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Mail Archives: djgpp/1996/10/01/02:22:05

From: "Rafael R. Sevilla" <dido AT gollum>
Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp
Subject: Re: LFNs
Date: Tue, 1 Oct 1996 12:11:06 -0800
Organization: University of the Philippines, Diliman
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Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.961001114917.1600A-100000@gollum>
References: <1 DOT 5 DOT 4 DOT 16 DOT 19960924095355 DOT 2c5722a6 AT dmeasc DOT rc DOT ipt DOT br>
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To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com
DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp

On Tue, 24 Sep 1996, Cesar Scarpini Rabak wrote:

> I came accross some CD-ROMs which had the following clause: 
> "ISO 9660 format with Rock Ridge Extensions". The only reference I have
> about these extensions is that "...use undefined fields in the ISO-9660
> standard to support long filenames and additional Unix information...".
> 
> So I wonder wouldn't support these extensions in DJGPP be possible and
> eventually easier than the other solutions pointed in last postings in
> this matter?
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Cesar Scarpini Rabak                      E-mail: csrabak AT ipt DOT br
> DME/ASC                                   Phone: 55-11-268-35221Ext.350
> IPT - Instituto de Pesquisas Tecnologicas Fax:   55-11-268-5996
> Av. Prof. Almeida Prado, 532.  Sao Paulo - SP 05508-901 BRAZIL
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> 
> 
> 

Uh huh. But take note that you'll have a lot of problems because DOS by
itself does not support any filenames longer than its pathetic 8.3 limit! 
And unless you're willing to hack the djgpp libraries and hack together a
replacement for MSCDEX AND the DOS network redirector, Rock Ridge
Extensions are absolutely unusable in plain DOS. Needless to say, most of
this information is undocumented, as Microsoft seems to have withheld the
whole network redirector mechanism. ISO-9660 is a foreign file system to
DOS, and the way DOS "mounts" it (to use a term from Un*x), in order that
files on it can be used, is to cause it to masquerade as a network drive.
The job of the network redirector is to make network drives look like
ordinary DOS file systems, whether they're really ISO-9660, Unix, NFS,
Macintosh, or some other weird file system. I don't know about Window 95, 
NT, OS/2 or whatever other OS, though, if they have better support.

---
Rafael R. Sevilla
dido AT eee DOT upd DOT edu DOT ph

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