Re: Playing or Ripping UDF CDs Under jessie
"Thomas Schmitt" <scdbackup@gmx.net> writes:
> I see that wodim does not display session end marks, as cdrskin does.
cdrskin to the rescue.
> With cdrskin there is an option with better readable output
>
> cdrskin -v dev=/dev/sr1 -minfo
>
> (Not to be confused with option -msinfo.)
> It will display session numbers and track numbers like:
>
> Track Sess Type Start Addr End Addr Size
> ==============================================
> 1 1 Audio 0 23259 23260
> 2 1 Audio 23260 45066 21807
> 3 1 Audio 45067 61931 16865
> 4 1 Audio 61932 81696 19765
> 5 1 Audio 81697 101666 19970
> 6 1 Audio 101667 125461 23795
> 7 1 Audio 125462 143956 18495
> 8 1 Audio 143957 164231 20275
> 9 1 Audio 164232 185991 21760
> 10 1 Audio 185992 202361 16370
>
> or
>
> Track Sess Type Start Addr End Addr Size
> ==============================================
> 1 1 Data 0 64211 64212
> 2 2 Data 75614 95346 19733
> 3 3 Data 102249 121981 19733
> 4 4 Data 128884 132113 3230
>
> Please post full lists without "all the way up".
Here is what I did so far and it works.
I ran cdrskin on one of the disks from /dev/sr1
ATIP start of lead in: -11634 (97:26/66)
ATIP start of lead out: 359846 (79:59/71)
1T speed low: 8 1T speed high: 8
Producer: CMC Magnetics Corporation
Manufacturer: CMC Magnetics Corporation
Mounted media class: CD
Mounted media type: CD-ROM
Disk Is not erasable
disk status: complete
session status: complete
first track: 1
number of sessions: 1
first track in last sess: 1
last track in last sess: 20
Disk Is not unrestricted
Disk type: CD-DA or CD-ROM
Track Sess Type Start Addr End Addr Size
==============================================
1 1 Audio 0 17270 17271
2 1 Audio 17271 33862 16592
3 1 Audio 33863 49554 15692
4 1 Audio 49555 64594 15040
5 1 Audio 64595 81015 16421
6 1 Audio 81016 94659 13644
7 1 Audio 94660 108516 13857
8 1 Audio 108517 123667 15151
9 1 Audio 123668 136320 12653
10 1 Audio 136321 148048 11728
11 1 Audio 148049 163696 15648
12 1 Audio 163697 182745 19049
13 1 Audio 182746 200379 17634
14 1 Audio 200380 217756 17377
15 1 Audio 217757 234016 16260
16 1 Audio 234017 249782 15766
17 1 Audio 249783 266826 17044
18 1 Audio 266827 280451 13625
19 1 Audio 280452 293349 12898
20 1 Audio 293350 306750 13401
Last session start address: 0
Last session leadout start address: 306751
Read capacity: 306751
The very first track
1 1 Audio 0 17270 17271
is what drives computers mad. It would correspond to
track0.cdda.wav and appears to contain information that looks
like a bad disk or otherwise pours sugar in to the fuel tank of a
normal ripping process.
So, what would happen if I ripped from track 1 instead of 0 using cdparanoia?
#!/bin/sh
drivespec=/dev/cdrom3
cdparanoia -d $drivespec "1-"
-rw-r--r-- 1 martin martin 721478396 Jan 27 21:52 cdda.wav
It plays but you lose the individual track boundaries as
you see in the listing above. I noticed that it occasionally
repeated what amounts to one revolution of the disk so a word or
2 might stutter but after track0, it's red-blooded orange book.
How about that as a meta fore? Or is it the red book for audio CD's?
I thought it was udf because one of the two systems I
tried it on spewed out a reference to udffs in one of the myriad
error messages it flung when I tried to mount it originally.
I might be able to restore the individual tracks by
feeding the output of cdrskin in to a perl program if cdparanoia
can't be persuaded to extract them any other way.
This is fun isn't it?
By the way, mplayer, set to do tempo compression worked
fine speeding up the audio.
Thanks to all who helped.
Martin
Reply to: