00001 /* -*- indent-tabs-mode: t; tab-width: 8; c-basic-offset: 8; -*- */ 00002 00003 /* Copyright (c) 2004 - 2006 Derek Foreman, Ben Jansens 00004 Copyright (c) 2006 - 2011 Thomas Schmitt <scdbackup@gmx.net> 00005 Provided under GPL version 2 or later. 00006 00007 This is the official API definition of libburn. 00008 00009 */ 00010 /* Important: If you add a public API function then add its name to file 00011 libburn/libburn.ver 00012 */ 00013 00014 00015 #ifndef LIBBURN_H 00016 #define LIBBURN_H 00017 00018 /* 00019 00020 Applications must use 64 bit off_t. E.g. by defining 00021 #define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE 00022 #define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64 00023 or take special precautions to interface with the library by 64 bit integers 00024 where this .h files prescribe off_t. 00025 00026 To prevent 64 bit file i/o in the library would keep the application from 00027 processing tracks of more than 2 GB size. 00028 00029 */ 00030 #include <sys/types.h> 00031 00032 #ifndef DOXYGEN 00033 00034 #if defined(__cplusplus) 00035 #define BURN_BEGIN_DECLS \ 00036 namespace burn { \ 00037 extern "C" { 00038 #define BURN_END_DECLS \ 00039 } \ 00040 } 00041 #else 00042 #define BURN_BEGIN_DECLS 00043 #define BURN_END_DECLS 00044 #endif 00045 00046 BURN_BEGIN_DECLS 00047 00048 #endif 00049 00050 /** References a physical drive in the system */ 00051 struct burn_drive; 00052 00053 /** References a whole disc */ 00054 struct burn_disc; 00055 00056 /** References a single session on a disc */ 00057 struct burn_session; 00058 00059 /** References a single track on a disc */ 00060 struct burn_track; 00061 00062 /* ts A61111 */ 00063 /** References a set of write parameters */ 00064 struct burn_write_opts; 00065 00066 /** Session format for normal audio or data discs */ 00067 #define BURN_CDROM 0 00068 /** Session format for obsolete CD-I discs */ 00069 #define BURN_CDI 0x10 00070 /** Session format for CDROM-XA discs */ 00071 #define BURN_CDXA 0x20 00072 00073 #define BURN_POS_END 100 00074 00075 /** Mask for mode bits */ 00076 #define BURN_MODE_BITS 127 00077 00078 /** Track mode - mode 0 data 00079 0 bytes of user data. it's all 0s. mode 0. get it? HAH 00080 */ 00081 #define BURN_MODE0 (1 << 0) 00082 /** Track mode - mode "raw" - all 2352 bytes supplied by app 00083 FOR DATA TRACKS ONLY! 00084 */ 00085 #define BURN_MODE_RAW (1 << 1) 00086 /** Track mode - mode 1 data 00087 2048 bytes user data, and all the LEC money can buy 00088 */ 00089 #define BURN_MODE1 (1 << 2) 00090 /** Track mode - mode 2 data 00091 defaults to formless, 2336 bytes of user data, unprotected 00092 | with a data form if required. 00093 */ 00094 #define BURN_MODE2 (1 << 3) 00095 /** Track mode modifier - Form 1, | with MODE2 for reasonable results 00096 2048 bytes of user data, 4 bytes of subheader 00097 */ 00098 #define BURN_FORM1 (1 << 4) 00099 /** Track mode modifier - Form 2, | with MODE2 for reasonable results 00100 lots of user data. not much LEC. 00101 */ 00102 #define BURN_FORM2 (1 << 5) 00103 /** Track mode - audio 00104 2352 bytes per sector. may be | with 4ch or preemphasis. 00105 NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH BURN_MODE_RAW 00106 Audio data must be 44100Hz 16bit stereo with no riff or other header at 00107 beginning. Extra header data will cause pops or clicks. Audio data should 00108 also be in little-endian byte order. Big-endian audio data causes static. 00109 */ 00110 #define BURN_AUDIO (1 << 6) 00111 /** Track mode modifier - 4 channel audio. */ 00112 #define BURN_4CH (1 << 7) 00113 /** Track mode modifier - Digital copy permitted, can be set on any track.*/ 00114 #define BURN_COPY (1 << 8) 00115 /** Track mode modifier - 50/15uS pre-emphasis */ 00116 #define BURN_PREEMPHASIS (1 << 9) 00117 /** Input mode modifier - subcodes present packed 16 */ 00118 #define BURN_SUBCODE_P16 (1 << 10) 00119 /** Input mode modifier - subcodes present packed 96 */ 00120 #define BURN_SUBCODE_P96 (1 << 11) 00121 /** Input mode modifier - subcodes present raw 96 */ 00122 #define BURN_SUBCODE_R96 (1 << 12) 00123 00124 /** Possible disc writing style/modes */ 00125 enum burn_write_types 00126 { 00127 /** Packet writing. 00128 currently unsupported, (for DVD Incremental Streaming use TAO) 00129 */ 00130 BURN_WRITE_PACKET, 00131 00132 /** With CD: Track At Once recording 00133 2s gaps between tracks, no fonky lead-ins 00134 00135 With sequential DVD-R[W]: Incremental Streaming 00136 With DVD+R and BD-R: Track of open size 00137 With DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, BD-RE: Random Writeable (used sequentially) 00138 With overwriteable DVD-RW: Rigid Restricted Overwrite 00139 */ 00140 BURN_WRITE_TAO, 00141 00142 /** With CD: Session At Once 00143 Block type MUST be BURN_BLOCK_SAO 00144 ts A70122: Currently not capable of mixing data and audio tracks. 00145 00146 With sequential DVD-R[W]: Disc-at-once, DAO 00147 Single session, single track, fixed size mandatory, (-dvd-compat) 00148 With other DVD or BD media: same as BURN_WRITE_TAO but may demand 00149 that track size is known in advance. 00150 */ 00151 BURN_WRITE_SAO, 00152 00153 /** With CD: Raw disc at once recording. 00154 all subcodes must be provided by lib or user 00155 only raw block types are supported 00156 With DVD and BD media: not supported. 00157 00158 ts A90901: This had been disabled because its implementation 00159 relied on code from cdrdao which is not understood 00160 currently. 00161 A burn run will abort with "FATAL" error message 00162 if this mode is attempted. 00163 @since 0.7.2 00164 ts A91016: Re-implemented according to ECMA-130 Annex A and B. 00165 Now understood, explained and not stemming from cdrdao. 00166 @since 0.7.4 00167 */ 00168 BURN_WRITE_RAW, 00169 00170 /** In replies this indicates that not any writing will work. 00171 As parameter for inquiries it indicates that no particular write 00172 mode shall is specified. 00173 Do not use for setting a write mode for burning. It will not work. 00174 */ 00175 BURN_WRITE_NONE 00176 }; 00177 00178 /** Data format to send to the drive */ 00179 enum burn_block_types 00180 { 00181 /** sync, headers, edc/ecc provided by lib/user */ 00182 BURN_BLOCK_RAW0 = 1, 00183 /** sync, headers, edc/ecc and p/q subs provided by lib/user */ 00184 BURN_BLOCK_RAW16 = 2, 00185 /** sync, headers, edc/ecc and packed p-w subs provided by lib/user */ 00186 BURN_BLOCK_RAW96P = 4, 00187 /** sync, headers, edc/ecc and raw p-w subs provided by lib/user */ 00188 BURN_BLOCK_RAW96R = 8, 00189 /** only 2048 bytes of user data provided by lib/user */ 00190 BURN_BLOCK_MODE1 = 256, 00191 /** 2336 bytes of user data provided by lib/user */ 00192 BURN_BLOCK_MODE2R = 512, 00193 /** 2048 bytes of user data provided by lib/user 00194 subheader provided in write parameters 00195 are we ever going to support this shit? I vote no. 00196 (supposed to be supported on all drives...) 00197 */ 00198 BURN_BLOCK_MODE2_PATHETIC = 1024, 00199 /** 2048 bytes of data + 8 byte subheader provided by lib/user 00200 hey, this is also dumb 00201 */ 00202 BURN_BLOCK_MODE2_LAME = 2048, 00203 /** 2324 bytes of data provided by lib/user 00204 subheader provided in write parameters 00205 no sir, I don't like it. 00206 */ 00207 BURN_BLOCK_MODE2_OBSCURE = 4096, 00208 /** 2332 bytes of data supplied by lib/user 00209 8 bytes sub header provided in write parameters 00210 this is the second least suck mode2, and is mandatory for 00211 all drives to support. 00212 */ 00213 BURN_BLOCK_MODE2_OK = 8192, 00214 /** SAO block sizes are based on cue sheet, so use this. */ 00215 BURN_BLOCK_SAO = 16384 00216 }; 00217 00218 /** Possible status of the drive in regard to the disc in it. */ 00219 enum burn_disc_status 00220 { 00221 /** The current status is not yet known */ 00222 BURN_DISC_UNREADY, 00223 00224 /** The drive holds a blank disc. It is ready for writing from scratch. 00225 Unused multi-session media: 00226 CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, BD-R 00227 Blanked multi-session media (i.e. treated by burn_disc_erase()) 00228 CD-RW, DVD-RW 00229 Overwriteable media with or without valid data 00230 DVD-RAM, DVD+RW, formatted DVD-RW, BD-RE 00231 */ 00232 BURN_DISC_BLANK, 00233 00234 /** There is no disc at all in the drive */ 00235 BURN_DISC_EMPTY, 00236 00237 /** There is an incomplete disc in the drive. It is ready for appending 00238 another session. 00239 Written but not yet closed multi-session media 00240 CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, BD-R 00241 */ 00242 BURN_DISC_APPENDABLE, 00243 00244 /** There is a disc with data on it in the drive. It is usable only for 00245 reading. 00246 Written and closed multi-session media 00247 CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, BD-R 00248 Read-Only media 00249 CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, BD-ROM 00250 Note that many DVD-ROM drives report any written media 00251 as Read-Only media and not by their real media types. 00252 */ 00253 BURN_DISC_FULL, 00254 00255 /* ts A61007 */ 00256 /* @since 0.2.4 */ 00257 /** The drive was not grabbed when the status was inquired */ 00258 BURN_DISC_UNGRABBED, 00259 00260 /* ts A61020 */ 00261 /* @since 0.2.6 */ 00262 /** The media seems to be unsuitable for reading and for writing */ 00263 BURN_DISC_UNSUITABLE 00264 }; 00265 00266 00267 /** Possible data source return values */ 00268 enum burn_source_status 00269 { 00270 /** The source is ok */ 00271 BURN_SOURCE_OK, 00272 /** The source is at end of file */ 00273 BURN_SOURCE_EOF, 00274 /** The source is unusable */ 00275 BURN_SOURCE_FAILED 00276 }; 00277 00278 00279 /** Possible busy states for a drive */ 00280 enum burn_drive_status 00281 { 00282 /** The drive is not in an operation */ 00283 BURN_DRIVE_IDLE, 00284 /** The library is spawning the processes to handle a pending 00285 operation (A read/write/etc is about to start but hasn't quite 00286 yet) */ 00287 BURN_DRIVE_SPAWNING, 00288 /** The drive is reading data from a disc */ 00289 BURN_DRIVE_READING, 00290 /** The drive is writing data to a disc */ 00291 BURN_DRIVE_WRITING, 00292 /** The drive is writing Lead-In */ 00293 BURN_DRIVE_WRITING_LEADIN, 00294 /** The drive is writing Lead-Out */ 00295 BURN_DRIVE_WRITING_LEADOUT, 00296 /** The drive is erasing a disc */ 00297 BURN_DRIVE_ERASING, 00298 /** The drive is being grabbed */ 00299 BURN_DRIVE_GRABBING, 00300 00301 /* ts A61102 */ 00302 /* @since 0.2.6 */ 00303 /** The drive gets written zeroes before the track payload data */ 00304 BURN_DRIVE_WRITING_PREGAP, 00305 /** The drive is told to close a track (TAO only) */ 00306 BURN_DRIVE_CLOSING_TRACK, 00307 /** The drive is told to close a session (TAO only) */ 00308 BURN_DRIVE_CLOSING_SESSION, 00309 00310 /* ts A61223 */ 00311 /* @since 0.3.0 */ 00312 /** The drive is formatting media */ 00313 BURN_DRIVE_FORMATTING, 00314 00315 /* ts A70822 */ 00316 /* @since 0.4.0 */ 00317 /** The drive is busy in synchronous read (if you see this then it 00318 has been interrupted) */ 00319 BURN_DRIVE_READING_SYNC, 00320 /** The drive is busy in synchronous write (if you see this then it 00321 has been interrupted) */ 00322 BURN_DRIVE_WRITING_SYNC 00323 00324 }; 00325 00326 00327 /** Information about a track on a disc - this is from the q sub channel of the 00328 lead-in area of a disc. The documentation here is very terse. 00329 See a document such as mmc3 for proper information. 00330 00331 CAUTION : This structure is prone to future extension ! 00332 00333 Do not restrict your application to unsigned char with any counter like 00334 "session", "point", "pmin", ... 00335 Do not rely on the current size of a burn_toc_entry. 00336 00337 ts A70201 : DVD extension, see below 00338 */ 00339 struct burn_toc_entry 00340 { 00341 /** Session the track is in */ 00342 unsigned char session; 00343 /** Type of data. for this struct to be valid, it must be 1 */ 00344 unsigned char adr; 00345 /** Type of data in the track */ 00346 unsigned char control; 00347 /** Zero. Always. Really. */ 00348 unsigned char tno; 00349 /** Track number or special information */ 00350 unsigned char point; 00351 unsigned char min; 00352 unsigned char sec; 00353 unsigned char frame; 00354 unsigned char zero; 00355 /** Track start time minutes for normal tracks */ 00356 unsigned char pmin; 00357 /** Track start time seconds for normal tracks */ 00358 unsigned char psec; 00359 /** Track start time frames for normal tracks */ 00360 unsigned char pframe; 00361 00362 /* Indicates whether extension data are valid and eventually override 00363 older elements in this structure: 00364 bit0= DVD extension is valid @since 0.3.2 00365 @since 0.5.2 : DVD extensions are made valid for CD too 00366 */ 00367 unsigned char extensions_valid; 00368 00369 /* ts A70201 : DVD extension. extensions_valid:bit0 00370 If invalid the members are guaranteed to be 0. */ 00371 /* @since 0.3.2 */ 00372 /* Tracks and session numbers are 16 bit. Here are the high bytes. */ 00373 unsigned char session_msb; 00374 unsigned char point_msb; 00375 /* pmin, psec, and pframe may be too small if DVD extension is valid */ 00376 int start_lba; 00377 /* min, sec, and frame may be too small if DVD extension is valid */ 00378 int track_blocks; 00379 00380 /* ts A90909 : LRA extension. extensions_valid:bit1 */ 00381 /* @since 0.7.2 */ 00382 /* MMC-5 6.27.3.18 : The Last Recorded Address is valid for DVD-R, 00383 DVD-R DL when LJRS = 00b, DVD-RW, HD DVD-R, and BD-R. 00384 This would mean profiles: 0x11, 0x15, 0x13, 0x14, 0x51, 0x41, 0x42 00385 */ 00386 int last_recorded_address; 00387 }; 00388 00389 00390 /** Data source interface for tracks. 00391 This allows to use arbitrary program code as provider of track input data. 00392 00393 Objects compliant to this interface are either provided by the application 00394 or by API calls of libburn: burn_fd_source_new() , burn_file_source_new(), 00395 and burn_fifo_source_new(). 00396 00397 The API calls allow to use any file object as data source. Consider to feed 00398 an eventual custom data stream asynchronously into a pipe(2) and to let 00399 libburn handle the rest. 00400 In this case the following rule applies: 00401 Call burn_source_free() exactly once for every source obtained from 00402 libburn API. You MUST NOT otherwise use or manipulate its components. 00403 00404 In general, burn_source objects can be freed as soon as they are attached 00405 to track objects. The track objects will keep them alive and dispose them 00406 when they are no longer needed. With a fifo burn_source it makes sense to 00407 keep the own reference for inquiring its state while burning is in 00408 progress. 00409 00410 --- 00411 00412 The following description of burn_source applies only to application 00413 implemented burn_source objects. You need not to know it for API provided 00414 ones. 00415 00416 If you really implement an own passive data producer by this interface, 00417 then beware: it can do anything and it can spoil everything. 00418 00419 In this case the functions (*read), (*get_size), (*set_size), (*free_data) 00420 MUST be implemented by the application and attached to the object at 00421 creation time. 00422 Function (*read_sub) is allowed to be NULL or it MUST be implemented and 00423 attached. 00424 00425 burn_source.refcount MUST be handled properly: If not exactly as many 00426 references are freed as have been obtained, then either memory leaks or 00427 corrupted memory are the consequence. 00428 All objects which are referred to by *data must be kept existent until 00429 (*free_data) is called via burn_source_free() by the last referer. 00430 */ 00431 struct burn_source { 00432 00433 /** Reference count for the data source. MUST be 1 when a new source 00434 is created and thus the first reference is handed out. Increment 00435 it to take more references for yourself. Use burn_source_free() 00436 to destroy your references to it. */ 00437 int refcount; 00438 00439 00440 /** Read data from the source. Semantics like with read(2), but MUST 00441 either deliver the full buffer as defined by size or MUST deliver 00442 EOF (return 0) or failure (return -1) at this call or at the 00443 next following call. I.e. the only incomplete buffer may be the 00444 last one from that source. 00445 libburn will read a single sector by each call to (*read). 00446 The size of a sector depends on BURN_MODE_*. The known range is 00447 2048 to 2352. 00448 00449 If this call is reading from a pipe then it will learn 00450 about the end of data only when that pipe gets closed on the 00451 feeder side. So if the track size is not fixed or if the pipe 00452 delivers less than the predicted amount or if the size is not 00453 block aligned, then burning will halt until the input process 00454 closes the pipe. 00455 00456 IMPORTANT: 00457 If this function pointer is NULL, then the struct burn_source is of 00458 version >= 1 and the job of .(*read)() is done by .(*read_xt)(). 00459 See below, member .version. 00460 */ 00461 int (*read)(struct burn_source *, unsigned char *buffer, int size); 00462 00463 00464 /** Read subchannel data from the source (NULL if lib generated) 00465 WARNING: This is an obscure feature with CD raw write modes. 00466 Unless you checked the libburn code for correctness in that aspect 00467 you should not rely on raw writing with own subchannels. 00468 ADVICE: Set this pointer to NULL. 00469 */ 00470 int (*read_sub)(struct burn_source *, unsigned char *buffer, int size); 00471 00472 00473 /** Get the size of the source's data. Return 0 means unpredictable 00474 size. If application provided (*get_size) allows return 0, then 00475 the application MUST provide a fully functional (*set_size). 00476 */ 00477 off_t (*get_size)(struct burn_source *); 00478 00479 00480 /* ts A70125 : BROKE BINARY BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY AT libburn-0.3.1. */ 00481 /* @since 0.3.2 */ 00482 /** Program the reply of (*get_size) to a fixed value. It is advised 00483 to implement this by a attribute off_t fixed_size; in *data . 00484 The read() function does not have to take into respect this fake 00485 setting. It is rather a note of libburn to itself. Eventually 00486 necessary truncation or padding is done in libburn. Truncation 00487 is usually considered a misburn. Padding is considered ok. 00488 00489 libburn is supposed to work even if (*get_size) ignores the 00490 setting by (*set_size). But your application will not be able to 00491 enforce fixed track sizes by burn_track_set_size() and possibly 00492 even padding might be left out. 00493 */ 00494 int (*set_size)(struct burn_source *source, off_t size); 00495 00496 00497 /** Clean up the source specific data. This function will be called 00498 once by burn_source_free() when the last referer disposes the 00499 source. 00500 */ 00501 void (*free_data)(struct burn_source *); 00502 00503 00504 /** Next source, for when a source runs dry and padding is disabled 00505 WARNING: This is an obscure feature. Set to NULL at creation and 00506 from then on leave untouched and uninterpreted. 00507 */ 00508 struct burn_source *next; 00509 00510 00511 /** Source specific data. Here the various source classes express their 00512 specific properties and the instance objects store their individual 00513 management data. 00514 E.g. data could point to a struct like this: 00515 struct app_burn_source 00516 { 00517 struct my_app *app_handle; 00518 ... other individual source parameters ... 00519 off_t fixed_size; 00520 }; 00521 00522 Function (*free_data) has to be prepared to clean up and free 00523 the struct. 00524 */ 00525 void *data; 00526 00527 00528 /* ts A71222 : Supposed to be binary backwards compatible extension. */ 00529 /* @since 0.4.2 */ 00530 /** Valid only if above member .(*read)() is NULL. This indicates a 00531 version of struct burn_source younger than 0. 00532 From then on, member .version tells which further members exist 00533 in the memory layout of struct burn_source. libburn will only touch 00534 those announced extensions. 00535 00536 Versions: 00537 0 has .(*read)() != NULL, not even .version is present. 00538 1 has .version, .(*read_xt)(), .(*cancel)() 00539 */ 00540 int version; 00541 00542 /** This substitutes for (*read)() in versions above 0. */ 00543 int (*read_xt)(struct burn_source *, unsigned char *buffer, int size); 00544 00545 /** Informs the burn_source that the consumer of data prematurely 00546 ended reading. This call may or may not be issued by libburn 00547 before (*free_data)() is called. 00548 */ 00549 int (*cancel)(struct burn_source *source); 00550 }; 00551 00552 00553 /** Information on a drive in the system */ 00554 struct burn_drive_info 00555 { 00556 /** Name of the vendor of the drive */ 00557 char vendor[9]; 00558 /** Name of the drive */ 00559 char product[17]; 00560 /** Revision of the drive */ 00561 char revision[5]; 00562 00563 /** Invalid: Was: "Location of the drive in the filesystem." */ 00564 /** This string has no meaning any more. Once it stored the persistent 00565 drive address. Now always use function burn_drive_d_get_adr() to 00566 inquire a persistent address. ^^^^^^ ALWAYS ^^^^^^^^ */ 00567 char location[17]; 00568 00569 /** Can the drive read DVD-RAM discs */ 00570 unsigned int read_dvdram:1; 00571 /** Can the drive read DVD-R discs */ 00572 unsigned int read_dvdr:1; 00573 /** Can the drive read DVD-ROM discs */ 00574 unsigned int read_dvdrom:1; 00575 /** Can the drive read CD-R discs */ 00576 unsigned int read_cdr:1; 00577 /** Can the drive read CD-RW discs */ 00578 unsigned int read_cdrw:1; 00579 00580 /** Can the drive write DVD-RAM discs */ 00581 unsigned int write_dvdram:1; 00582 /** Can the drive write DVD-R discs */ 00583 unsigned int write_dvdr:1; 00584 /** Can the drive write CD-R discs */ 00585 unsigned int write_cdr:1; 00586 /** Can the drive write CD-RW discs */ 00587 unsigned int write_cdrw:1; 00588 00589 /** Can the drive simulate a write */ 00590 unsigned int write_simulate:1; 00591 00592 /** Can the drive report C2 errors */ 00593 unsigned int c2_errors:1; 00594 00595 /** The size of the drive's buffer (in kilobytes) */ 00596 int buffer_size; 00597 /** 00598 * The supported block types in tao mode. 00599 * They should be tested with the desired block type. 00600 * See also burn_block_types. 00601 */ 00602 int tao_block_types; 00603 /** 00604 * The supported block types in sao mode. 00605 * They should be tested with the desired block type. 00606 * See also burn_block_types. 00607 */ 00608 int sao_block_types; 00609 /** 00610 * The supported block types in raw mode. 00611 * They should be tested with the desired block type. 00612 * See also burn_block_types. 00613 */ 00614 int raw_block_types; 00615 /** 00616 * The supported block types in packet mode. 00617 * They should be tested with the desired block type. 00618 * See also burn_block_types. 00619 */ 00620 int packet_block_types; 00621 00622 /** The value by which this drive can be indexed when using functions 00623 in the library. This is the value to pass to all libbburn functions 00624 that operate on a drive. */ 00625 struct burn_drive *drive; 00626 }; 00627 00628 00629 /** Operation progress report. All values are 0 based indices. 00630 * */ 00631 struct burn_progress { 00632 /** The total number of sessions */ 00633 int sessions; 00634 /** Current session.*/ 00635 int session; 00636 /** The total number of tracks */ 00637 int tracks; 00638 /** Current track. */ 00639 int track; 00640 /** The total number of indices */ 00641 int indices; 00642 /** Curent index. */ 00643 int index; 00644 /** The starting logical block address */ 00645 int start_sector; 00646 /** On write: The number of sectors. 00647 On blank: 0x10000 as upper limit for relative progress steps */ 00648 int sectors; 00649 /** On write: The current sector being processed. 00650 On blank: Relative progress steps 0 to 0x10000 */ 00651 int sector; 00652 00653 /* ts A61023 */ 00654 /* @since 0.2.6 */ 00655 /** The capacity of the drive buffer */ 00656 unsigned buffer_capacity; 00657 /** The free space in the drive buffer (might be slightly outdated) */ 00658 unsigned buffer_available; 00659 00660 /* ts A61119 */ 00661 /* @since 0.2.6 */ 00662 /** The number of bytes sent to the drive buffer */ 00663 off_t buffered_bytes; 00664 /** The minimum number of bytes stored in buffer during write. 00665 (Caution: Before surely one buffer size of bytes was processed, 00666 this value is 0xffffffff.) 00667 */ 00668 unsigned buffer_min_fill; 00669 }; 00670 00671 00672 /* ts A61226 */ 00673 /* @since 0.3.0 */ 00674 /** Description of a speed capability as reported by the drive in conjunction 00675 with eventually loaded media. There can be more than one such object per 00676 drive. So they are chained via .next and .prev , where NULL marks the end 00677 of the chain. This list is set up by burn_drive_scan() and gets updated 00678 by burn_drive_grab(). 00679 A copy may be obtained by burn_drive_get_speedlist() and disposed by 00680 burn_drive_free_speedlist(). 00681 For technical background info see SCSI specs MMC and SPC: 00682 mode page 2Ah (from SPC 5Ah MODE SENSE) , mmc3r10g.pdf , 6.3.11 Table 364 00683 ACh GET PERFORMANCE, Type 03h , mmc5r03c.pdf , 6.8.5.3 Table 312 00684 */ 00685 struct burn_speed_descriptor { 00686 00687 /** Where this info comes from : 00688 0 = misc , 1 = mode page 2Ah , 2 = ACh GET PERFORMANCE */ 00689 int source; 00690 00691 /** The media type that was current at the time of report 00692 -2 = state unknown, -1 = no media was loaded , else see 00693 burn_disc_get_profile() */ 00694 int profile_loaded; 00695 char profile_name[80]; 00696 00697 /** The attributed capacity of appropriate media in logical block units 00698 i.e. 2352 raw bytes or 2048 data bytes. -1 = capacity unknown. */ 00699 int end_lba; 00700 00701 /** Speed is given in 1000 bytes/s , 0 = invalid. The numbers 00702 are supposed to be usable with burn_drive_set_speed() */ 00703 int write_speed; 00704 int read_speed; 00705 00706 /** Expert info from ACh GET PERFORMANCE and/or mode page 2Ah. 00707 Expect values other than 0 or 1 to get a meaning in future.*/ 00708 /* Rotational control: 0 = CLV/default , 1 = CAV */ 00709 int wrc; 00710 /* 1 = drive promises reported performance over full media */ 00711 int exact; 00712 /* 1 = suitable for mixture of read and write */ 00713 int mrw; 00714 00715 /** List chaining. Use .next until NULL to iterate over the list */ 00716 struct burn_speed_descriptor *prev; 00717 struct burn_speed_descriptor *next; 00718 }; 00719 00720 00721 /** Initialize the library. 00722 This must be called before using any other functions in the library. It 00723 may be called more than once with no effect. 00724 It is possible to 'restart' the library by shutting it down and 00725 re-initializing it. Once this was necessary if you follow the older and 00726 more general way of accessing a drive via burn_drive_scan() and 00727 burn_drive_grab(). See burn_drive_scan_and_grab() with its strong 00728 urges and its explanations. 00729 @return Nonzero if the library was able to initialize; zero if 00730 initialization failed. 00731 */ 00732 int burn_initialize(void); 00733 00734 /** Shutdown the library. 00735 This should be called before exiting your application. Make sure that all 00736 drives you have grabbed are released <i>before</i> calling this. 00737 */ 00738 void burn_finish(void); 00739 00740 00741 /* ts A61002 */ 00742 /** Abort any running drive operation and eventually call burn_finish(). 00743 00744 You MUST shut down the busy drives if an aborting event occurs during a 00745 burn run. For that you may call this function either from your own signal 00746 handling code or indirectly by activating the built-in signal handling: 00747 burn_set_signal_handling("my_app_name : ", NULL, 0); 00748 Else you may eventually call burn_drive_cancel() on the active drives and 00749 wait for them to assume state BURN_DRIVE_IDLE. 00750 @param patience Maximum number of seconds to wait for drives to 00751 finish. 00752 @since 0.7.8 : 00753 If this is -1, then only the cancel operations will 00754 be performed and no burn_finish() will happen. 00755 @param pacifier_func If not NULL: a function to produce appeasing messages. 00756 See burn_abort_pacifier() for an example. 00757 @param handle Opaque handle to be used with pacifier_func 00758 @return 1 ok, all went well 00759 0 had to leave a drive in unclean state 00760 <0 severe error, do no use libburn again 00761 @since 0.2.6 00762 */ 00763 int burn_abort(int patience, 00764 int (*pacifier_func)(void *handle, int patience, int elapsed), 00765 void *handle); 00766 00767 /** A pacifier function suitable for burn_abort. 00768 @param handle If not NULL, a pointer to a text suitable for printf("%s") 00769 @param patience Maximum number of seconds to wait 00770 @param elapsed Elapsed number of seconds 00771 */ 00772 int burn_abort_pacifier(void *handle, int patience, int elapsed); 00773 00774 00775 /** ts A61006 : This is for development only. Not suitable for applications. 00776 Set the verbosity level of the library. The default value is 0, which means 00777 that nothing is output on stderr. The more you increase this, the more 00778 debug output should be displayed on stderr for you. 00779 @param level The verbosity level desired. 0 for nothing, higher positive 00780 values for more information output. 00781 */ 00782 void burn_set_verbosity(int level); 00783 00784 /* ts A91111 */ 00785 /** Enable resp. disable logging of SCSI commands (currently GNU/Linux only). 00786 This call can be made at any time - even before burn_initialize(). 00787 It is in effect for all active drives and currently not very thread 00788 safe for multiple drives. 00789 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes. The default is 0. 00790 bit0= log to file /tmp/libburn_sg_command_log 00791 bit1= log to stderr 00792 bit2= flush output after each line 00793 @since 0.7.4 00794 */ 00795 void burn_set_scsi_logging(int flag); 00796 00797 /* ts A60813 */ 00798 /** Set parameters for behavior on opening device files. To be called early 00799 after burn_initialize() and before any bus scan. But not mandatory at all. 00800 Parameter value 1 enables a feature, 0 disables. 00801 Default is (1,0,0). Have a good reason before you change it. 00802 @param exclusive 00803 0 = no attempt to make drive access exclusive. 00804 1 = Try to open only devices which are not marked as busy 00805 and try to mark them busy if opened sucessfully. (O_EXCL 00806 on GNU/Linux , flock(LOCK_EX) on FreeBSD.) 00807 2 = in case of a SCSI device, also try to open exclusively 00808 the matching /dev/sr, /dev/scd and /dev/st . 00809 One may select a device SCSI file family by adding 00810 0 = default family 00811 4 = /dev/sr%d 00812 8 = /dev/scd%d 00813 16 = /dev/sg%d 00814 Do not use other values ! 00815 Add 32 to demand on GNU/Linux an exclusive lock by 00816 fcntl(,F_SETLK,) after open() has succeeded. 00817 @param blocking Try to wait for drives which do not open immediately but 00818 also do not return an error as well. (O_NONBLOCK) 00819 This might stall indefinitely with /dev/hdX hard disks. 00820 @param abort_on_busy Unconditionally abort process when a non blocking 00821 exclusive opening attempt indicates a busy drive. 00822 Use this only after thorough tests with your app. 00823 @since 0.2.2 00824 */ 00825 void burn_preset_device_open(int exclusive, int blocking, int abort_on_busy); 00826 00827 00828 /* ts A70223 */ 00829 /** Allows the use of media types which are implemented in libburn but not yet 00830 tested. The list of those untested profiles is subject to change. 00831 - Currently no media types are under test reservation - 00832 If you really test such media, then please report the outcome on 00833 libburn-hackers@pykix.org 00834 If ever then this call should be done soon after burn_initialize() before 00835 any drive scanning. 00836 @param yes 1=allow all implemented profiles, 0=only tested media (default) 00837 @since 0.3.4 00838 */ 00839 void burn_allow_untested_profiles(int yes); 00840 00841 00842 /* ts A60823 */ 00843 /** Aquire a drive with known persistent address. 00844 00845 This is the sysadmin friendly way to open one drive and to leave all 00846 others untouched. It bundles the following API calls to form a 00847 non-obtrusive way to use libburn: 00848 burn_drive_add_whitelist() , burn_drive_scan() , burn_drive_grab() 00849 You are *strongly urged* to use this call whenever you know the drive 00850 address in advance. 00851 00852 If not, then you have to use directly above calls. In that case, you are 00853 *strongly urged* to drop any unintended drive which will be exclusively 00854 occupied and not closed by burn_drive_scan(). 00855 This can be done by shutting down the library including a call to 00856 burn_finish(). You may later start a new libburn session and should then 00857 use the function described here with an address obtained after 00858 burn_drive_scan() via burn_drive_d_get_adr(drive_infos[driveno].drive,adr). 00859 Another way is to drop the unwanted drives by burn_drive_info_forget(). 00860 00861 Operating on multiple drives: 00862 00863 Different than with burn_drive_scan() it is allowed to call 00864 burn_drive_scan_and_grab() without giving up any other scanned drives. So 00865 this call can be used to get a collection of more than one aquired drives. 00866 The attempt to aquire the same drive twice will fail, though. 00867 00868 Pseudo-drives: 00869 00870 burn_drive_scan_and_grab() is able to aquire virtual drives which will 00871 accept options much like a MMC burner drive. Many of those options will not 00872 cause any effect, though. The address of a pseudo-drive begins with 00873 prefix "stdio:" followed by a path. 00874 Examples: "stdio:/tmp/pseudo_drive" , "stdio:/dev/null" , "stdio:-" 00875 00876 If the path is empty, the result is a null-drive = drive role 0. 00877 It pretends to have loaded no media and supports no reading or writing. 00878 00879 If the path leads to an existing regular file, or to a not yet existing 00880 file, or to an existing block device, then the result is a random access 00881 stdio-drive capable of reading and writing = drive role 2. 00882 00883 If the path leads to an existing file of any type other than directory, 00884 then the result is a sequential write-only stdio-drive = drive role 3. 00885 00886 The special address form "stdio:/dev/fd/{number}" is interpreted literally 00887 as reference to open file descriptor {number}. This address form coincides 00888 with real files on some systems, but it is in fact hardcoded in libburn. 00889 Special address "stdio:-" means stdout = "stdio:/dev/fd/1". 00890 The role of such a drive is determined by the file type obtained via 00891 fstat({number}). 00892 00893 Roles 2 and 3 perform all their eventual data transfer activities on a file 00894 via standard i/o functions open(2), lseek(2), read(2), write(2), close(2). 00895 The media profile is reported as 0xffff. Write space information from those 00896 media is not necessarily realistic. 00897 00898 The capabilities of role 2 resemble DVD-RAM but it can simulate writing. 00899 If the path does not exist in the filesystem yet, it is attempted to create 00900 it as a regular file as soon as write operations are started. 00901 00902 The capabilities of role 3 resemble a blank DVD-R. Nevertheless each 00903 burn_disc_write() run may only write a single track. 00904 00905 One may distinguish pseudo-drives from MMC drives by call 00906 burn_drive_get_drive_role(). 00907 00908 @param drive_infos On success returns a one element array with the drive 00909 (cdrom/burner). Thus use with driveno 0 only. On failure 00910 the array has no valid elements at all. 00911 The returned array should be freed via burn_drive_info_free() 00912 when it is no longer needed. 00913 This is a result from call burn_drive_scan(). See there. 00914 Use with driveno 0 only. 00915 @param adr The persistent address of the desired drive. Either once 00916 obtained by burn_drive_d_get_adr() or composed skillfully by 00917 application resp. its user. E.g. "/dev/sr0". 00918 Consider to preprocess it by burn_drive_convert_fs_adr(). 00919 @param load Nonzero to make the drive attempt to load a disc (close its 00920 tray door, etc). 00921 @return 1 = success , 0 = drive not found , -1 = other error 00922 @since 0.2.2 00923 */ 00924 int burn_drive_scan_and_grab(struct burn_drive_info *drive_infos[], 00925 char* adr, int load); 00926 00927 00928 /* ts A51221 */ 00929 /* @since 0.2.2 */ 00930 /** Maximum number of particularly permissible drive addresses */ 00931 #define BURN_DRIVE_WHITELIST_LEN 255 00932 00933 /** Add a device to the list of permissible drives. As soon as some entry is in 00934 the whitelist all non-listed drives are banned from scanning. 00935 @return 1 success, <=0 failure 00936 @since 0.2.2 00937 */ 00938 int burn_drive_add_whitelist(char *device_address); 00939 00940 /** Remove all drives from whitelist. This enables all possible drives. */ 00941 void burn_drive_clear_whitelist(void); 00942 00943 00944 /** Scan for drives. This function MUST be called until it returns nonzero. 00945 In case of re-scanning: 00946 All pointers to struct burn_drive and all struct burn_drive_info arrays 00947 are invalidated by using this function. Do NOT store drive pointers across 00948 calls to this function ! 00949 To avoid invalid pointers one MUST free all burn_drive_info arrays 00950 by burn_drive_info_free() before calling burn_drive_scan() a second time. 00951 If there are drives left, then burn_drive_scan() will refuse to work. 00952 00953 After this call all drives depicted by the returned array are subject 00954 to eventual (O_EXCL) locking. See burn_preset_device_open(). This state 00955 ends either with burn_drive_info_forget() or with burn_drive_release(). 00956 It is unfriendly to other processes on the system to hold drives locked 00957 which one does not definitely plan to use soon. 00958 @param drive_infos Returns an array of drive info items (cdroms/burners). 00959 The returned array must be freed by burn_drive_info_free() 00960 before burn_finish(), and also before calling this function 00961 burn_drive_scan() again. 00962 @param n_drives Returns the number of drive items in drive_infos. 00963 @return 0 while scanning is not complete 00964 >0 when it is finished sucessfully, 00965 <0 when finished but failed. 00966 */ 00967 int burn_drive_scan(struct burn_drive_info *drive_infos[], 00968 unsigned int *n_drives); 00969 00970 /* ts A60904 : ticket 62, contribution by elmom */ 00971 /** Release memory about a single drive and any exclusive lock on it. 00972 Become unable to inquire or grab it. Expect FATAL consequences if you try. 00973 @param drive_info pointer to a single element out of the array 00974 obtained from burn_drive_scan() : &(drive_infos[driveno]) 00975 @param force controls degree of permissible drive usage at the moment this 00976 function is called, and the amount of automatically provided 00977 drive shutdown : 00978 0= drive must be ungrabbed and BURN_DRIVE_IDLE 00979 1= try to release drive resp. accept BURN_DRIVE_GRABBING 00980 Use these two only. Further values are to be defined. 00981 @return 1 on success, 2 if drive was already forgotten, 00982 0 if not permissible, <0 on other failures, 00983 @since 0.2.2 00984 */ 00985 int burn_drive_info_forget(struct burn_drive_info *drive_info, int force); 00986 00987 00988 /** When no longer needed, free a whole burn_drive_info array which was 00989 returned by burn_drive_scan(). 00990 For freeing single drive array elements use burn_drive_info_forget(). 00991 */ 00992 void burn_drive_info_free(struct burn_drive_info drive_infos[]); 00993 00994 00995 /* ts A60823 */ 00996 /* @since 0.2.2 */ 00997 /** Maximum length+1 to expect with a persistent drive address string */ 00998 #define BURN_DRIVE_ADR_LEN 1024 00999 01000 /* ts A70906 */ 01001 /** Inquire the persistent address of the given drive. 01002 @param drive The drive to inquire. 01003 @param adr An application provided array of at least BURN_DRIVE_ADR_LEN 01004 characters size. The persistent address gets copied to it. 01005 @return >0 success , <=0 error (due to libburn internal problem) 01006 @since 0.4.0 01007 */ 01008 int burn_drive_d_get_adr(struct burn_drive *drive, char adr[]); 01009 01010 /* A60823 */ 01011 /** Inquire the persistent address of a drive via a given drive_info object. 01012 (Note: This is a legacy call.) 01013 @param drive_info The drive to inquire.Usually some &(drive_infos[driveno]) 01014 @param adr An application provided array of at least BURN_DRIVE_ADR_LEN 01015 characters size. The persistent address gets copied to it. 01016 @return >0 success , <=0 error (due to libburn internal problem) 01017 @since 0.2.6 01018 */ 01019 int burn_drive_get_adr(struct burn_drive_info *drive_info, char adr[]); 01020 01021 01022 /* ts A60922 ticket 33 */ 01023 /** Evaluate whether the given address would be a possible persistent drive 01024 address of libburn. 01025 @return 1 means yes, 0 means no 01026 @since 0.2.6 01027 */ 01028 int burn_drive_is_enumerable_adr(char *adr); 01029 01030 /* ts A60922 ticket 33 */ 01031 /** Try to convert a given existing filesystem address into a persistent drive 01032 address. This succeeds with symbolic links or if a hint about the drive's 01033 system address can be read from the filesystem object and a matching drive 01034 is found. 01035 @param path The address of an existing file system object 01036 @param adr An application provided array of at least BURN_DRIVE_ADR_LEN 01037 characters size. The persistent address gets copied to it. 01038 @return 1 = success , 0 = failure , -1 = severe error 01039 @since 0.2.6 01040 */ 01041 int burn_drive_convert_fs_adr(char *path, char adr[]); 01042 01043 /* ts A60923 */ 01044 /** Try to convert a given SCSI address of bus,host,channel,target,lun into 01045 a persistent drive address. If a SCSI address component parameter is < 0 01046 then it is not decisive and the first enumerated address which matches 01047 the >= 0 parameters is taken as result. 01048 Note: bus and (host,channel) are supposed to be redundant. 01049 @param bus_no "Bus Number" (something like a virtual controller) 01050 @param host_no "Host Number" (something like half a virtual controller) 01051 @param channel_no "Channel Number" (other half of "Host Number") 01052 @param target_no "Target Number" or "SCSI Id" (a device) 01053 @param lun_no "Logical Unit Number" (a sub device) 01054 @param adr An application provided array of at least BURN_DRIVE_ADR_LEN 01055 characters size. The persistent address gets copied to it. 01056 @return 1 = success , 0 = failure , -1 = severe error 01057 @since 0.2.6 01058 */ 01059 int burn_drive_convert_scsi_adr(int bus_no, int host_no, int channel_no, 01060 int target_no, int lun_no, char adr[]); 01061 01062 /* ts A60923 - A61005 */ 01063 /** Try to obtain bus,host,channel,target,lun from path. If there is an SCSI 01064 address at all, then this call should succeed with a persistent 01065 drive address obtained via burn_drive_d_get_adr(). It is also supposed to 01066 succeed with any device file of a (possibly emulated) SCSI device. 01067 @return 1 = success , 0 = failure , -1 = severe error 01068 @since 0.2.6 01069 */ 01070 int burn_drive_obtain_scsi_adr(char *path, int *bus_no, int *host_no, 01071 int *channel_no, int *target_no, int *lun_no); 01072 01073 /** Grab a drive. This must be done before the drive can be used (for reading, 01074 writing, etc). 01075 @param drive The drive to grab. This is found in a returned 01076 burn_drive_info struct. 01077 @param load Nonzero to make the drive attempt to load a disc (close its 01078 tray door, etc). 01079 @return 1 if it was possible to grab the drive, else 0 01080 */ 01081 int burn_drive_grab(struct burn_drive *drive, int load); 01082 01083 /* ts B00114 */ 01084 /* Probe available CD write modes and block types. In earlier versions this 01085 was done unconditionally on drive examination or aquiration. But it is 01086 lengthy and obtrusive, up to spoiling burn runs on the examined drives. 01087 So now this probing is omitted by default. All drives which announce to be 01088 capable of CD or DVD writing, get blindly attributed the capability for 01089 SAO and TAO. Applications which are interested in RAW modes or want to 01090 rely on the traditional write mode information, may use this call. 01091 @param drive_info drive object to be inquired 01092 @return >0 indicates success, <=0 means failure 01093 @since 0.7.6 01094 */ 01095 int burn_drive_probe_cd_write_modes(struct burn_drive_info *drive_info); 01096 01097 /* ts A90824 */ 01098 /** Calm down or alert a drive. Some drives stay alert after reading for 01099 quite some time. This saves time with the startup for the next read 01100 operation but also causes noise and consumes extra energy. It makes 01101 sense to calm down the drive if no read operation is expected for the 01102 next few seconds. The drive will get alert automatically if operations 01103 are required. 01104 @param d The drive to influence. 01105 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 01106 bit0= become alert (else start snoozing) 01107 This is not mandatory to allow further drive operations 01108 @return 1= success , 0= drive role not suitable for calming 01109 @since 0.7.0 01110 */ 01111 int burn_drive_snooze(struct burn_drive *d, int flag); 01112 01113 01114 /** Release a drive. This should not be done until the drive is no longer 01115 busy (see burn_drive_get_status). 01116 @param drive The drive to release. 01117 @param eject Nonzero to make the drive eject the disc in it. 01118 */ 01119 void burn_drive_release(struct burn_drive *drive, int eject); 01120 01121 01122 /* ts A70918 */ 01123 /** Like burn_drive_release() but keeping the drive tray closed and its 01124 eject button disabled. This physically locked drive state will last until 01125 the drive is grabbed again and released via burn_drive_release(). 01126 Programs like eject, cdrecord, growisofs will break that ban too. 01127 @param d The drive to release and leave locked. 01128 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 01129 @return 1 means success, <=0 means failure 01130 @since 0.4.0 01131 */ 01132 int burn_drive_leave_locked(struct burn_drive *d, int flag); 01133 01134 01135 /** Returns what kind of disc a drive is holding. This function may need to be 01136 called more than once to get a proper status from it. See burn_disc_status 01137 for details. 01138 @param drive The drive to query for a disc. 01139 @return The status of the drive, or what kind of disc is in it. 01140 Note: BURN_DISC_UNGRABBED indicates wrong API usage 01141 */ 01142 enum burn_disc_status burn_disc_get_status(struct burn_drive *drive); 01143 01144 01145 /* ts A61020 */ 01146 /** WARNING: This revives an old bug-like behavior that might be dangerous. 01147 Sets the drive status to BURN_DISC_BLANK if it is BURN_DISC_UNREADY 01148 or BURN_DISC_UNSUITABLE. Thus marking media as writable which actually 01149 failed to declare themselves either blank or (partially) filled. 01150 @return 1 drive status has been set , 0 = unsuitable drive status 01151 @since 0.2.6 01152 */ 01153 int burn_disc_pretend_blank(struct burn_drive *drive); 01154 01155 01156 /* ts A61106 */ 01157 /** WARNING: This overrides the safety measures against unsuitable media. 01158 Sets the drive status to BURN_DISC_FULL if it is BURN_DISC_UNREADY 01159 or BURN_DISC_UNSUITABLE. Thus marking media as blankable which actually 01160 failed to declare themselves either blank or (partially) filled. 01161 @since 0.2.6 01162 */ 01163 int burn_disc_pretend_full(struct burn_drive *drive); 01164 01165 01166 /* ts A61021 */ 01167 /** Reads ATIP information from inserted media. To be obtained via 01168 burn_drive_get_write_speed(), burn_drive_get_min_write_speed(), 01169 burn_drive_get_start_end_lba(). The drive must be grabbed for this call. 01170 @param drive The drive to query. 01171 @return 1=sucess, 0=no valid ATIP info read, -1 severe error 01172 @since 0.2.6 01173 */ 01174 int burn_disc_read_atip(struct burn_drive *drive); 01175 01176 01177 /* ts A61020 */ 01178 /** Returns start and end lba of the media which is currently inserted 01179 in the given drive. The drive has to be grabbed to have hope for reply. 01180 Shortcomming (not a feature): unless burn_disc_read_atip() was called 01181 only blank media will return valid info. 01182 @param drive The drive to query. 01183 @param start_lba Returns the start lba value 01184 @param end_lba Returns the end lba value 01185 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 01186 @return 1 if lba values are valid , 0 if invalid 01187 @since 0.2.6 01188 */ 01189 int burn_drive_get_start_end_lba(struct burn_drive *drive, 01190 int *start_lba, int *end_lba, int flag); 01191 01192 01193 /* ts A90902 */ 01194 /** Guess the manufacturer name of CD media from the ATIP addresses of lead-in 01195 and lead-out. (Currently only lead-in is interpreted. Lead-out may in 01196 future be used to identify the media type in more detail.) 01197 The parameters of this call should be obtained by burn_disc_read_atip(d), 01198 burn_drive_get_start_end_lba(d, &start_lba, &end_lba, 0), 01199 burn_lba_to_msf(start_lba, &m_li, &s_li, &f_li) and 01200 burn_lba_to_msf(end_lba, &m_lo, &s_lo, &f_lo). 01201 @param m_li "minute" part of ATIP lead-in resp. start_lba 01202 @param s_li "second" of lead-in resp. start_lba 01203 @param f_li "frame" of lead-in 01204 @param m_lo "minute" part of ATIP lead-out 01205 @param s_lo "second" of lead-out 01206 @param f_lo "frame" of lead-out 01207 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes, 01208 bit0= append a text "(aka ...)" to reply if other brands or 01209 vendor names are known. 01210 @return Printable text or NULL on memory shortage. 01211 Dispose by free() when no longer needed. 01212 @since 0.7.2 01213 */ 01214 char *burn_guess_cd_manufacturer(int m_li, int s_li, int f_li, 01215 int m_lo, int s_lo, int f_lo, int flag); 01216 01217 /* ts A90909 */ 01218 /** Retrieve some media information which is mainly specific to CD. For other 01219 media only the bits in reply parameter valid are supposed to be meaningful. 01220 @param d The drive to query. 01221 @param disc_type A string saying either "CD-DA or CD-ROM", or "CD-I", 01222 or ""CD-ROM XA", or "undefined". 01223 @param disc_id A 32 bit number read from the media. (Meaning unclear yet) 01224 @param bar_code 8 hex digits from a barcode on media read by the drive 01225 (if the drive has a bar code reader built in). 01226 @param app_code The Host Application Code which must be set in the Write 01227 Parameters Page if the media is not unrestricted (URU==0). 01228 @param valid Replies bits which indicate the validity of other reply 01229 parameters or the state of certain CD info bits: 01230 bit0= disc_type is valid 01231 bit1= disc_id is valid 01232 bit2= bar_code is valid 01233 bit3= disc_app_code is valid 01234 bit4= Disc is unrestricted (URU bit, 51h READ DISC INFO) 01235 This seems to be broken with my drives. The bit is 01236 0 and the validity bit for disc_app_code is 0 too. 01237 bit5= Disc is nominally erasable (Erasable bit) 01238 This will be set with overwriteable media which 01239 libburn normally considers to be unerasable blank. 01240 @return 1 success, <= 0 an error occured 01241 @since 0.7.2 01242 */ 01243 int burn_disc_get_cd_info(struct burn_drive *d, char disc_type[80], 01244 unsigned int *disc_id, char bar_code[9], int *app_code, 01245 int *valid); 01246 01247 /* ts B00924 */ 01248 /** Read the current usage of the eventual BD Spare Area. This area gets 01249 reserved on BD media during formatting. During writing it is used to 01250 host replacements of blocks which failed the checkread immediately after 01251 writing. 01252 This call applies only to recordable BD media. I.e. profiles 0x41 to 0x43. 01253 @param d The drive to query. 01254 @param alloc_blocks Returns the number of blocks reserved as Spare Area 01255 @param free_blocks Returns the number of yet unused blocks in that area 01256 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 01257 @return 1 = reply prarameters are valid, 01258 <=0 = reply is invalid (e.g. because no BD profile) 01259 @since 0.8.8 01260 */ 01261 int burn_disc_get_bd_spare_info(struct burn_drive *d, 01262 int *alloc_blocks, int *free_blocks, int flag); 01263 01264 /* ts A61110 */ 01265 /** Read start lba and Next Writeable Address of a track from media. 01266 Usually a track lba is obtained from the result of burn_track_get_entry(). 01267 This call retrieves an updated lba, eventual nwa, and can address the 01268 invisible track to come. 01269 The drive must be grabbed for this call. One may not issue this call 01270 during ongoing burn_disc_write() or burn_disc_erase(). 01271 @param d The drive to query. 01272 @param o If not NULL: write parameters to be set on drive before query 01273 @param trackno 0=next track to come, >0 number of existing track 01274 @param lba return value: start lba 01275 @param nwa return value: Next Writeable Address 01276 @return 1=nwa is valid , 0=nwa is not valid , -1=error 01277 @since 0.2.6 01278 */ 01279 int burn_disc_track_lba_nwa(struct burn_drive *d, struct burn_write_opts *o, 01280 int trackno, int *lba, int *nwa); 01281 01282 /* ts A70131 */ 01283 /** Read start lba of the first track in the last complete session. 01284 This is the first parameter of mkisofs option -C. The second parameter 01285 is nwa as obtained by burn_disc_track_lba_nwa() with trackno 0. 01286 @param d The drive to query. 01287 @param start_lba returns the start address of that track 01288 @return <= 0 : failure, 1 = ok 01289 @since 0.3.2 01290 */ 01291 int burn_disc_get_msc1(struct burn_drive *d, int *start_lba); 01292 01293 01294 /* ts A70213 */ 01295 /** Return the best possible estimation of the currently available capacity of 01296 the media. This might depend on particular write option settings. For 01297 inquiring the space with such a set of options, the drive has to be 01298 grabbed and BURN_DRIVE_IDLE. If not, then one will only get a canned value 01299 from the most recent automatic inquiry (e.g. during last drive grabbing). 01300 An eventual start address from burn_write_opts_set_start_byte() will be 01301 subtracted from the obtained capacity estimation. Negative results get 01302 defaulted to 0. 01303 @param d The drive to query. 01304 @param o If not NULL: write parameters to be set on drive before query 01305 @return number of most probably available free bytes 01306 @since 0.3.4 01307 */ 01308 off_t burn_disc_available_space(struct burn_drive *d, 01309 struct burn_write_opts *o); 01310 01311 01312 /* ts A61202 */ 01313 /** Tells the MMC Profile identifier of the loaded media. The drive must be 01314 grabbed in order to get a non-zero result. 01315 libburn currently writes only to profiles 01316 0x09 "CD-R" 01317 0x0a "CD-RW" 01318 0x11 "DVD-R sequential recording" 01319 0x12 "DVD-RAM" 01320 0x13 "DVD-RW restricted overwrite" 01321 0x14 "DVD-RW sequential recording", 01322 0x15 "DVD-R/DL sequential recording", 01323 0x1a "DVD+RW" 01324 0x1b "DVD+R", 01325 0x2b "DVD+R/DL", 01326 0x41 "BD-R sequential recording", 01327 0x43 "BD-RE", 01328 0xffff "stdio file" 01329 Note: 0xffff is not a MMC profile but a libburn invention. 01330 Read-only are the profiles 01331 0x08 "CD-ROM", 01332 0x10 "DVD-ROM", 01333 0x40 "BD-ROM", 01334 Read-only for now is this BD-R profile (testers wanted) 01335 0x42 "BD-R random recording" 01336 @param d The drive where the media is inserted. 01337 @param pno Profile Number. See also mmc5r03c.pdf, table 89 01338 @param name Profile Name (see above list, unknown profiles have empty name) 01339 @return 1 profile is valid, 0 no profile info available 01340 @since 0.3.0 01341 */ 01342 int burn_disc_get_profile(struct burn_drive *d, int *pno, char name[80]); 01343 01344 01345 /* ts A90903 : API */ 01346 /** Obtain product id and standards defined media codes. 01347 The product id is a printable string which is supposed to be the same 01348 for identical media but should vary with non-identical media. Some media 01349 do not allow to obtain such an id at all. 01350 The pair (profile_number, product_id) should be the best id to identify 01351 media with identical product specifications. 01352 The reply parameters media_code1 and media_code2 can be used with 01353 burn_guess_manufacturer() 01354 The reply parameters have to be disposed by free() when no longer needed. 01355 @param d The drive where the media is inserted. 01356 @param product_id Reply: Printable text depicting manufacturer and 01357 eventually media id. 01358 @param media_code1 Reply: The eventual manufacturer identification as read 01359 from DVD/BD media or a text "XXmYYsZZf" from CD media 01360 ATIP lead-in. 01361 @param media_code2 The eventual media id as read from DVD+/BD media or a 01362 text "XXmYYsZZf" from CD ATIP lead-out. 01363 @param book_type Book type text for DVD and BD. 01364 Caution: is NULL with CD, even if return value says ok. 01365 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 01366 bit0= do not escape " _/" (not suitable for 01367 burn_guess_manufacturer()) 01368 @return 1= ok, product_id and media codes are valid, 01369 0= no product id_available, reply parameters are NULL 01370 <0= error 01371 @since 0.7.2 01372 */ 01373 int burn_disc_get_media_id(struct burn_drive *d, 01374 char **product_id, char **media_code1, char **media_code2, 01375 char **book_type, int flag); 01376 01377 01378 /* ts A90904 */ 01379 /** Guess the name of a manufacturer by profile number, manufacturer code 01380 and media code. The profile number can be obtained by 01381 burn_disc_get_profile(), the other two parameters can be obtained as 01382 media_code1 and media_code2 by burn_get_media_product_id(). 01383 @param profile_no Profile number (submit -1 if not known) 01384 @param manuf_code Manufacturer code from media (e.g. "RICOHJPN") 01385 @param media_code Media ID code from media (e.g. "W11") 01386 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes, submit 0 01387 @return Printable text or NULL on memory shortage. 01388 If the text begins with "Unknown " then no item of the 01389 manufacturer list matched the codes. 01390 Dispose by free() when no longer needed. 01391 @since 0.7.2 01392 */ 01393 char *burn_guess_manufacturer(int profile_no, 01394 char *manuf_code, char *media_code, int flag); 01395 01396 01397 /** Tells whether a disc can be erased or not 01398 @param d The drive to inquire. 01399 @return Non-zero means erasable 01400 */ 01401 int burn_disc_erasable(struct burn_drive *d); 01402 01403 /** Returns the progress and status of a drive. 01404 @param drive The drive to query busy state for. 01405 @param p Returns the progress of the operation, NULL if you don't care 01406 @return the current status of the drive. See also burn_drive_status. 01407 */ 01408 enum burn_drive_status burn_drive_get_status(struct burn_drive *drive, 01409 struct burn_progress *p); 01410 01411 /** Creates a write_opts struct for burning to the specified drive. 01412 The returned object must later be freed with burn_write_opts_free(). 01413 @param drive The drive to write with 01414 @return The write_opts, NULL on error 01415 */ 01416 struct burn_write_opts *burn_write_opts_new(struct burn_drive *drive); 01417 01418 01419 /* ts A70901 */ 01420 /** Inquires the drive associated with a burn_write_opts object. 01421 @param opts object to inquire 01422 @return pointer to drive 01423 @since 0.4.0 01424 */ 01425 struct burn_drive *burn_write_opts_get_drive(struct burn_write_opts *opts); 01426 01427 01428 /** Frees a write_opts struct created with burn_write_opts_new 01429 @param opts write_opts to free 01430 */ 01431 void burn_write_opts_free(struct burn_write_opts *opts); 01432 01433 /** Creates a read_opts struct for reading from the specified drive 01434 must be freed with burn_read_opts_free 01435 @param drive The drive to read from 01436 @return The read_opts 01437 */ 01438 struct burn_read_opts *burn_read_opts_new(struct burn_drive *drive); 01439 01440 /** Frees a read_opts struct created with burn_read_opts_new 01441 @param opts write_opts to free 01442 */ 01443 void burn_read_opts_free(struct burn_read_opts *opts); 01444 01445 /** Erase a disc in the drive. The drive must be grabbed successfully BEFORE 01446 calling this functions. Always ensure that the drive reports a status of 01447 BURN_DISC_FULL before calling this function. An erase operation is not 01448 cancellable, as control of the operation is passed wholly to the drive and 01449 there is no way to interrupt it safely. 01450 @param drive The drive with which to erase a disc. 01451 @param fast Nonzero to do a fast erase, where only the disc's headers are 01452 erased; zero to erase the entire disc. 01453 With DVD-RW, fast blanking yields media capable only of DAO. 01454 */ 01455 void burn_disc_erase(struct burn_drive *drive, int fast); 01456 01457 01458 /* ts A70101 - A70417 */ 01459 /** Format media for use with libburn. This currently applies to DVD-RW 01460 in state "Sequential Recording" (profile 0014h) which get formatted to 01461 state "Restricted Overwrite" (profile 0013h). DVD+RW can be "de-iced" 01462 by setting bit2 of flag. DVD-RAM and BD-RE may get formatted initially 01463 or re-formatted to adjust their Defect Managment. 01464 This function usually returns while the drive is still in the process 01465 of formatting. The formatting is done, when burn_drive_get_status() 01466 returns BURN_DRIVE_IDLE. This may be immediately after return or may 01467 need several thousand seconds to occur. 01468 @param drive The drive with the disc to format. 01469 @param size The size in bytes to be used with the format command. It should 01470 be divisible by 32*1024. The effect of this parameter may 01471 depend on the media profile and on parameter flag. 01472 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes: 01473 bit0= after formatting, write the given number of zero-bytes 01474 to the media and eventually perform preliminary closing. 01475 bit1+2: size mode 01476 0 = use parameter size as far as it makes sense 01477 1 = insist in size 0 even if there is a better default known 01478 (on DVD-RAM or BD-R identical to size mode 0, 01479 i.e. they never get formatted with payload size 0) 01480 2 = without bit7: format to maximum available size 01481 with bit7 : take size from indexed format descriptor 01482 3 = without bit7: format to default size 01483 with bit7 : take size from indexed format descriptor 01484 bit3= -reserved- 01485 bit4= enforce re-format of (partly) formatted media 01486 bit5= try to disable eventual defect management 01487 bit6= try to avoid lengthy media certification 01488 bit7, bit8 to bit15 = 01489 bit7 enables MMC expert application mode (else libburn 01490 tries to choose a suitable format type): 01491 If it is set then bit8 to bit15 contain the index of 01492 the format to use. See burn_disc_get_formats(), 01493 burn_disc_get_format_descr(). 01494 Acceptable types are: 0x00, 0x01, 0x10, 0x11, 0x13, 01495 0x15, 0x26, 0x30, 0x31, 0x32. 01496 If bit7 is set, then bit4 is set automatically. 01497 bit16= enable POW on blank BD-R 01498 @since 0.3.0 01499 */ 01500 void burn_disc_format(struct burn_drive *drive, off_t size, int flag); 01501 01502 01503 /* ts A70112 */ 01504 /* @since 0.3.0 */ 01505 /** Possible formatting status values */ 01506 #define BURN_FORMAT_IS_UNFORMATTED 1 01507 #define BURN_FORMAT_IS_FORMATTED 2 01508 #define BURN_FORMAT_IS_UNKNOWN 3 01509 01510 /* ts A70112 */ 01511 /** Inquire the formatting status, the associated sizes and the number of 01512 available formats. The info is media specific and stems from MMC command 01513 23h READ FORMAT CAPACITY. See mmc5r03c.pdf 6.24 for background details. 01514 Media type can be determined via burn_disc_get_profile(). 01515 @param drive The drive with the disc to format. 01516 @param status The current formatting status of the inserted media. 01517 See BURN_FORMAT_IS_* macros. Note: "unknown" is the 01518 legal status for quick formatted, yet unwritten DVD-RW. 01519 @param size The size in bytes associated with status. 01520 unformatted: the maximum achievable size of the media 01521 formatted: the currently formatted capacity 01522 unknown: maximum capacity of drive or of media 01523 @param bl_sas Additional info "Block Length/Spare Area Size". 01524 Expected to be constantly 2048 for non-BD media. 01525 @param num_formats The number of available formats. To be used with 01526 burn_disc_get_format_descr() to obtain such a format 01527 and eventually with burn_disc_format() to select one. 01528 @return 1 reply is valid , <=0 failure 01529 @since 0.3.0 01530 */ 01531 int burn_disc_get_formats(struct burn_drive *drive, int *status, off_t *size, 01532 unsigned *bl_sas, int *num_formats); 01533 01534 /* ts A70112 */ 01535 /** Inquire parameters of an available media format. 01536 @param drive The drive with the disc to format. 01537 @param index The index of the format item. Beginning with 0 up to reply 01538 parameter from burn_disc_get_formats() : num_formats - 1 01539 @param type The format type. See mmc5r03c.pdf, 6.5, 04h FORMAT UNIT. 01540 0x00=full, 0x10=CD-RW/DVD-RW full, 0x11=CD-RW/DVD-RW grow, 01541 0x15=DVD-RW quick, 0x13=DVD-RW quick grow, 01542 0x26=DVD+RW background, 0x30=BD-RE with spare areas, 01543 0x31=BD-RE without spare areas 01544 @param size The maximum size in bytes achievable with this format. 01545 @param tdp Type Dependent Parameter. See mmc5r03c.pdf. 01546 @return 1 reply is valid , <=0 failure 01547 @since 0.3.0 01548 */ 01549 int burn_disc_get_format_descr(struct burn_drive *drive, int index, 01550 int *type, off_t *size, unsigned *tdp); 01551 01552 01553 01554 /* ts A61109 : this was and is defunct */ 01555 /** Read a disc from the drive and write it to an fd pair. The drive must be 01556 grabbed successfully BEFORE calling this function. Always ensure that the 01557 drive reports a status of BURN_DISC_FULL before calling this function. 01558 @param drive The drive from which to read a disc. 01559 @param o The options for the read operation. 01560 */ 01561 void burn_disc_read(struct burn_drive *drive, const struct burn_read_opts *o); 01562 01563 01564 01565 /* ts A70222 */ 01566 /* @since 0.3.4 */ 01567 /** The length of a rejection reasons string for burn_precheck_write() and 01568 burn_write_opts_auto_write_type() . 01569 */ 01570 #define BURN_REASONS_LEN 4096 01571 01572 01573 /* ts A70219 */ 01574 /** Examines a completed setup for burn_disc_write() whether it is permissible 01575 with drive and media. This function is called by burn_disc_write() but 01576 an application might be interested in this check in advance. 01577 @param o The options for the writing operation. 01578 @param disc The descrition of the disc to be created 01579 @param reasons Eventually returns a list of rejection reason statements 01580 @param silent 1= do not issue error messages , 0= report problems 01581 @return 1 ok, -1= no recordable media detected, 0= other failure 01582 @since 0.3.4 01583 */ 01584 int burn_precheck_write(struct burn_write_opts *o, struct burn_disc *disc, 01585 char reasons[BURN_REASONS_LEN], int silent); 01586 01587 01588 /** Write a disc in the drive. The drive must be grabbed successfully before 01589 calling this function. Always ensure that the drive reports a status of 01590 BURN_DISC_BLANK ot BURN_DISC_APPENDABLE before calling this function. 01591 Note: write_type BURN_WRITE_SAO is currently not capable of writing a mix 01592 of data and audio tracks. You must use BURN_WRITE_TAO for such sessions. 01593 To be set by burn_write_opts_set_write_type(). 01594 Note: This function is not suitable for overwriting data in the middle of 01595 a valid data area because it is allowed to append trailing data. 01596 For exact random access overwriting use burn_random_access_write(). 01597 @param o The options for the writing operation. 01598 @param disc The struct burn_disc * that described the disc to be created 01599 */ 01600 void burn_disc_write(struct burn_write_opts *o, struct burn_disc *disc); 01601 01602 01603 /* ts A90227 */ 01604 /** Control stream recording during the write run and eventually set the start 01605 LBA for stream recording. 01606 Stream recording is set from struct burn_write_opts when the write run 01607 gets started. See burn_write_opts_set_stream_recording(). 01608 The call described here can be used later to override this setting and 01609 to program automatic switching at a given LBA. It also affects subsequent 01610 calls to burn_random_access_write(). 01611 @param drive The drive which performs the write operation. 01612 @param recmode -1= disable stream recording 01613 0= leave setting as is 01614 1= enable stream recording 01615 @param start The LBA where actual stream recording shall start. 01616 (0 means unconditional stream recording) 01617 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0). 01618 @return 1=success , <=0 failure 01619 @since 0.6.4 01620 */ 01621 int burn_drive_set_stream_recording(struct burn_drive *drive, int recmode, 01622 int start, int flag); 01623 01624 /** Cancel an operation on a drive. 01625 This will only work when the drive's busy state is BURN_DRIVE_READING or 01626 BURN_DRIVE_WRITING. 01627 @param drive The drive on which to cancel the current operation. 01628 */ 01629 void burn_drive_cancel(struct burn_drive *drive); 01630 01631 01632 /* ts A61223 */ 01633 /** Inquire whether the most recent asynchronous media job was successful. 01634 This applies to burn_disc_erase(), burn_disc_format(), burn_disc_write(). 01635 Reasons for non-success may be: rejection of burn parameters, abort due to 01636 fatal errors during write, blank or format, a call to burn_drive_cancel() 01637 by the application thread. 01638 @param d The drive to inquire. 01639 @return 1=burn seems to have went well, 0=burn failed 01640 @since 0.2.6 01641 */ 01642 int burn_drive_wrote_well(struct burn_drive *d); 01643 01644 01645 /** Convert a minute-second-frame (MSF) value to sector count 01646 @param m Minute component 01647 @param s Second component 01648 @param f Frame component 01649 @return The sector count 01650 */ 01651 int burn_msf_to_sectors(int m, int s, int f); 01652 01653 /** Convert a sector count to minute-second-frame (MSF) 01654 @param sectors The sector count 01655 @param m Returns the minute component 01656 @param s Returns the second component 01657 @param f Returns the frame component 01658 */ 01659 void burn_sectors_to_msf(int sectors, int *m, int *s, int *f); 01660 01661 /** Convert a minute-second-frame (MSF) value to an lba 01662 @param m Minute component 01663 @param s Second component 01664 @param f Frame component 01665 @return The lba 01666 */ 01667 int burn_msf_to_lba(int m, int s, int f); 01668 01669 /** Convert an lba to minute-second-frame (MSF) 01670 @param lba The lba 01671 @param m Returns the minute component 01672 @param s Returns the second component 01673 @param f Returns the frame component 01674 */ 01675 void burn_lba_to_msf(int lba, int *m, int *s, int *f); 01676 01677 /** Create a new disc 01678 @return Pointer to a burn_disc object or NULL on failure. 01679 */ 01680 struct burn_disc *burn_disc_create(void); 01681 01682 /** Delete disc and decrease the reference count on all its sessions 01683 @param d The disc to be freed 01684 */ 01685 void burn_disc_free(struct burn_disc *d); 01686 01687 /** Create a new session 01688 @return Pointer to a burn_session object or NULL on failure. 01689 */ 01690 struct burn_session *burn_session_create(void); 01691 01692 /** Free a session (and decrease reference count on all tracks inside) 01693 @param s Session to be freed 01694 */ 01695 void burn_session_free(struct burn_session *s); 01696 01697 /** Add a session to a disc at a specific position, increasing the 01698 sessions's reference count. 01699 @param d Disc to add the session to 01700 @param s Session to add to the disc 01701 @param pos position to add at (BURN_POS_END is "at the end") 01702 @return 0 for failure, 1 for success 01703 */ 01704 int burn_disc_add_session(struct burn_disc *d, struct burn_session *s, 01705 unsigned int pos); 01706 01707 /** Remove a session from a disc 01708 @param d Disc to remove session from 01709 @param s Session pointer to find and remove 01710 */ 01711 int burn_disc_remove_session(struct burn_disc *d, struct burn_session *s); 01712 01713 01714 /** Create a track (for TAO recording, or to put in a session) */ 01715 struct burn_track *burn_track_create(void); 01716 01717 /** Free a track 01718 @param t Track to free 01719 */ 01720 void burn_track_free(struct burn_track *t); 01721 01722 /** Add a track to a session at specified position 01723 @param s Session to add to 01724 @param t Track to insert in session 01725 @param pos position to add at (BURN_POS_END is "at the end") 01726 @return 0 for failure, 1 for success 01727 */ 01728 int burn_session_add_track(struct burn_session *s, struct burn_track *t, 01729 unsigned int pos); 01730 01731 /** Remove a track from a session 01732 @param s Session to remove track from 01733 @param t Track pointer to find and remove 01734 @return 0 for failure, 1 for success 01735 */ 01736 int burn_session_remove_track(struct burn_session *s, struct burn_track *t); 01737 01738 01739 /** Define the data in a track 01740 @param t the track to define 01741 @param offset The lib will write this many 0s before start of data 01742 @param tail The number of extra 0s to write after data 01743 @param pad 1 means the lib should pad the last sector with 0s if the 01744 track isn't exactly sector sized. (otherwise the lib will 01745 begin reading from the next track) 01746 @param mode data format (bitfield) 01747 */ 01748 void burn_track_define_data(struct burn_track *t, int offset, int tail, 01749 int pad, int mode); 01750 01751 01752 /* ts A61024 */ 01753 /** Define whether a track shall swap bytes of its input stream. 01754 @param t The track to change 01755 @param swap_source_bytes 0=do not swap, 1=swap byte pairs 01756 @return 1=success , 0=unacceptable value 01757 @since 0.2.6 01758 */ 01759 int burn_track_set_byte_swap(struct burn_track *t, int swap_source_bytes); 01760 01761 01762 /* ts A90910 */ 01763 /** Activates CD XA compatibility modes. 01764 libburn currently writes data only in CD mode 1. Some programs insist in 01765 sending data with additional management bytes. These bytes have to be 01766 stripped in order to make the input suitable for BURN_MODE1. 01767 @param t The track to manipulate 01768 @param value 0= no conversion 01769 1= strip 8 byte sector headers of CD-ROM XA mode 2 form 1 01770 see MMC-5 4.2.3.8.5.3 Block Format for Mode 2 form 1 Data 01771 all other values are reserved 01772 @return 1=success , 0=unacceptable value 01773 @since 0.7.2 01774 */ 01775 int burn_track_set_cdxa_conv(struct burn_track *t, int value); 01776 01777 01778 /** Set the ISRC details for a track 01779 @param t The track to change 01780 @param country the 2 char country code. Each character must be 01781 only numbers or letters. 01782 @param owner 3 char owner code. Each character must be only numbers 01783 or letters. 01784 @param year 2 digit year. A number in 0-99 (Yep, not Y2K friendly). 01785 @param serial 5 digit serial number. A number in 0-99999. 01786 */ 01787 void burn_track_set_isrc(struct burn_track *t, char *country, char *owner, 01788 unsigned char year, unsigned int serial); 01789 01790 /** Disable ISRC parameters for a track 01791 @param t The track to change 01792 */ 01793 void burn_track_clear_isrc(struct burn_track *t); 01794 01795 /** Hide the first track in the "pre gap" of the disc 01796 @param s session to change 01797 @param onoff 1 to enable hiding, 0 to disable 01798 */ 01799 void burn_session_hide_first_track(struct burn_session *s, int onoff); 01800 01801 /** Get the drive's disc struct - free when done 01802 @param d drive to query 01803 @return the disc struct or NULL on failure 01804 */ 01805 struct burn_disc *burn_drive_get_disc(struct burn_drive *d); 01806 01807 /** Set the track's data source 01808 @param t The track to set the data source for 01809 @param s The data source to use for the contents of the track 01810 @return An error code stating if the source is ready for use for 01811 writing the track, or if an error occured 01812 01813 */ 01814 enum burn_source_status burn_track_set_source(struct burn_track *t, 01815 struct burn_source *s); 01816 01817 01818 /* ts A70218 */ 01819 /** Set a default track size to be used only if the track turns out to be of 01820 unpredictable length and if the effective write type demands a fixed size. 01821 This can be useful to enable write types CD SAO or DVD DAO together with 01822 a track source like stdin. If the track source delivers fewer bytes than 01823 announced then the track will be padded up with zeros. 01824 @param t The track to change 01825 @param size The size to set 01826 @return 0=failure 1=sucess 01827 @since 0.3.4 01828 */ 01829 int burn_track_set_default_size(struct burn_track *t, off_t size); 01830 01831 /** Free a burn_source (decrease its refcount and maybe free it) 01832 @param s Source to free 01833 */ 01834 void burn_source_free(struct burn_source *s); 01835 01836 /** Creates a data source for an image file (and maybe subcode file) 01837 @param path The file address for the main channel payload. 01838 @param subpath Eventual address for subchannel data. Only used in exotic 01839 raw write modes. Submit NULL for normal tasks. 01840 @return Pointer to a burn_source object, NULL indicates failure 01841 */ 01842 struct burn_source *burn_file_source_new(const char *path, 01843 const char *subpath); 01844 01845 01846 /* ts A91122 : An interface to open(O_DIRECT) or similar OS tricks. */ 01847 01848 /** Opens a file with eventual acceleration preparations which may depend 01849 on the operating system and on compile time options of libburn. 01850 You may use this call instead of open(2) for opening file descriptors 01851 which shall be handed to burn_fd_source_new(). 01852 This should only be done for tracks with BURN_BLOCK_MODE1 (2048 bytes 01853 per block). 01854 01855 If you use this call then you MUST allocate the buffers which you use 01856 with read(2) by call burn_os_alloc_buffer(). Read sizes MUST be a multiple 01857 of a safe buffer amount. Else you risk that track data get altered during 01858 transmission. 01859 burn_disk_write() will allocate a suitable read/write buffer for its own 01860 operations. A fifo created by burn_fifo_source_new() will allocate 01861 suitable memory for its buffer if called with flag bit0 and a multiple 01862 of a safe buffer amount. 01863 @param path The file address to open 01864 @param open_flags The flags as of man 2 open. Normally just O_RDONLY. 01865 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0). 01866 @return A file descriptor as of open(2). Finally to be disposed 01867 by close(2). 01868 -1 indicates failure. 01869 @since 0.7.4 01870 */ 01871 int burn_os_open_track_src(char *path, int open_flags, int flag); 01872 01873 /** Allocate a memory area that is suitable for reading with a file descriptor 01874 opened by burn_os_open_track_src(). 01875 @param amount Number of bytes to allocate. This should be a multiple 01876 of the operating system's i/o block size. 32 KB is 01877 guaranteed by libburn to be safe. 01878 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0). 01879 @return The address of the allocated memory, or NULL on failure. 01880 A non-NULL return value has finally to be disposed via 01881 burn_os_free_buffer(). 01882 @since 0.7.4 01883 */ 01884 void *burn_os_alloc_buffer(size_t amount, int flag); 01885 01886 /** Dispose a memory area which was obtained by burn_os_alloc_buffer(), 01887 @param buffer Memory address to be freed. 01888 @param amount The number of bytes which was allocated at that 01889 address. 01890 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0). 01891 @return 1 success , <=0 failure 01892 @since 0.7.4 01893 */ 01894 int burn_os_free_buffer(void *buffer, size_t amount, int flag); 01895 01896 01897 /** Creates a data source for an image file (a track) from an open 01898 readable filedescriptor, an eventually open readable subcodes file 01899 descriptor and eventually a fixed size in bytes. 01900 @param datafd The source of data. 01901 @param subfd The eventual source of subchannel data. Only used in exotic 01902 raw write modes. Submit -1 for normal tasks. 01903 @param size The eventual fixed size of eventually both fds. 01904 If this value is 0, the size will be determined from datafd. 01905 @return Pointer to a burn_source object, NULL indicates failure 01906 */ 01907 struct burn_source *burn_fd_source_new(int datafd, int subfd, off_t size); 01908 01909 01910 /* ts B00922 */ 01911 /** Creates an offset source which shall provide a byte interval of a stream 01912 to its consumer. It is supposed to be chain-linked with other offset 01913 sources which serve neighboring consumers. The chronological sequence 01914 of consumers and the sequence of offset sources must match. The intervals 01915 of the sources must not overlap. 01916 01917 A chain of these burn_source objects may be used to feed multiple tracks 01918 from one single stream of input bytes. 01919 Each of the offset sources will skip the bytes up to its start address and 01920 provide the prescribed number of bytes to the track. Skipping takes into 01921 respect the bytes which have been processed by eventual predecessors in the 01922 chain. 01923 Important: It is not allowed to free an offset source before its successor 01924 has ended its work. Best is to keep them all until all tracks 01925 are done. 01926 01927 @param inp The burn_source object from which to read stream data. 01928 E.g. created by burn_file_source_new(). 01929 @param prev The eventual offset source object which shall read data from 01930 inp before the new offset source will begin its own work. 01931 This must either be a result of burn_offst_source_new() or 01932 it must be NULL. 01933 @param start The byte address where to start reading bytes for the 01934 consumer. inp bytes may get skipped to reach this address. 01935 @param size The number of bytes to be delivered to the consumer. 01936 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0). 01937 @return Pointer to a burn_source object, later to be freed by 01938 burn_source_free(). NULL indicates failure. 01939 @since 0.8.8 01940 */ 01941 struct burn_source *burn_offst_source_new( 01942 struct burn_source *inp, struct burn_source *prev, 01943 off_t start, off_t size, int flag); 01944 01945 /* ts A70930 */ 01946 /** Creates a fifo which acts as proxy for an already existing data source. 01947 The fifo provides a ring buffer which shall smoothen the data stream 01948 between burn_source and writer thread. Each fifo serves only for one 01949 data source and gets attached to one track as its only data source 01950 by burn_track_set_source(). 01951 A fifo starts its life in "standby" mode with no buffer space allocated. 01952 As soon as its track requires bytes, the fifo establishes a worker thread 01953 and allocates its buffer. After input has ended and all buffer content is 01954 consumed, the buffer space gets freed and the worker thread ends. 01955 This happens asynchronously. So expect two buffers and worker threads to 01956 exist for a short time between tracks. Be modest in your size demands if 01957 multiple tracks are to be expected. 01958 @param inp The burn_source for which the fifo shall act as proxy. 01959 It can be disposed by burn_source_free() immediately 01960 after this call. 01961 @param chunksize The size in bytes of a chunk. 01962 Use 2048 for sources suitable for BURN_BLOCK_MODE1, 01963 2352 for sources which deliver for BURN_BLOCK_AUDIO, 01964 2056 for sources which shall get treated by 01965 burn_track_set_cdxa_conv(track, 1). 01966 Some variations of burn_source might work only with 01967 a particular chunksize. E.g. libisofs demands 2048. 01968 @param chunks The number of chunks to be allocated in ring buffer. 01969 This value must be >= 2. 01970 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes: 01971 bit0= The read method of inp is capable of delivering 01972 arbitrary amounts of data per call. Not only one 01973 sector. 01974 Suitable for inp from burn_file_source_new() 01975 and burn_fd_source_new() if not the fd has 01976 exotic limitations on read size. 01977 You MUST use this on inp which uses an fd opened 01978 with burn_os_open_track_src(). 01979 Better do not use with other inp types. 01980 @since 0.7.4 01981 @return A pointer to the newly created burn_source. 01982 Later both burn_sources, inp and the returned fifo, have 01983 to be disposed by calling burn_source_free() for each. 01984 inp can be freed immediately, the returned fifo may be 01985 kept as handle for burn_fifo_inquire_status(). 01986 @since 0.4.0 01987 */ 01988 struct burn_source *burn_fifo_source_new(struct burn_source *inp, 01989 int chunksize, int chunks, int flag); 01990 01991 /* ts A71003 */ 01992 /** Inquires state and fill parameters of a fifo burn_source which was created 01993 by burn_fifo_source_new() . Do not use with other burn_source variants. 01994 @param fifo The fifo object to inquire 01995 @param size The total size of the fifo 01996 @param free_bytes The current free capacity of the fifo 01997 @param status_text Returns a pointer to a constant text, see below 01998 @return <0 reply invalid, >=0 fifo status code: 01999 bit0+1=input status, bit2=consumption status, i.e: 02000 0="standby" : data processing not started yet 02001 1="active" : input and consumption are active 02002 2="ending" : input has ended without error 02003 3="failing" : input had error and ended, 02004 4="unused" : ( consumption has ended before processing start ) 02005 5="abandoned" : consumption has ended prematurely 02006 6="ended" : consumption has ended without input error 02007 7="aborted" : consumption has ended after input error 02008 @since 0.4.0 02009 */ 02010 int burn_fifo_inquire_status(struct burn_source *fifo, int *size, 02011 int *free_bytes, char **status_text); 02012 02013 /* ts A91125 */ 02014 /** Inquire various counters which reflect the fifo operation. 02015 @param fifo The fifo object to inquire 02016 @param total_min_fill The minimum number of bytes in the fifo. Beginning 02017 from the moment when fifo consumption is enabled. 02018 @param interval_min_fill The minimum byte number beginning from the moment 02019 when fifo consumption is enabled or from the 02020 most recent moment when burn_fifo_next_interval() 02021 was called. 02022 @param put_counter The number of data transactions into the fifo. 02023 @param get_counter The number of data transactions out of the fifo. 02024 @param empty_counter The number of times the fifo was empty. 02025 @param full_counter The number of times the fifo was full. 02026 @since 0.7.4 02027 */ 02028 void burn_fifo_get_statistics(struct burn_source *fifo, 02029 int *total_min_fill, int *interval_min_fill, 02030 int *put_counter, int *get_counter, 02031 int *empty_counter, int *full_counter); 02032 02033 /* ts A91125 */ 02034 /** Inquire the fifo minimum fill counter for intervals and reset that counter. 02035 @param fifo The fifo object to inquire 02036 @param interval_min_fill The minimum number of bytes in the fifo. Beginning 02037 from the moment when fifo consumption is enabled 02038 or from the most recent moment when 02039 burn_fifo_next_interval() was called. 02040 @since 0.7.4 02041 */ 02042 void burn_fifo_next_interval(struct burn_source *fifo, int *interval_min_fill); 02043 02044 /* ts A80713 */ 02045 /** Obtain a preview of the first input data of a fifo which was created 02046 by burn_fifo_source_new(). The data will later be delivered normally to 02047 the consumer track of the fifo. 02048 bufsize may not be larger than the fifo size (chunk_size * chunks) - 32k. 02049 This call will succeed only if data consumption by the track has not 02050 started yet, i.e. best before the call to burn_disc_write(). 02051 It will start the worker thread of the fifo with the expectable side 02052 effects on the external data source. Then it waits either until enough 02053 data have arrived or until it becomes clear that this will not happen. 02054 The call may be repeated with increased bufsize. It will always yield 02055 the bytes beginning from the first one in the fifo. 02056 @param fifo The fifo object to inquire resp. start 02057 @param buf Pointer to memory of at least bufsize bytes where to 02058 deliver the peeked data. 02059 @param bufsize Number of bytes to peek from the start of the fifo data 02060 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0). 02061 @return <0 on severe error, 0 if not enough data, 1 if bufsize bytes read 02062 @since 0.5.0 02063 */ 02064 int burn_fifo_peek_data(struct burn_source *fifo, char *buf, int bufsize, 02065 int flag); 02066 02067 /* ts A91125 */ 02068 /** Start the fifo worker thread and wait either until the requested number 02069 of bytes have arrived or until it becomes clear that this will not happen. 02070 Filling will go on asynchronously after burn_fifo_fill() returned. 02071 This call and burn_fifo_peek_data() do not disturb each other. 02072 @param fifo The fifo object to start 02073 @param fill Number of bytes desired. Expect to get return 1 if 02074 at least fifo size - 32k were read. 02075 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes. 02076 bit0= fill fifo to maximum size 02077 @return <0 on severe error, 0 if not enough data, 02078 1 if desired amount or fifo full 02079 @since 0.7.4 02080 */ 02081 int burn_fifo_fill(struct burn_source *fifo, int fill, int flag); 02082 02083 02084 /* ts A70328 */ 02085 /** Sets a fixed track size after the data source object has already been 02086 created. 02087 @param t The track to operate on 02088 @param size the number of bytes to use as track size 02089 @return <=0 indicates failure , >0 success 02090 @since 0.3.6 02091 */ 02092 int burn_track_set_size(struct burn_track *t, off_t size); 02093 02094 02095 /** Tells how long a track will be on disc 02096 >>> NOTE: Not reliable with tracks of undefined length 02097 */ 02098 int burn_track_get_sectors(struct burn_track *); 02099 02100 02101 /* ts A61101 */ 02102 /** Tells how many source bytes have been read and how many data bytes have 02103 been written by the track during burn. 02104 @param t The track to inquire 02105 @param read_bytes Number of bytes read from the track source 02106 @param written_bytes Number of bytes written to track 02107 @since 0.2.6 02108 */ 02109 int burn_track_get_counters(struct burn_track *t, 02110 off_t *read_bytes, off_t *written_bytes); 02111 02112 02113 /** Sets drive read and write speed 02114 Note: "k" is 1000, not 1024. 1xCD = 176.4 k/s, 1xDVD = 1385 k/s. 02115 Fractional speeds should be rounded up. Like 4xCD = 706. 02116 @param d The drive to set speed for 02117 @param read Read speed in k/s (0 is max, -1 is min). 02118 @param write Write speed in k/s (0 is max, -1 is min). 02119 */ 02120 void burn_drive_set_speed(struct burn_drive *d, int read, int write); 02121 02122 02123 /* ts A70711 */ 02124 /** Controls the behavior with writing when the drive buffer is suspected to 02125 be full. To check and wait for enough free buffer space before writing 02126 will move the task of waiting from the operating system's device driver 02127 to libburn. While writing is going on and waiting is enabled, any write 02128 operation will be checked whether it will fill the drive buffer up to 02129 more than max_percent. If so, then waiting will happen until the buffer 02130 fill is predicted with at most min_percent. 02131 Thus: if min_percent < max_percent then transfer rate will oscillate. 02132 This may allow the driver to operate on other devices, e.g. a disk from 02133 which to read the input for writing. On the other hand, this checking might 02134 reduce maximum throughput to the drive or even get misled by faulty buffer 02135 fill replies from the drive. 02136 If a setting parameter is < 0, then this setting will stay unchanged 02137 by the call. 02138 Known burner or media specific pitfalls: 02139 To have max_percent larger than the burner's best reported buffer fill has 02140 the same effect as min_percent==max_percent. Some burners do not report 02141 their full buffer with all media types. Some are not suitable because 02142 they report their buffer fill with delay. 02143 @param d The drive to control 02144 @param enable 0= disable , 1= enable waiting , (-1 = do not change setting) 02145 @param min_usec Shortest possible sleeping period (given in micro seconds) 02146 @param max_usec Longest possible sleeping period (given in micro seconds) 02147 @param timeout_sec If a single write has to wait longer than this number 02148 of seconds, then waiting gets disabled and mindless 02149 writing starts. A value of 0 disables this timeout. 02150 @param min_percent Minimum of desired buffer oscillation: 25 to 100 02151 @param max_percent Maximum of desired buffer oscillation: 25 to 100 02152 @return 1=success , 0=failure 02153 @since 0.3.8 02154 */ 02155 int burn_drive_set_buffer_waiting(struct burn_drive *d, int enable, 02156 int min_usec, int max_usec, int timeout_sec, 02157 int min_percent, int max_percent); 02158 02159 02160 /* these are for my debugging, they will disappear */ 02161 void burn_structure_print_disc(struct burn_disc *d); 02162 void burn_structure_print_session(struct burn_session *s); 02163 void burn_structure_print_track(struct burn_track *t); 02164 02165 /** Sets the write type for the write_opts struct. 02166 Note: write_type BURN_WRITE_SAO is currently not capable of writing a mix 02167 of data and audio tracks. You must use BURN_WRITE_TAO for such sessions. 02168 @param opts The write opts to change 02169 @param write_type The write type to use 02170 @param block_type The block type to use 02171 @return Returns 1 on success and 0 on failure. 02172 */ 02173 int burn_write_opts_set_write_type(struct burn_write_opts *opts, 02174 enum burn_write_types write_type, 02175 int block_type); 02176 02177 02178 /* ts A70207 */ 02179 /** As an alternative to burn_write_opts_set_write_type() this function tries 02180 to find a suitable write type and block type for a given write job 02181 described by opts and disc. To be used after all other setups have been 02182 made, i.e. immediately before burn_disc_write(). 02183 @param opts The nearly complete write opts to change 02184 @param disc The already composed session and track model 02185 @param reasons This text string collects reasons for decision resp. failure 02186 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes: 02187 bit0= do not choose type but check the one that is already set 02188 bit1= do not issue error messages via burn_msgs queue 02189 (is automatically set with bit0) 02190 @return Chosen write type. BURN_WRITE_NONE on failure. 02191 @since 0.3.2 02192 */ 02193 enum burn_write_types burn_write_opts_auto_write_type( 02194 struct burn_write_opts *opts, struct burn_disc *disc, 02195 char reasons[BURN_REASONS_LEN], int flag); 02196 02197 02198 /** Supplies toc entries for writing - not normally required for cd mastering 02199 @param opts The write opts to change 02200 @param count The number of entries 02201 @param toc_entries 02202 */ 02203 void burn_write_opts_set_toc_entries(struct burn_write_opts *opts, 02204 int count, 02205 struct burn_toc_entry *toc_entries); 02206 02207 /** Sets the session format for a disc 02208 @param opts The write opts to change 02209 @param format The session format to set 02210 */ 02211 void burn_write_opts_set_format(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int format); 02212 02213 /** Sets the simulate value for the write_opts struct . 02214 This corresponds to the Test Write bit in MMC mode page 05h. Several media 02215 types do not support this. See struct burn_multi_caps.might_simulate for 02216 actual availability of this feature. 02217 If the media is suitable, the drive will perform burn_write_disc() as a 02218 simulation instead of effective write operations. This means that the 02219 media content and burn_disc_get_status() stay unchanged. 02220 Note: With stdio-drives, the target file gets eventually created, opened, 02221 lseeked, and closed, but not written. So there are effects on it. 02222 Warning: Call burn_random_access_write() will never do simulation because 02223 it does not get any burn_write_opts. 02224 @param opts The write opts to change 02225 @param sim Non-zero enables simulation, 0 enables real writing 02226 @return Returns 1 on success and 0 on failure. 02227 */ 02228 int burn_write_opts_set_simulate(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int sim); 02229 02230 /** Controls buffer underrun prevention 02231 @param opts The write opts to change 02232 @param underrun_proof if non-zero, buffer underrun protection is enabled 02233 @return Returns 1 on success and 0 on failure. 02234 */ 02235 int burn_write_opts_set_underrun_proof(struct burn_write_opts *opts, 02236 int underrun_proof); 02237 02238 /** Sets whether to use opc or not with the write_opts struct 02239 @param opts The write opts to change 02240 @param opc If non-zero, optical power calibration will be performed at 02241 start of burn 02242 02243 */ 02244 void burn_write_opts_set_perform_opc(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int opc); 02245 02246 void burn_write_opts_set_has_mediacatalog(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int has_mediacatalog); 02247 02248 void burn_write_opts_set_mediacatalog(struct burn_write_opts *opts, unsigned char mediacatalog[13]); 02249 02250 02251 /* ts A61106 */ 02252 /** Sets the multi flag which eventually marks the emerging session as not 02253 being the last one and thus creating a BURN_DISC_APPENDABLE media. 02254 Note: DVD-R[W] in write mode BURN_WRITE_SAO are not capable of this. 02255 DVD-R DL are not capable of this at all. 02256 libburn will refuse to write if burn_write_opts_set_multi() is 02257 enabled under such conditions. 02258 @param opts The option object to be manipulated 02259 @param multi 1=media will be appendable, 0=media will be closed (default) 02260 @since 0.2.6 02261 */ 02262 void burn_write_opts_set_multi(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int multi); 02263 02264 02265 /* ts A61222 */ 02266 /** Sets a start address for writing to media and write modes which allow to 02267 choose this address at all (for now: DVD+RW, DVD-RAM, formatted DVD-RW). 02268 now). The address is given in bytes. If it is not -1 then a write run 02269 will fail if choice of start address is not supported or if the block 02270 alignment of the address is not suitable for media and write mode. 02271 Alignment to 32 kB blocks is supposed to be safe with DVD media. 02272 Call burn_disc_get_multi_caps() can obtain the necessary media info. See 02273 resulting struct burn_multi_caps elements .start_adr , .start_alignment , 02274 .start_range_low , .start_range_high . 02275 @param opts The write opts to change 02276 @param value The address in bytes (-1 = start at default address) 02277 @since 0.3.0 02278 */ 02279 void burn_write_opts_set_start_byte(struct burn_write_opts *opts, off_t value); 02280 02281 02282 /* ts A70213 */ 02283 /** Caution: still immature and likely to change. Problems arose with 02284 sequential DVD-RW on one drive. 02285 02286 Controls whether the whole available space of the media shall be filled up 02287 by the last track of the last session. 02288 @param opts The write opts to change 02289 @param fill_up_media If 1 : fill up by last track, if 0 = do not fill up 02290 @since 0.3.4 02291 */ 02292 void burn_write_opts_set_fillup(struct burn_write_opts *opts, 02293 int fill_up_media); 02294 02295 02296 /* ts A70303 */ 02297 /** Eventually makes libburn ignore the failure of some conformance checks: 02298 - the check whether CD write+block type is supported by the drive 02299 - the check whether the media profile supports simulated burning 02300 @param opts The write opts to change 02301 @param use_force 1=ignore above checks, 0=refuse work on failed check 02302 @since 0.3.4 02303 */ 02304 void burn_write_opts_set_force(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int use_force); 02305 02306 02307 /* ts A80412 */ 02308 /** Eventually makes use of the more modern write command AAh WRITE12 and 02309 sets the Streaming bit. With DVD-RAM and BD this can override the 02310 traditional slowdown to half nominal speed. But if it speeds up writing 02311 then it also disables error management and correction. Weigh your 02312 priorities. This affects the write operations of burn_disc_write() 02313 and subsequent calls of burn_random_access_write(). 02314 @param opts The write opts to change 02315 @param value 0=use 2Ah WRITE10, 1=use AAh WRITE12 with Streaming bit 02316 @since 0.6.4: 02317 >=16 use WRITE12 but not before the LBA given by value 02318 @since 0.4.6 02319 */ 02320 void burn_write_opts_set_stream_recording(struct burn_write_opts *opts, 02321 int value); 02322 02323 /* ts A91115 */ 02324 /** Overrides the write chunk size for DVD and BD media which is normally 02325 determined according to media type and setting of stream recording. 02326 A chunk size of 64 KB may improve throughput with bus systems which show 02327 latency problems. 02328 @param opts The write opts to change 02329 @param obs Number of bytes which shall be sent by a single write command. 02330 0 means automatic size, 32768 and 65336 are the only other 02331 accepted sizes for now. 02332 @since 0.7.4 02333 */ 02334 void burn_write_opts_set_dvd_obs(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int obs); 02335 02336 /* ts A91115 */ 02337 /** Sets the rythm by which stdio pseudo drives force their output data to 02338 be consumed by the receiving storage device. This forcing keeps the memory 02339 from being clogged with lots of pending data for slow devices. 02340 @param opts The write opts to change 02341 @param rythm Number of 2KB output blocks after which fsync(2) is 02342 performed. -1 means no fsync(), 0 means default, 02343 elsewise the value must be >= 32. 02344 Default is currently 8192 = 16 MB. 02345 @since 0.7.4 02346 */ 02347 void burn_write_opts_set_stdio_fsync(struct burn_write_opts *opts, int rythm); 02348 02349 02350 /** Sets whether to read in raw mode or not 02351 @param opts The read opts to change 02352 @param raw_mode If non-zero, reading will be done in raw mode, so that everything in the data tracks on the 02353 disc is read, including headers. 02354 */ 02355 void burn_read_opts_set_raw(struct burn_read_opts *opts, int raw_mode); 02356 02357 /** Sets whether to report c2 errors or not 02358 @param opts The read opts to change 02359 @param c2errors If non-zero, report c2 errors. 02360 */ 02361 void burn_read_opts_set_c2errors(struct burn_read_opts *opts, int c2errors); 02362 02363 /** Sets whether to read subcodes from audio tracks or not 02364 @param opts The read opts to change 02365 @param subcodes_audio If non-zero, read subcodes from audio tracks on the disc. 02366 */ 02367 void burn_read_opts_read_subcodes_audio(struct burn_read_opts *opts, 02368 int subcodes_audio); 02369 02370 /** Sets whether to read subcodes from data tracks or not 02371 @param opts The read opts to change 02372 @param subcodes_data If non-zero, read subcodes from data tracks on the disc. 02373 */ 02374 void burn_read_opts_read_subcodes_data(struct burn_read_opts *opts, 02375 int subcodes_data); 02376 02377 /** Sets whether to recover errors if possible 02378 @param opts The read opts to change 02379 @param hardware_error_recovery If non-zero, attempt to recover errors if possible. 02380 */ 02381 void burn_read_opts_set_hardware_error_recovery(struct burn_read_opts *opts, 02382 int hardware_error_recovery); 02383 02384 /** Sets whether to report recovered errors or not 02385 @param opts The read opts to change 02386 @param report_recovered_errors If non-zero, recovered errors will be reported. 02387 */ 02388 void burn_read_opts_report_recovered_errors(struct burn_read_opts *opts, 02389 int report_recovered_errors); 02390 02391 /** Sets whether blocks with unrecoverable errors should be read or not 02392 @param opts The read opts to change 02393 @param transfer_damaged_blocks If non-zero, blocks with unrecoverable errors will still be read. 02394 */ 02395 void burn_read_opts_transfer_damaged_blocks(struct burn_read_opts *opts, 02396 int transfer_damaged_blocks); 02397 02398 /** Sets the number of retries to attempt when trying to correct an error 02399 @param opts The read opts to change 02400 @param hardware_error_retries The number of retries to attempt when correcting an error. 02401 */ 02402 void burn_read_opts_set_hardware_error_retries(struct burn_read_opts *opts, 02403 unsigned char hardware_error_retries); 02404 02405 02406 /* ts A90815 */ 02407 /** Gets the list of profile codes supported by the drive. 02408 Profiles depict the feature sets which constitute media types. For 02409 known profile codes and names see burn_disc_get_profile(). 02410 @param d is the drive to query 02411 @param num_profiles returns the number of supported profiles 02412 @param profiles returns the profile codes 02413 @param is_current returns the status of the corresponding profile code: 02414 1= current, i.e. the matching media is loaded 02415 0= not current, i.e. the matching media is not loaded 02416 @return always 1 for now 02417 @since 0.7.0 02418 */ 02419 int burn_drive_get_all_profiles(struct burn_drive *d, int *num_profiles, 02420 int profiles[64], char is_current[64]); 02421 02422 02423 /* ts A90815 */ 02424 /** Obtains the profile name associated with a profile code. 02425 @param profile_code the profile code to be translated 02426 @param name returns the profile name (e.g. "DVD+RW") 02427 @return 1= known profile code , 0= unknown profile code 02428 @since 0.7.0 02429 */ 02430 int burn_obtain_profile_name(int profile_code, char name[80]); 02431 02432 02433 /** Gets the maximum write speed for a drive and eventually loaded media. 02434 The return value might change by the media type of already loaded media, 02435 again by call burn_drive_grab() and again by call burn_disc_read_atip(). 02436 @param d Drive to query 02437 @return Maximum write speed in K/s 02438 */ 02439 int burn_drive_get_write_speed(struct burn_drive *d); 02440 02441 02442 /* ts A61021 */ 02443 /** Gets the minimum write speed for a drive and eventually loaded media. 02444 The return value might change by the media type of already loaded media, 02445 again by call burn_drive_grab() and again by call burn_disc_read_atip(). 02446 @param d Drive to query 02447 @return Minimum write speed in K/s 02448 @since 0.2.6 02449 */ 02450 int burn_drive_get_min_write_speed(struct burn_drive *d); 02451 02452 02453 /** Gets the maximum read speed for a drive 02454 @param d Drive to query 02455 @return Maximum read speed in K/s 02456 */ 02457 int burn_drive_get_read_speed(struct burn_drive *d); 02458 02459 02460 /* ts A61226 */ 02461 /** Obtain a copy of the current speed descriptor list. The drive's list gets 02462 updated on various occasions such as burn_drive_grab() but the copy 02463 obtained here stays untouched. It has to be disposed via 02464 burn_drive_free_speedlist() when it is not longer needed. Speeds 02465 may appear several times in the list. The list content depends much on 02466 drive and media type. It seems that .source == 1 applies mostly to CD media 02467 whereas .source == 2 applies to any media. 02468 @param d Drive to query 02469 @param speed_list The copy. If empty, *speed_list gets returned as NULL. 02470 @return 1=success , 0=list empty , <0 severe error 02471 @since 0.3.0 02472 */ 02473 int burn_drive_get_speedlist(struct burn_drive *d, 02474 struct burn_speed_descriptor **speed_list); 02475 02476 /* ts A70713 */ 02477 /** Look up the fastest speed descriptor which is not faster than the given 02478 speed_goal. If it is 0, then the fastest one is chosen among the 02479 descriptors with the highest end_lba. If it is -1 then the slowest speed 02480 descriptor is chosen regardless of end_lba. Parameter flag decides whether 02481 the speed goal means write speed or read speed. 02482 @param d Drive to query 02483 @param speed_goal Upper limit for speed, 02484 0=search for maximum speed , -1 search for minimum speed 02485 @param best_descr Result of the search, NULL if no match 02486 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 02487 bit0= look for best read speed rather than write speed 02488 bit1= look for any source type (else look for source==2 first 02489 and for any other source type only with CD media) 02490 @return >0 indicates a valid best_descr, 0 = no valid best_descr 02491 @since 0.3.8 02492 */ 02493 int burn_drive_get_best_speed(struct burn_drive *d, int speed_goal, 02494 struct burn_speed_descriptor **best_descr, int flag); 02495 02496 02497 /* ts A61226 */ 02498 /** Dispose a speed descriptor list copy which was obtained by 02499 burn_drive_get_speedlist(). 02500 @param speed_list The list copy. *speed_list gets set to NULL. 02501 @return 1=list disposed , 0= *speedlist was already NULL 02502 @since 0.3.0 02503 */ 02504 int burn_drive_free_speedlist(struct burn_speed_descriptor **speed_list); 02505 02506 02507 /* ts A70203 */ 02508 /* @since 0.3.2 */ 02509 /** The reply structure for burn_disc_get_multi_caps() 02510 */ 02511 struct burn_multi_caps { 02512 02513 /* Multi-session capability allows to keep the media appendable after 02514 writing a session. It also guarantees that the drive will be able 02515 to predict and use the appropriate Next Writeable Address to place 02516 the next session on the media without overwriting the existing ones. 02517 It does not guarantee that the selected write type is able to do 02518 an appending session after the next session. (E.g. CD SAO is capable 02519 of multi-session by keeping a disc appendable. But .might_do_sao 02520 will be 0 afterwards, when checking the appendable media.) 02521 1= media may be kept appendable by burn_write_opts_set_multi(o,1) 02522 0= media will not be appendable 02523 */ 02524 int multi_session; 02525 02526 /* Multi-track capability allows to write more than one track source 02527 during a single session. The written tracks can later be found in 02528 libburn's TOC model with their start addresses and sizes. 02529 1= multiple tracks per session are allowed 02530 0= only one track per session allowed 02531 */ 02532 int multi_track; 02533 02534 /* Start-address capability allows to set a non-zero address with 02535 burn_write_opts_set_start_byte(). Eventually this has to respect 02536 .start_alignment and .start_range_low, .start_range_high in this 02537 structure. 02538 1= non-zero start address is allowed 02539 0= only start address 0 is allowed (to depict the drive's own idea 02540 about the appropriate write start) 02541 */ 02542 int start_adr; 02543 02544 /** The alignment for start addresses. 02545 ( start_address % start_alignment ) must be 0. 02546 */ 02547 off_t start_alignment; 02548 02549 /** The lowest permissible start address. 02550 */ 02551 off_t start_range_low; 02552 02553 /** The highest addressable start address. 02554 */ 02555 off_t start_range_high; 02556 02557 /** Potential availability of write modes 02558 4= needs no size prediction, not to be chosen automatically 02559 3= needs size prediction, not to be chosen automatically 02560 2= available, no size prediction necessary 02561 1= available, needs exact size prediction 02562 0= not available 02563 With CD media (profiles 0x09 and 0x0a) check also the elements 02564 *_block_types of the according write mode. 02565 */ 02566 int might_do_tao; 02567 int might_do_sao; 02568 int might_do_raw; 02569 02570 /** Generally advised write mode. 02571 Not necessarily the one chosen by burn_write_opts_auto_write_type() 02572 because the burn_disc structure might impose particular demands. 02573 */ 02574 enum burn_write_types advised_write_mode; 02575 02576 /** Write mode as given by parameter wt of burn_disc_get_multi_caps(). 02577 */ 02578 enum burn_write_types selected_write_mode; 02579 02580 /** Profile number which was current when the reply was generated */ 02581 int current_profile; 02582 02583 /** Wether the current profile indicates CD media. 1=yes, 0=no */ 02584 int current_is_cd_profile; 02585 02586 /* ts A70528 */ 02587 /* @since 0.3.8 */ 02588 /** Wether the current profile is able to perform simulated write */ 02589 int might_simulate; 02590 }; 02591 02592 /** Allocates a struct burn_multi_caps (see above) and fills it with values 02593 which are appropriate for the drive and the loaded media. The drive 02594 must be grabbed for this call. The returned structure has to be disposed 02595 via burn_disc_free_multi_caps() when no longer needed. 02596 @param d The drive to inquire 02597 @param wt With BURN_WRITE_NONE the best capabilities of all write modes 02598 get returned. If set to a write mode like BURN_WRITE_SAO the 02599 capabilities with that particular mode are returned and the 02600 return value is 0 if the desired mode is not possible. 02601 @param caps returns the info structure 02602 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 02603 @return < 0 : error , 0 : writing seems impossible , 1 : writing possible 02604 @since 0.3.2 02605 */ 02606 int burn_disc_get_multi_caps(struct burn_drive *d, enum burn_write_types wt, 02607 struct burn_multi_caps **caps, int flag); 02608 02609 /** Removes from memory a multi session info structure which was returned by 02610 burn_disc_get_multi_caps(). The pointer *caps gets set to NULL. 02611 @param caps the info structure to dispose (note: pointer to pointer) 02612 @return 0 : *caps was already NULL, 1 : memory object was disposed 02613 @since 0.3.2 02614 */ 02615 int burn_disc_free_multi_caps(struct burn_multi_caps **caps); 02616 02617 02618 /** Gets a copy of the toc_entry structure associated with a track 02619 @param t Track to get the entry from 02620 @param entry Struct for the library to fill out 02621 */ 02622 void burn_track_get_entry(struct burn_track *t, struct burn_toc_entry *entry); 02623 02624 /** Gets a copy of the toc_entry structure associated with a session's lead out 02625 @param s Session to get the entry from 02626 @param entry Struct for the library to fill out 02627 */ 02628 void burn_session_get_leadout_entry(struct burn_session *s, 02629 struct burn_toc_entry *entry); 02630 02631 /** Gets an array of all the sessions for the disc 02632 THIS IS NO LONGER VALID AFTER YOU ADD OR REMOVE A SESSION 02633 @param d Disc to get session array for 02634 @param num Returns the number of sessions in the array 02635 @return array of sessions 02636 */ 02637 struct burn_session **burn_disc_get_sessions(struct burn_disc *d, 02638 int *num); 02639 02640 int burn_disc_get_sectors(struct burn_disc *d); 02641 02642 /** Gets an array of all the tracks for a session 02643 THIS IS NO LONGER VALID AFTER YOU ADD OR REMOVE A TRACK 02644 @param s session to get track array for 02645 @param num Returns the number of tracks in the array 02646 @return array of tracks 02647 */ 02648 struct burn_track **burn_session_get_tracks(struct burn_session *s, 02649 int *num); 02650 02651 int burn_session_get_sectors(struct burn_session *s); 02652 02653 /** Gets the mode of a track 02654 @param track the track to query 02655 @return the track's mode 02656 */ 02657 int burn_track_get_mode(struct burn_track *track); 02658 02659 /** Returns whether the first track of a session is hidden in the pregap 02660 @param session the session to query 02661 @return non-zero means the first track is hidden 02662 */ 02663 int burn_session_get_hidefirst(struct burn_session *session); 02664 02665 /** Returns the library's version in its parts. 02666 This is the runtime counterpart of the three build time macros 02667 burn_header_version_* below. 02668 @param major The major version number 02669 @param minor The minor version number 02670 @param micro The micro version number 02671 */ 02672 void burn_version(int *major, int *minor, int *micro); 02673 02674 02675 /* ts A80129 */ 02676 /* @since 0.4.4 */ 02677 /** These three release version numbers tell the revision of this header file 02678 and of the API it describes. They are memorized by applications at build 02679 time. 02680 Immediately after burn_initialize() an application should do this check: 02681 burn_version(&major, &minor, µ); 02682 if(major > burn_header_version_major 02683 || (major == burn_header_version_major 02684 && (minor > burn_header_version_minor 02685 || (minor == burn_header_version_minor 02686 && micro >= burn_header_version_micro)))) { 02687 ... Young enough. Go on with program run .... 02688 } else { 02689 ... Too old. Do not use this libburn version ... 02690 } 02691 02692 */ 02693 #define burn_header_version_major 1 02694 #define burn_header_version_minor 0 02695 #define burn_header_version_micro 2 02696 /** Note: 02697 Above version numbers are also recorded in configure.ac because libtool 02698 wants them as parameters at build time. 02699 For the library compatibility check, BURN_*_VERSION in configure.ac 02700 are not decisive. Only the three numbers above do matter. 02701 */ 02702 /** Usage discussion: 02703 02704 Some developers of the libburnia project have differing 02705 opinions how to ensure the compatibility of libaries 02706 and applications. 02707 02708 It is about whether to use at compile time and at runtime 02709 the version numbers isoburn_header_version_* provided here. 02710 Thomas Schmitt advises to use them. 02711 Vreixo Formoso advises to use other means. 02712 02713 At compile time: 02714 02715 Vreixo Formoso advises to leave proper version matching 02716 to properly programmed checks in the the application's 02717 build system, which will eventually refuse compilation. 02718 02719 Thomas Schmitt advises to use the macros defined here 02720 for comparison with the application's requirements of 02721 library revisions and to eventually break compilation. 02722 02723 Both advises are combinable. I.e. be master of your 02724 build system and have #if checks in the source code 02725 of your application, nevertheless. 02726 02727 At runtime (via *_is_compatible()): 02728 02729 Vreixo Formoso advises to compare the application's 02730 requirements of library revisions with the runtime 02731 library. This is to allow runtime libraries which are 02732 young enough for the application but too old for 02733 the lib*.h files seen at compile time. 02734 02735 Thomas Schmitt advises to compare the header 02736 revisions defined here with the runtime library. 02737 This is to enforce a strictly monotonous chain 02738 of revisions from app to header to library, 02739 at the cost of excluding some older libraries. 02740 02741 These two advises are mutually exclusive. 02742 02743 */ 02744 02745 /* ts A91226 */ 02746 /** Obtain the id string of the SCSI transport interface. 02747 This interface may be a system specific adapter module of libburn or 02748 an adapter to a supporting library like libcdio. 02749 @param flag Bitfield for control puposes, submit 0 for now 02750 @return A pointer to the id string. Do not alter the string content. 02751 @since 0.7.6 02752 */ 02753 char *burn_scsi_transport_id(int flag); 02754 02755 /* ts A60924 : ticket 74 */ 02756 /** Control queueing and stderr printing of messages from libburn. 02757 Severity may be one of "NEVER", "ABORT", "FATAL", "FAILURE", "SORRY", 02758 "WARNING", "HINT", "NOTE", "UPDATE", "DEBUG", "ALL". 02759 @param queue_severity Gives the minimum limit for messages to be queued. 02760 Default: "NEVER". If you queue messages then you 02761 must consume them by burn_msgs_obtain(). 02762 @param print_severity Does the same for messages to be printed directly 02763 to stderr. Default: "FATAL". 02764 @param print_id A text prefix to be printed before the message. 02765 @return >0 for success, <=0 for error 02766 @since 0.2.6 02767 */ 02768 int burn_msgs_set_severities(char *queue_severity, 02769 char *print_severity, char *print_id); 02770 02771 /* ts A60924 : ticket 74 */ 02772 /* @since 0.2.6 */ 02773 #define BURN_MSGS_MESSAGE_LEN 4096 02774 02775 /** Obtain the oldest pending libburn message from the queue which has at 02776 least the given minimum_severity. This message and any older message of 02777 lower severity will get discarded from the queue and is then lost forever. 02778 @param minimum_severity may be one of "NEVER", "ABORT", "FATAL", 02779 "FAILURE", "SORRY", "WARNING", "HINT", "NOTE", "UPDATE", 02780 "DEBUG", "ALL". 02781 To call with minimum_severity "NEVER" will discard the 02782 whole queue. 02783 @param error_code Will become a unique error code as listed in 02784 libburn/libdax_msgs.h 02785 @param msg_text Must provide at least BURN_MSGS_MESSAGE_LEN bytes. 02786 @param os_errno Will become the eventual errno related to the message 02787 @param severity Will become the severity related to the message and 02788 should provide at least 80 bytes. 02789 @return 1 if a matching item was found, 0 if not, <0 for severe errors 02790 @since 0.2.6 02791 */ 02792 int burn_msgs_obtain(char *minimum_severity, 02793 int *error_code, char msg_text[], int *os_errno, 02794 char severity[]); 02795 02796 02797 /* ts A70922 */ 02798 /** Submit a message to the libburn queueing system. It will be queued or 02799 printed as if it was generated by libburn itself. 02800 @param error_code The unique error code of your message. 02801 Submit 0 if you do not have reserved error codes within 02802 the libburnia project. 02803 @param msg_text Not more than BURN_MSGS_MESSAGE_LEN characters of 02804 message text. 02805 @param os_errno Eventual errno related to the message. Submit 0 if 02806 the message is not related to a operating system error. 02807 @param severity One of "ABORT", "FATAL", "FAILURE", "SORRY", "WARNING", 02808 "HINT", "NOTE", "UPDATE", "DEBUG". Defaults to "FATAL". 02809 @param d An eventual drive to which the message shall be related. 02810 Submit NULL if the message is not specific to a 02811 particular drive object. 02812 @return 1 if message was delivered, <=0 if failure 02813 @since 0.4.0 02814 */ 02815 int burn_msgs_submit(int error_code, char msg_text[], int os_errno, 02816 char severity[], struct burn_drive *d); 02817 02818 02819 /* ts A71016 */ 02820 /** Convert a severity name into a severity number, which gives the severity 02821 rank of the name. 02822 @param severity_name A name as with burn_msgs_submit(), e.g. "SORRY". 02823 @param severity_number The rank number: the higher, the more severe. 02824 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 02825 @return >0 success, <=0 failure 02826 @since 0.4.0 02827 */ 02828 int burn_text_to_sev(char *severity_name, int *severity_number, int flag); 02829 02830 02831 /* ts A80202 */ 02832 /** Convert a severity number into a severity name 02833 @since 0.4.4 02834 @param severity_number The rank number: the higher, the more severe. 02835 @param severity_name A name as with burn_msgs_submit(), e.g. "SORRY". 02836 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 02837 @since 0.4.4 02838 */ 02839 int burn_sev_to_text(int severity_number, char **severity_name, int flag); 02840 02841 02842 02843 /* ts A70915 */ 02844 /** Replace the messenger object handle of libburn by a compatible handle 02845 obtained from a related library. 02846 See also: libisofs, API function iso_get_messenger(). 02847 @param messenger The foreign but compatible message handle. 02848 @return 1 : success, <=0 : failure 02849 @since 0.4.0 02850 */ 02851 int burn_set_messenger(void *messenger); 02852 02853 02854 /* ts A61002 */ 02855 /* @since 0.2.6 */ 02856 /** The prototype of a handler function suitable for burn_set_signal_handling() 02857 Such a function has to return -2 if it does not want the process to 02858 exit with value 1. 02859 */ 02860 typedef int (*burn_abort_handler_t)(void *handle, int signum, int flag); 02861 02862 /** Control built-in signal handling. Either by setting an own handler or 02863 by activating the built-in signal handler. 02864 02865 A function parameter handle of NULL activates the built-in abort handler. 02866 Depending on mode it may cancel all drive operations, wait for all drives 02867 to become idle, exit(1). It may also prepare function 02868 burn_drive_get_status() for waiting and performing exit(1). 02869 If parameter handle may be NULL or a text that shall be used as prefix for 02870 pacifier messages of burn_abort_pacifier(). Other than with an application 02871 provided handler, the prefix char array does not have to be kept existing 02872 until the eventual signal event. 02873 Before version 0.7.8 only action 0 was available. I.e. the built-in handler 02874 waited for the drives to become idle and then performed exit(1) directly. 02875 But during burn_disc_write() onto real CD or DVD, FreeBSD 8.0 pauses the 02876 other threads until the signal handler returns. 02877 The new actions try to avoid this deadlock. It is advised to use action 3 02878 at least during burn_disc_write(), burn_disc_erase(), burn_disc_format(): 02879 burn_set_signal_handling(text, NULL, 0x30); 02880 and to call burn_is_aborting(0) when the drive is BURN_DRIVE_IDLE. 02881 If burn_is_aborting(0) returns 1, then call burn_abort() and exit(1). 02882 02883 @param handle Opaque handle eventually pointing to an application 02884 provided memory object 02885 @param handler A function to be called on signals. It will get handle as 02886 argument. flag will be 0. 02887 It should finally call burn_abort(). See there. 02888 @param mode : bit0 - bit3: 02889 Receiving signals: 02890 0 Call handler(handle, signum, 0) on nearly all signals 02891 1 Enable system default reaction on all signals 02892 2 Try to ignore nearly all signals 02893 10 like mode 2 but handle SIGABRT like with mode 0 02894 bit4 - bit7: With handler == NULL : 02895 Action of built-in handler. "control thread" is the one 02896 which called burn_set_signal_handling(). 02897 All actions activate receive mode 2 to ignore further 02898 signals. 02899 0 Same as 1 (for pre-0.7.8 backward compatibility) 02900 @since 0.7.8 02901 1 Catch the control thread in abort handler, call 02902 burn_abort(>0) and finally exit(1). 02903 Does not always work with FreeBSD. 02904 2 Call burn_abort(-1) and return from handler. When the 02905 control thread calls burn_drive_get_status(), then do 02906 burn_abort(>0) instead, and finally exit(1). 02907 Does not always work with FreeBSD. 02908 3 Call burn_abort(-1), return from handler. It is duty of 02909 the application to detect a pending abort condition 02910 by calling burn_is_aborting() and to wait for all 02911 drives to become idle. E.g. by calling burn_abort(>0). 02912 4 Like 3, but without calling burn_abort(-1). Only the 02913 indicator of burn_is_aborting() gets set. 02914 @since 0.2.6 02915 */ 02916 void burn_set_signal_handling(void *handle, burn_abort_handler_t handler, 02917 int mode); 02918 02919 02920 /* ts B00304 */ 02921 /* Inquire whether the built-in abort handler was triggered by a signal. 02922 This has to be done to detect pending abort handling if signal handling 02923 was set to the built-in handler and action was set to 2 or 3. 02924 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 02925 @return 0 = no abort was triggered 02926 >0 = action that was triggered (action 0 is reported as 1) 02927 @since 0.7.8 02928 */ 02929 int burn_is_aborting(int flag); 02930 02931 02932 /* ts A70811 */ 02933 /** Write data in random access mode. 02934 The drive must be grabbed successfully before calling this function which 02935 circumvents usual libburn session processing and rather writes data without 02936 preparations or finalizing. This will work only with overwriteable media 02937 which are also suitable for burn_write_opts_set_start_byte(). The same 02938 address alignment restrictions as with this function apply. I.e. for DVD 02939 it is best to align to 32 KiB blocks (= 16 LBA units). The amount of data 02940 to be written is subject to the same media dependent alignment rules. 02941 Again, 32 KiB is most safe. 02942 Call burn_disc_get_multi_caps() can obtain the necessary media info. See 02943 resulting struct burn_multi_caps elements .start_adr , .start_alignment , 02944 .start_range_low , .start_range_high . 02945 Other than burn_disc_write() this is a synchronous call which returns 02946 only after the write transaction has ended (sucessfully or not). So it is 02947 wise not to transfer giant amounts of data in a single call. 02948 Important: Data have to fit into the already formatted area of the media. 02949 @param d The drive to which to write 02950 @param byte_address The start address of the write in byte 02951 (1 LBA unit = 2048 bytes) (do respect media alignment) 02952 @param data The bytes to be written 02953 @param data_count The number of those bytes (do respect media alignment) 02954 data_count == 0 is permitted (e.g. to flush the 02955 drive buffer without further data transfer). 02956 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes: 02957 bit0 = flush the drive buffer after eventual writing 02958 @return 1=sucessful , <=0 : number of transfered bytes * -1 02959 @since 0.4.0 02960 */ 02961 int burn_random_access_write(struct burn_drive *d, off_t byte_address, 02962 char *data, off_t data_count, int flag); 02963 02964 02965 /* ts A81215 */ 02966 /** Inquire the maximum amount of readable data. 02967 It is supposed that all LBAs in the range from 0 to media_read_acpacity-1 02968 can be read via burn_read_data() although some of them may never have been 02969 recorded. If tracks are recognizable then it is better to only read 02970 LBAs which are part of some track. 02971 @param d The drive from which to read 02972 @param capacity Will return the result if valid 02973 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes: Unused yet, submit 0. 02974 @return 1=sucessful , <=0 an error occured 02975 @since 0.6.0 02976 */ 02977 int burn_get_read_capacity(struct burn_drive *d, int *capacity, int flag); 02978 02979 02980 /* ts A70812 */ 02981 /** Read data in random access mode. 02982 The drive must be grabbed successfully before calling this function. 02983 With all currently supported drives and media the byte_address has to 02984 be aligned to 2048 bytes. Only data tracks with 2048 bytes per sector 02985 can be read this way. I.e. not CD-audio, not CD-video-stream ... 02986 This is a synchronous call which returns only after the full read job 02987 has ended (sucessfully or not). So it is wise not to read giant amounts 02988 of data in a single call. 02989 @param d The drive from which to read 02990 @param byte_address The start address of the read in byte (aligned to 2048) 02991 @param data A memory buffer capable of taking data_size bytes 02992 @param data_size The amount of data to be read. This does not have to 02993 be aligned to any block size. 02994 @param data_count The amount of data actually read (interesting on error) 02995 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes: 02996 bit0= - reserved - 02997 bit1= do not submit error message if read error 02998 bit2= on error do not try to read a second time 02999 with single block steps. @since 0.5.2 03000 @return 1=sucessful , <=0 an error occured 03001 @since 0.4.0 03002 */ 03003 int burn_read_data(struct burn_drive *d, off_t byte_address, 03004 char data[], off_t data_size, off_t *data_count, int flag); 03005 03006 03007 /* A70904 */ 03008 /** Inquire whether the drive object is a real MMC drive or a pseudo-drive 03009 created by a stdio: address. 03010 @param d The drive to inquire 03011 @return 0= null-drive 03012 1= real MMC drive 03013 2= stdio-drive, random access, read-write 03014 3= stdio-drive, sequential, write-only 03015 @since 0.4.0 03016 */ 03017 int burn_drive_get_drive_role(struct burn_drive *d); 03018 03019 03020 /* ts A70923 */ 03021 /** Find out whether a given address string would lead to the given drive 03022 object. This should be done in advance for track source addresses 03023 with parameter drive_role set to 2. 03024 Although a real MMC drive should hardly exist as two drive objects at 03025 the same time, this can easily happen with stdio-drives. So if more than 03026 one drive is used by the application, then this gesture is advised: 03027 burn_drive_d_get_adr(d2, adr2); 03028 if (burn_drive_equals_adr(d1, adr2, burn_drive_get_drive_role(d2))) 03029 ... Both drive objects point to the same storage facility ... 03030 03031 @param d1 Existing drive object 03032 @param adr2 Address string to be tested. Prefix "stdio:" overrides 03033 parameter drive_role2 by either 0 or 2 as appropriate. 03034 The string must be shorter than BURN_DRIVE_ADR_LEN. 03035 @param drive_role2 Role as burn_drive_get_drive_role() would attribute 03036 to adr2 if it was a drive. Use value 2 for checking track 03037 sources resp. pseudo-drive addresses without "stdio:". 03038 Use 1 for checking drive addresses including those with 03039 prefix "stdio:". 03040 @return 1= adr2 leads to d1 , 0= adr2 seems not to lead to d1, 03041 -1 = adr2 is bad 03042 @since 0.4.0 03043 */ 03044 int burn_drive_equals_adr(struct burn_drive *d1, char *adr2, int drive_role2); 03045 03046 03047 03048 /* 03049 Audio track data extraction facility. 03050 */ 03051 03052 /* Maximum size for address paths and fmt_info strings */ 03053 #define LIBDAX_AUDIOXTR_STRLEN 4096 03054 03055 03056 /** Extractor object encapsulating intermediate states of extraction. 03057 The clients of libdax_audioxtr shall only allocate pointers to this 03058 struct and get a storage object via libdax_audioxtr_new(). 03059 Appropriate initial value for the pointer is NULL. 03060 */ 03061 struct libdax_audioxtr; 03062 03063 03064 /** Open an audio file, check wether suitable, create extractor object. 03065 @param xtr Opaque handle to extractor. Gets attached extractor object. 03066 @param path Address of the audio file to extract. "-" is stdin (but might 03067 be not suitable for all futurely supported formats). 03068 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 03069 @return >0 success 03070 0 unsuitable format 03071 -1 severe error 03072 -2 path not found 03073 @since 0.2.4 03074 */ 03075 int libdax_audioxtr_new(struct libdax_audioxtr **xtr, char *path, int flag); 03076 03077 03078 /** Obtain identification parameters of opened audio source. 03079 @param xtr Opaque handle to extractor 03080 @param fmt Gets pointed to the audio file format id text: ".wav" , ".au" 03081 @param fmt_info Gets pointed to a format info text telling parameters 03082 @param num_channels e.g. 1=mono, 2=stereo, etc 03083 @param sample_rate e.g. 11025, 44100 03084 @param bits_per_sample e.g. 8= 8 bits per sample, 16= 16 bits ... 03085 @param msb_first Byte order of samples: 0=Intel 1=Motorola 03086 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 03087 @return >0 success, <=0 failure 03088 @since 0.2.4 03089 */ 03090 int libdax_audioxtr_get_id(struct libdax_audioxtr *xtr, 03091 char **fmt, char **fmt_info, 03092 int *num_channels, int *sample_rate, 03093 int *bits_per_sample, int *msb_first, int flag); 03094 03095 03096 /** Obtain a prediction about the extracted size based on internal information 03097 of the formatted file. 03098 @param xtr Opaque handle to extractor 03099 @param size Gets filled with the predicted size 03100 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 03101 @return 1 prediction was possible , 0 no prediction could be made 03102 @since 0.2.4 03103 */ 03104 int libdax_audioxtr_get_size(struct libdax_audioxtr *o, off_t *size, int flag); 03105 03106 03107 /** Obtain next buffer full of extracted data in desired format (only raw audio 03108 for now). 03109 @param xtr Opaque handle to extractor 03110 @param buffer Gets filled with extracted data 03111 @param buffer_size Maximum number of bytes to be filled into buffer 03112 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 03113 bit0= do not stop at predicted end of data 03114 @return >0 number of valid buffer bytes, 03115 0 End of file 03116 -1 operating system reports error 03117 -2 usage error by application 03118 @since 0.2.4 03119 */ 03120 int libdax_audioxtr_read(struct libdax_audioxtr *xtr, 03121 char buffer[], int buffer_size, int flag); 03122 03123 03124 /** Try to obtain a file descriptor which will deliver extracted data 03125 to normal calls of read(2). This may fail because the format is 03126 unsuitable for that, but ".wav" is ok. If this call succeeds the xtr 03127 object will have forgotten its file descriptor and libdax_audioxtr_read() 03128 will return a usage error. One may use *fd after libdax_audioxtr_destroy() 03129 and will have to close it via close(2) when done with it. 03130 @param xtr Opaque handle to extractor 03131 @param fd Eventually returns the file descriptor number 03132 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 03133 bit0= do not dup(2) and close(2) but hand out original fd 03134 @return 1 success, 0 cannot hand out fd , -1 severe error 03135 @since 0.2.4 03136 */ 03137 int libdax_audioxtr_detach_fd(struct libdax_audioxtr *o, int *fd, int flag); 03138 03139 03140 /** Clean up after extraction and destroy extractor object. 03141 @param xtr Opaque handle to extractor, *xtr is allowed to be NULL, 03142 *xtr is set to NULL by this function 03143 @param flag Bitfield for control purposes (unused yet, submit 0) 03144 @return 1 = destroyed object, 0 = was already destroyed 03145 @since 0.2.4 03146 */ 03147 int libdax_audioxtr_destroy(struct libdax_audioxtr **xtr, int flag); 03148 03149 03150 03151 #ifndef DOXYGEN 03152 03153 BURN_END_DECLS 03154 03155 #endif 03156 03157 03158 /* ts A91205 */ 03159 /* The following experiments may be interesting in future: 03160 */ 03161 03162 /* Perform OPC explicitely. 03163 # define Libburn_pioneer_dvr_216d_with_opC 1 03164 */ 03165 03166 /* Load mode page 5 and modify it rather than composing from scratch. 03167 # define Libburn_pioneer_dvr_216d_load_mode5 1 03168 */ 03169 03170 /* Inquire drive events and react by reading configuration or starting unit. 03171 # define Libburn_pioneer_dvr_216d_get_evenT 1 03172 */ 03173 03174 /* ts A91112 */ 03175 /* Do not probe CD modes but declare only data and audio modes supported. 03176 For other modes resp. real probing one has to call 03177 burn_drive_probe_cd_write_modes(). 03178 03179 */ 03180 #define Libburn_dummy_probe_write_modeS 1 03181 03182 03183 #endif /*LIBBURN_H*/