP
+.B \-preemp
+If this flag is present, all TOC entries for subsequent audio tracks
+will indicate that the audio data has been sampled with 50/15 \*msec
+pre-emphasis.
+The data, however is not modified during the process of transferring from file
+to disk.
+This option has no effect on data tracks.
+.TP
+.B \-nopreemp
+If this flag is present, all TOC entries for subsequent audio tracks
+will indicate that the audio data has been mastered with linear data \-
+this is the default.
+.TP
+.B \-copy
+If this flag is present, all TOC entries for subsequent audio tracks
+of the resulting CD
+will indicate that the audio data has permission to be copied without limit.
+This option has no effect on data tracks.
+.TP
+.B \-nocopy
+If this flag is present, all TOC entries for subsequent audio tracks
+of the resulting CD
+will indicate that the audio data has permission to be copied only once for
+personal use \-
+this is the default.
+.TP
+.B \-scms
+If this flag is present, all TOC entries for subsequent audio tracks
+of the resulting CD
+will indicate that the audio data has no permission to be copied anymore.
+.TP
+.BR tsize= #
+If the master image for the next track has been stored on a raw disk,
+use this option
+to specify the valid amount of data on this disk. If the image of the next
+track is stored in a regular file, the size of that file is taken to determine
+the length of this track.
+If the track contains an ISO 9660 filesystem image use the
+.I \-isosize
+option to determine the length of that filesystem image.
+.br
+In Disk at Once mode and with some drives that use
+the TEAC programming interface, even in Track at Once mode,
+.B wodim
+needs to know the size of each track before starting to write the disk.
+wodim now checks this and aborts before starting to write.
+If this happens you will need to run
+.B "genisoimage -print-size
+before and use the output (with `s' appended) as an argument to the
+.BR tsize =
+option of
+.B wodim
+(e.g. tsize=250000s).
+.br
+See
+.BR fs =
+option for possible arguments.
+
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.PP
+For all examples below, it will be assumed that the CD/DVD-Recorder is
+connected to the primary SCSI bus of the machine. The SCSI target id is
+set to 2.
+.PP
+To record a pure CD-ROM at double speed, using data from the file
+.IR cdimage.raw :
+.PP
+ wodim \-v speed=2 dev=2,0 cdimage.raw
+.PP
+To create an image for a ISO 9660 filesystem with Rock Ridge extensions:
+.PP
+ genisoimage \-R \-o cdimage.raw /home/joerg/master/tree
+.PP
+To check the resulting file before writing to CD on Solaris:
+.PP
+ mount \-r \-F fbk \-o type=hsfs /dev/fbk0:cdimage.raw /mnt
+.PP
+On Linux:
+.PP
+ mount cdimage.raw \-r \-t iso9660 \-o loop /mnt
+.PP
+Go on with:
+.br
+ ls \-lR /mnt
+.br
+ umount /mnt
+.PP
+If the overall speed of the system is sufficient and the structure of
+the filesystem is not too complex, wodim will run without creating an
+image of the ISO 9660 filesystem. Simply run the pipeline:
+.PP
+ genisoimage \-R /master/tree | wodim \-v fs=6m speed=2 dev=2,0 -
+.PP
+The recommended minimum FIFO size for running this pipeline is 4 MBytes.
+As the default FIFO size is 4 MB, the
+.B fs=
+option needs only be present if you want to use a different FIFO size.
+If your system is loaded, you should run genisoimage in the real time class too.
+To raise the priority of
+.B genisoimage
+replace the command
+.PP
+ genisoimage \-R /master/tree
+.br
+by
+.br
+ priocntl \-e \-c RT \-p 59 genisoimage \-R /master/tree
+.sp
+on Solaris and by
+.sp
+ nice --18 genisoimage \-R /master/tree
+.sp
+on systems that don't have
+.B "UNIX International
+compliant real-time scheduling.
+.PP
+wodim runs at priority 59 on Solaris, you should run genisoimage
+at no more than priority 58. On other systems, you should run genisoimage
+at no less than nice --18.
+.PP
+Creating a CD-ROM without file system image on disk has been tested
+on a Sparcstation-2 with a Yamaha CDR-400. It did work up to quad speed
+when the machine was not loaded.
+A faster machine may be able to handle quad speed also in the loaded case.
+.PP
+To record a pure CD-DA (audio) at single speed, with each track contained
+in a file named
+.IR track01.cdaudio ,
+.IR track02.cdaudio ,
+etc:
+.PP
+ wodim \-v speed=1 dev=/dev/cdrw -audio track*.cdaudio
+.PP
+To check if it will be ok to use double speed for the example above.
+Use the dummy write option:
+.PP
+ wodim \-v \-dummy speed=2 dev=/dev/cdrw \-audio track*.cdaudio
+.PP
+To record a mixed-mode CD with an ISO 9660 filesystem from
+.I cdimage.raw
+on the first track, the other tracks being audio tracks from the files
+.IR track01.cdaudio ,
+.IR track02.cdaudio ,
+etc:
+.PP
+ wodim \-v dev=2,0 cdimage.raw \-audio track*.cdaudio
+.PP
+To handle drives that need to know the size of a track before starting to write,
+first run
+.PP
+ genisoimage -R -q -print-size /master/tree
+.PP
+and then run
+.PP
+ genisoimage -R /master/tree | wodim speed=2 dev=2,0 tsize=XXXs -
+.PP
+where
+.I XXX
+is replaced by the output of the previous run of genisoimage.
+.PP
+To copy an audio CD in the most accurate way, first run
+.PP
+ icedax dev=/dev/cdrom \-vall cddb=0 -B \-Owav
+.PP
+and then run
+.PP
+ wodim dev=/dev/cdrw \-v \-dao \-useinfo \-text *.wav
+.PP
+This will try to copy track indices and to read CD-Text information from disk.
+If there is no CD-Text information,
+.B icedax
+will try to get the information from freedb.org instead.
+.PP
+To copy an audio CD from a pipe (without intermediate files), first run
+.PP
+ icedax dev=1,0 \-vall cddb=0 \-info-only
+.PP
+and then run
+.PP
+ icedax dev=1,0 \-no-infofile \-B \-Oraw \- | \\
+.br
+ wodim dev=2,0 \-v \-dao \-audio \-useinfo \-text *.inf
+.PP
+This will get all information (including track size info) from the
+.B *.inf
+files and then read the audio data from stdin.
+.sp
+If you like to write from
+.BR stdin ,
+make sure that wodim is called with a large enough FIFO size (e.g.
+.BR fs=128m ),
+reduce the write speed to a value below the read speed of the source drive
+(e.g.
+.BR speed=12 ),
+and get a CD/DVD drive with BURN-Free feature if it is not available yet.
+.PP
+To set drive options without writing a CD (e.g. to switch a drive
+to single session mode), run
+.PP
+ wodim dev=1,0 \-setdropts driveropts=singlesession
+.PP
+If you like to do this when no CD is in the drive, call
+.PP
+ wodim dev=1,0 \-force \-setdropts driveropts=singlesession
+.PP
+To copy a CD in clone mode, first read the master CD using:
+.PP
+ readom dev=b,t,l \-clone f=somefile
+.PP
+or (in case the CD contains many sectors that are unreadable by intention)
+by calling:
+.PP
+ readom dev=1,0 -clone -nocorr f=somefile
+.PP
+will create the files
+.I somefile
+and
+.IR somefile.toc .
+Then write the CD using:
+.PP
+ wodim dev=1,0 -raw96r -clone -v somefile
+
+
+.SH ENVIRONMENT
+.TP
+.B CDR_DEVICE
+This may either hold a device identifier that is suitable to the open
+call of the SCSI transport library or a label in the file /etc/wodim.conf.
+.TP
+.B CDR_SPEED
+Sets the default speed value for writing (see also
+.B speed=
+option).
+.TP
+.B CDR_FIFOSIZE
+Sets the default size of the FIFO (see also
+.BR fs= #
+option).
+.TP
+.B CDR_FORCERAWSPEED
+If this environment variable is set,
+.B wodim
+will allow you to write at the full RAW encoding speed a single CPU supports.
+This will create high potential of buffer underruns. Use with care.
+.TP
+.B CDR_FORCESPEED
+If this environment variable is set,
+.B wodim
+will allow you to write at the full DMA speed the system supports.
+There is no DMA reserve for reading the data that is to be written from disk.
+This will create high potential of buffer underruns. Use with care.
+.TP
+.B RSH
+If the
+.B RSH
+environment is present, the remote connection will not be created via
+.BR rcmd (3)
+but by calling the program pointed to by
+.BR RSH .
+Use e.g.
+.BR RSH= /usr/bin/ssh
+to create a secure shell connection.
+.sp
+Note that this forces
+.B wodim
+to create a pipe to the
+.B rsh(1)
+program and disallows
+.B wodim
+to directly access the network socket to the remote server.
+This makes it impossible to set up performance parameters and slows down
+the connection compared to a
+.B root
+initiated
+.B rcmd(3)
+connection.
+.TP
+.B RSCSI
+If the
+.B RSCSI
+environment is present, the remote SCSI server will not be the program
+.B /opt/schily/sbin/rscsi
+but the program pointed to by
+.BR RSCSI .
+Note that the remote SCSI server program name will be ignored if you log in
+using an account that has been created with a remote SCSI server program as
+login shell.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+/etc/wodim.conf
+Default values can be set for the following options in /etc/wodim.conf.
+For example:
+.SM CDR_FIFOSIZE=8m
+or
+.SM CDR_SPEED=2
+.RS
+.TP
+CDR_DEVICE
+This may either hold a device identifier that is suitable to the open
+call of the SCSI transport library or a label in the file /etc/wodim.conf
+that allows to identify a specific drive on the system.
+.TP
+CDR_SPEED
+Sets the default speed value for writing (see also
+.B speed=
+option).
+.TP
+CDR_FIFOSIZE
+Sets the default size of the FIFO (see also
+.BR fs= #
+option).
+.TP
+CDR_MAXFIFOSIZE
+Sets the maximum size of the FIFO (see also
+.BR fs= #
+option).
+.TP
+Any other keyword (label) is an identifier (symbolic name) for a specific drive
+on the system. Such an identifier may not contain the characters ',', '/', '@'
+or ':'.
+.sp
+Each line that follows a label contains a whitespace separated list of items.
+Currently, four items are recognized: the drive's target specification, the
+default speed that should be used for this drive, the default FIFO size
+that should be used for this drive and drive specific options. The values for
+.I speed
+and
+.I fifosize
+may be set to -1 to tell wodim to use the global defaults.
+.I target
+can be -1 to use the auto-guessing of the drive (see above).
+
+The value for driveropts may be omitted or set to "" if no driveropts are used.
+A typical line may look this way:
+.sp
+plex760= 0,5,0 12 50m varirec=1
+.sp
+pioneer= /dev/hdd -1 -1
+.sp
+This tells
+.B wodim
+that a drive named
+.I plex760
+is at scsibus 0, target 5, lun 0 and should be used with speed 12 and
+a FIFO size of 50 MB. It also uses some device specific parameter.
+A second drive may is accessible via the device file /dev/hdd and uses the
+default speed and the default FIFO size.
+.RE
+
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR icedax (1),
+.BR readom (1),
+.BR genisoimage (1),
+.BR ssh (1).
+
+.SH NOTES
+.PP
+On Solaris you need to stop the volume management if you like to use the USCSI
+fallback SCSI transport code. Even things like
+.B "wodim -scanbus
+will not work if the volume management is running.
+.PP
+Disks made in
+.B "Track At Once
+mode are not suitable as a master for direct mass production by CD manufacturers.
+You will need the
+.B "disk at once
+option to record such disks.
+Nevertheless the disks made in
+.B "Track At Once
+will normally be read in all CD players. Some old
+audio CD players however may produce a two second click between two audio tracks.
+.PP
+The minimal size of a track is 4 seconds or 300 sectors. If you write
+smaller tracks, the CD-Recorder will add dummy blocks. This is not an
+error, even though the SCSI-error message looks this way.
+.PP
+The Yamaha CDR-400 and all new SCSI-3/mmc conforming drives are supported
+in single and multi-session.
+.PP
+You should run several tests in all supported speeds of your drive with the
+.B \-dummy
+option turned on if you are using
+.B wodim
+on an unknown system. Writing a CD is a real-time process.
+.B NFS, CIFS
+and other network file systems
+won't always deliver constantly the needed data rates.
+If you want to use
+.B wodim
+with CD-images that are located on a
+.B NFS
+mounted filesystem, be sure that the FIFO size is big enough.
+If you want to make sure that buffer underruns are not
+caused by your source disk, you may use the command
+.PP
+.B " wodim -dummy dev=2,0 padsize=600m /dev/null
+.PP
+to create a disk that is entirely made of dummy data.
+.PP
+There are also cases where you either need to be root or install
+.B wodim
+executable with suid-root permissions. First, if you are using a device
+manufactured before 1999 which requires a non-MMC driver, you should run
+.B wodim
+in dummy mode before writing data. If you find a problem doing this, please
+report it to the
+.B cdrkit
+maintainers (see below).
+.PP
+Second, certain functionality may be unusable because of Linux's SCSI
+command filtering. When using
+.B wodim
+for anything except of pure data writing, you should also test the process in
+dummy mode and report trouble to the contact address below.
+.PP
+If you still want to run
+.B wodim
+with root permissions, you can set the permissions of the executable to
+suid-root. See the additional notes of your system/program distribution or
+README.suidroot which is part of the cdrkit source.
+.PP
+You should not connect old drives that do not support
+disconnect/reconnect to either the SCSI bus that is connected to the
+CD-Recorder or the source disk.
+.PP
+A Compact Disc can have no more than 99 tracks.
+.PP
+When creating a disc with both audio and data tracks,
+the data should be on track 1 otherwise you should create
+a CDplus disk which is a multi session disk with the first session
+containing the audio tracks and the following session containing the data track.
+.PP
+Many operating systems are not able to read more than a single data track, or
+need special software to do so.
+.PP
+If you have more information or SCSI command manuals for currently
+unsupported CD/DVD/BR/HD-DVD-Recorders, please contact the
+.B cdrkit
+maintainers (see below).
+.PP
+Many CD recorders have bugs and often require a firmware update to work
+correctly. If you experience problems which cannot be solved or explained by the
+notes above, please look for instructions on the homepage of the particular
+manufacturer.
+.PP
+Some bugs will force you to power cycle the device or to reboot the machine.
+.PP
+The FIFO percent output is computed just after a block of data has been written
+to the CD/DVD-Recorder. For this reason, there will never be 100% FIFO fill ratio
+while the FIFO is in streaming mode.
+
+.SH DIAGNOSTICS
+.PP
+You have 4 seconds to abort
+.B wodim
+start after you see the message:
+.PP
+Starting to write CD at speed %d in %s mode for %s session.
+In most shells you can do that by pressing Ctrl-C.
+.PP
+A typical error message for a SCSI command looks like:
+.sp
+.RS
+.nf
+wodim: I/O error. test unit ready: scsi sendcmd: no error
+CDB: 00 20 00 00 00 00
+status: 0x2 (CHECK CONDITION)
+Sense Bytes: 70 00 05 00 00 00 00 0A 00 00 00 00 25 00 00 00 00 00
+Sense Key: 0x5 Illegal Request, Segment 0
+Sense Code: 0x25 Qual 0x00 (logical unit not supported) Fru 0x0
+Sense flags: Blk 0 (not valid)
+cmd finished after 0.002s timeout 40s
+.fi
+.RE
+.sp
+The first line gives information about the transport of the command.
+The text after the first colon gives the error text for the system call
+from the view of the kernel. It usually is:
+.B "I/O error
+unless other problems happen. The next words contain a short description for
+the SCSI command that fails. The rest of the line tells you if there were
+any problems for the transport of the command over the SCSI bus.
+.B "fatal error
+means that it was not possible to transport the command (i.e. no device present
+at the requested SCSI address).
+.PP
+The second line prints the SCSI command descriptor block for the failed command.
+.PP
+The third line gives information on the SCSI status code returned by the
+command, if the transport of the command succeeds.
+This is error information from the SCSI device.
+.PP
+The fourth line is a hex dump of the auto request sense information for the
+command.
+.PP
+The fifth line is the error text for the sense key if available, followed
+by the segment number that is only valid if the command was a
+.I copy
+command. If the error message is not directly related to the current command,
+the text
+.I deferred error
+is appended.
+.PP
+The sixth line is the error text for the sense code and the sense qualifier if available.
+If the type of the device is known, the sense data is decoded from tables
+in
+.IR scsierrs.c " .
+The text is followed by the error value for a field replaceable unit.
+.PP
+The seventh line prints the block number that is related to the failed command
+and text for several error flags. The block number may not be valid.
+.PP
+The eight line reports the timeout set up for this command and the time
+that the command really needed to complete.
+.PP
+The following message is not an error:
+.sp
+.RS
+.nf
+Track 01: Total bytes read/written: 2048/2048 (1 sectors).
+wodim: I/O error. flush cache: scsi sendcmd: no error
+CDB: 35 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
+status: 0x2 (CHECK CONDITION)
+Sense Bytes: F0 00 05 80 00 00 27 0A 00 00 00 00 B5 00 00 00 00 00
+Sense Key: 0x5 Illegal Request, Segment 0
+Sense Code: 0xB5 Qual 0x00 (dummy data blocks added) Fru 0x0
+Sense flags: Blk -2147483609 (valid)
+cmd finished after 0.002s timeout 40s
+.fi
+.RE
+.sp
+It simply notifies, that a track that is smaller than the minimum size has been
+expanded to 300 sectors.
+.SH BUGS
+.PP
+.B netscsid
+does not work properly and is generally unmaintained. It is probably not
+compatible with rscsi from
+.BR cdrtools
+either. Good bugfixes are welcome, talk to Cdrkit maintainers.
+.PP
+.B cuefile support is very limited, only one file is allowed. For volunteers,
+see TODO file in the source.
+.PP
+.B Specifying an audio file multiple times causes corruption of the second
+track (effectively no data plus minimum padding).
+.PP
+Some of the bugs may be fixed in Joerg Schilling's cdrtools. See there for
+details, URL attached below.
+
+.SH CREDITS
+.PP
+.TP 15
+Joerg Schilling (schilling@fokus.fhg.de)
+.br
+For writing cdrecord and libscg which represent the most parts of wodim's code.
+.PP
+.TP 15
+Bill Swartz (Bill_Swartz@twolf.com)
+.br
+For helping me with the TEAC driver support
+.TP
+Aaron Newsome (aaron.d.newsome@wdc.com)
+.br
+For letting me develop Sony support on his drive
+.TP
+Eric Youngdale (eric@andante.jic.com)
+.br
+For supplying mkisofs
+.TP
+Gadi Oxman (gadio@netvision.net.il)
+.br
+For tips on the ATAPI standard
+.TP
+Finn Arne Gangstad (finnag@guardian.no)
+.br
+For the first FIFO implementation.
+.TP
+Dave Platt (dplatt@feghoot.ml.org)
+.br
+For creating the experimental packet writing support,
+the first implementation of CD-RW blanking support,
+the first .wav file decoder
+and many nice discussions on cdrecord.
+.TP
+Chris P. Ross (cross@eng.us.uu.net)
+.br
+For the first implementation of a BSDI SCSI transport.
+.TP
+Grant R. Guenther (grant@torque.net)
+.br
+For creating the first parallel port transport implementation
+for Linux.
+.TP
+Kenneth D. Merry (ken@kdm.org)
+.br
+for providing the CAM port for FreeBSD together with Michael Smith (msmith@freebsd.org)
+.TP
+Heiko Ei\*sfeldt (heiko@hexco.de)
+for making libedc_ecc available (needed to write RAW data sectors).
+
+.SH "MAILING LISTS
+If you want to actively take part on the development of wodim,
+you may join the developer mailing list via this URL:
+.sp
+.B
+https://alioth.debian.org/mail/?group_id=31006
+.PP
+The mail address of the list is:
+.B
+debburn-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org
+
+.SH AUTHORS
+.B wodim
+is currently maintained as part of the cdrkit project by its developers. Most of the code and this manual page was originally written by:
+.PP
+.nf
+Joerg Schilling
+Seestr. 110
+D-13353 Berlin
+Germany
+.fi
+.PP
+This application is derived from "cdrecord" as included
+in the cdrtools package [1] created by Joerg
+Schilling, who deserves most of the credit for its success. However, he is not
+involved into the development of this spinoff and therefore he shall not be
+held responsible for any problems caused by it. Do not refer to this application
+as "cdrecord", do not try to get support for wodim by contacting the original
+authors.
+.PP
+Additional information can be found on:
+.br
+https://alioth.debian.org/projects/debburn/
+.PP
+If you have support questions, send them to
+.PP
+.B
+debburn-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org
+.br
+.PP
+If you have definitely found a bug, send a mail to this list or to
+.PP
+.B
+submit@bugs.debian.org
+.br
+.PP
+writing at least a short description into the Subject and "Package: cdrkit" in the first line of the mail body.
+.SH SOURCES
+.PP
+.br
+[1] Cdrtools 2.01.01a08 from May 2006, http://cdrecord.berlios.de
+