James, I use kdar and what I do is I select DVD 4.7 and then I reduce the size to 4.0 and it works great. Then to restore you just load the last one and select and restore. No in relation with the topic of this thread, the maximal file size depends on three variables: 1. the operating system 2. the file system 3. the tar version. You can overcome limitation in the file system piping the output. For example you can tar to stout and redirect to a file and also the stderr. tar -cp -ppPv --posix -f - /home/me/ 2> MeLogFile > MeTarFile or :-) tar --create --preserve-permissions --preserve-order --absolute-names --verbose --verify --posix -f --to-stdout /home/me 2> MeTarFile.log MeTarFile.tar Restoring is the opposite xf - < MeTarFile Ciao -=terry(Denver)=- On Sun, 2007-02-11 at 08:53 -0500, James Knott wrote:
Bryan S. Tyson wrote:
On Saturday 10 February 2007 19:06, Kai Ponte wrote:
Um, for some reason, K3B can't make a DVD out of one 4.7GB file. I don't quite understand why - something to do with math, and I suck at math. In any case, I can put two 2 GB files on a DVD without a problem.
Files in an ISO filesystem can be no larger than 2 GB. If you want to burn a DVD with larger files, use UDF.
How would you select UDF in KDar?
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