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README
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binchunker for Unix, version 1.2.2
Copyright (C) 1998-2004 Heikki Hannikainen <[email protected]>
Enhancements provided by:
Colas Nahaboo <[email protected]>, 1999
Godmar Back <[email protected]>, 2001
Matthew Green <[email protected]>, 2003
Piotr Kaczuba <[email protected]>, 2009
Reuben Thomas <[email protected]>, 2008
Yegor Timoshenko <[email protected]>, 2017
http://he.fi/bchunk/
Created with the kind help of Bob Marietta <[email protected]>,
partly based on his Pascal (Delphi) implementation.
Released under the GNU GPL, version 2 or later (at your option).
---
Licence:
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA
02111-1307 USA
---
Credits:
This is a Unix/C rewrite of the fine BinChunker software for some
non-Unix system. The non-Unix version of BinChunker has been
obsoleted by FireBurner, which can be found at www.fireburner.com.
FireBurner does a lot more than BinChunker did, but can be used to
do exactly the same even without a burner device installed.
Thanks go to Bob Marietta, the author of BinChunker, for the
extensive help, documentation and letting me look at his
Pascal/Delphi source code!
Colas Nahaboo <[email protected]> and Godmar Back <[email protected]>
added support for MODE2/2352 ISO data tracks in bchunk 1.1.0.
Matthew Green implemented the -r option for raw MODE2/2352
extraction for bchunk 1.2.0.
---
What on earth is this stuff:
binchunker converts a CD image in a ".bin / .cue" format
(sometimes ".raw / .cue") to a set of .iso and .cdr tracks.
The bin/cue format is used by some non-Unix cd-writing
software, but is not supported on most other cd-writing
programs.
The .iso track contains an ISO file system, which can be
mounted through a loop device on Linux systems ('mount track.iso
/mnt/cdrom -o loop=/dev/loop0,blocksize=1024'), or written on a
CD-R using cdrecord.
The .cdr tracks are in the native CD audio format. They can
be either written on a CD-R using cdrecord -audio, or converted
to WAV (or any other sound format for that matter) using
sox ('sox track.cdr track.wav'). Audio tracks can be written
in WAV format by using the -w switch.
The output type depends on the input type (data is just copied).
If the input is in ISO format, the output will be. On the other
hand, if the input is raw audio data, the output will be CDR or
WAV (the latter if -w is given).
---
How to install this stuff:
$ gzip -d -c bchunk-1.2.2.tar.gz | tar xvf -
$ cd bchunk-1.2.2
$ make
# make install
If your system does not have GCC installed, edit Makefile,
uncommenting the CC lines.
If your system does not ship with a BSD-style 'install' program and the
make install fails, copy the resulting 'bchunk' binary to your favourite
directory in your $PATH. /usr/local/bin is a good one. The manual page
'bchunk.1' should go to /usr/local/man/man1 for example.
bchunk has been successfully compiled on the following platforms:
Linux 2.0, i686, glibc 2.0.7, gcc 2.7.2.3 (RedHat 5.1)
Linux 2.2, i686, glibc 2.1.1, egcs 1.1.2 (RedHat 6.0)
Linux 2.4, i686, glibc 2.2, gcc-2.96 (RedHat 7.0)
Solaris 2.5.1, SPARC, gcc 2.7.2
Solaris 2.6, SPARC, gcc 2.8.1
Digital Unix 4.0c, Alpha, DEC C V5.2-033
SGI IRIX 6.5.7m, MIPS R4600 IP22, gcc 2.95.2
Mac OS X 10.1.4, gcc 2.95.2
It should be ANSI enough to compile on any decent system.
(The HP-UX bundled compiler is not decent.)
---
How to use this stuff:
bchunk [-v] [-p (PSX)] [-r (raw)] [-w (wav)] [-s (swabaudio)]
<image.bin> <image.cue> <basename>
image.bin is the raw cd image file. image.cue is the
track index file containing track types and offsets.
basename is used for the beginning part of the created
track files.
The -v flag makes binchunker print some more unnecessary
messages, which should not be of interest for anyone.
The -p flag makes binchunker go into PSX mode and truncate
MODE2/2352 tracks to 2336 bytes at offset 0 instead of normal
2048 bytes at offset 24.
The -r flag makes binchunker output MODE2/2352 tracks in raw
format, from offset 0 for 2352 bytes. Good for MPEG/VCD.
The -p and -r flags works only with MODE2/2352 input (if input
is in PSX mode pass -p flag or if it is in raw format pass
-r flag).
The -w flag makes binchunker write audio tracks in WAV format.
The -s flag makes binchunker swap byte order in the samples of
the audio tracks. If the audio sounds like loud static noise,
try this.