Freecom Technologies II User Manual

Page 21

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21

GB

5

Green Book

Specification for CD-I.

High Sierra/High Sierra Format

The Hotel in Nevada, USA where in 1985 the foundation was laid for determining

the file systems for CDs. The efforts of the group which came to be known as

the "High Sierra Group" led to the standard ISO 9660, the most common file

system for CDs. A CD that conforms to this standard is at times still referred to

as a "High Sierra" CD. The original High Sierra format has almost died out; as a

rule, ISO 9660 is used instead.

Image File

see physical image

ISO 9660

ISO 9660 describes the requirements a CD file system has to fulfill. This allows a

CD to be used universally.

Only the capital letters from A to Z, the digits 0 to 9 and the underscore symbol

are permitted for file and directory names. Diacritical marks (Д, Ц, Ь), foreign

characters and punctuation marks (ß, ?, ! etc.) as well as hyphens are not

permitted. The filename can have a max. of 8 characters, the extension only up

to 3. The filename must be at least one character in length, for example 'A'. A

version number (1 to 32767) can be appended (for example 'A.B;1'). A maximum

directory hierarchy of eight levels is permitted whereby the root is considered

the first level. The ISO 9660 employs specifications of the High Sierra Group

and is for that reason also called the High Sierra format. There are also other

file systems ( for example, Joliet for Win95 or HFS for Apple Macintosh) which,

however, can only be recognized on these types of systems.

Joliet

CD file system that supports long filenames and can be used under Windows

 95. For full compatibility to DOS, an ISO 9660 file system must be created. This

is a part of the complete Joliet system.

Lead-In

The lead-in is a data area at the beginning of a CD-R session. This area contains

the directory (table of contents TOC) of a session. The lead-in is written together

with the lead-out of a session. Every lead-in uses 4500 sectors (approx. 9 MB) on

the CD.

Lead-Out

The lead-out marks the physical end of a session and does not contain any data.

It is written together with the lead-in. The first lead-out of a CD uses 6750 sectors

(approx. 13 MB), all following ones 2250 sectors (approx. 4 MB).

Glossary

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