Difference between revisions of "Rescuing optical media"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Megalanya0 (talk | contribs) m (MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !) |
Megalanya0 (talk | contribs) m (MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !) |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
The following is a table of some available disc dumping tools. | The following is a table of some available disc dumping tools. | ||
== '''MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !''' == | |||
== '''MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !''' == | |||
== '''MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !''' == | == '''MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !''' == |
Revision as of 15:31, 16 January 2017
Rescuing optical media can be difficult, due to the many incompatible formats and copy protections that were used. CDs are difficult to image at low-level because most drives do not give access to the raw data.
The following is a table of some available disc dumping tools.
MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !
MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !
MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !
MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !
MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !
Linux
- In most cases you can just create an ISO image with k3b.
- Using ddrescue (
ddrescue -b 2048 -n /dev/sr0 image.iso image.log
and so on) you can make an exact copy of any DVD/CD; intentionally corrupt sectors will just be replaced by zeros. [1] You then need to remove encryption (including region protection) with dvdbackup. [2] - Some people report good results with k9copy, not available in all repositories.
- See also this blog post which covers the preservation of CD-ROMs and DVDs using the readom tool, and audio CDs using cdparanoia.