I apologize if I'm missing the bus here, but for some reason I
recently came awake and noticed packet-writing for what it could be.
In reading the history and archives I can find, it seems most people
are concentrated on using RW media for temporary storage - "floppy
replacement" kind of stuff. My interest is in using it with R media
as a poor-man's WORM drive substitute for storing log files, but I'm
not finding much reference to anyone doing so other than claims that
it "can be done." I've tried a superset of all the instructions I can
find, but thus far have succeeded in nothing more than making a couple
of coasters - dvd+rw-format seems counter-intuitive on write-once
media.
This list seems to have really slowed down in the past couple of
years, but I hope there are still enough knowledgeable people watching
this list that can answer my [hopefully] elementary questions:
- It has been stated that CD-R (and presumably CD+R) media is not
supported for use; is that due to lack of software or that the
physical medium itself cannot be abused in that manner?
- Has anyone actually ever successfully used DVD-R (or DVD+R) media
to store 'immutable' data? If so, can you list the precise steps,
drive, and media (if relevant) you used to do so? The ability to
actually [physically] delete things from RW media defeats my intended
purpose.
- Does pktcdvd gracefully handle concurrent, incremental file writes
(read: log files), i.e., can blocks be interleaved or must an entire
file's worth of blocks be allocated at once? Note - this question is
due more to my lack of understanding of the UDF format than anything.
Whatever the answers, I'm certainly willing to learn & get my hands
dirty trying to get this working, I'd just like a few things cleared
up so I know what I'm getting into.
Thanks for your time!
RB
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: packet-writing+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: packet-writing+help(a)opensuse.org