jaclaz, on Feb 14 2010, 06:09 AM, said:
"I am using a modified Windows 98 install floppy boot disk image using JO.SYS as El-Torito floppy emulation using MSCDEX.EXE "
Boy, do I hate these Romulan cloaking devices!
jaclaz
Well, I did say those things, just not ALL in one post, or one sentence.
But you're dealing with a TOS Romulan, not one of those bastardized TNG Romulans, so I have some honor.
I very much appreciate your help and your expertise jaclaz, I think there's been a lot of miscommunication in this thread.
I'm going to go back to the basics on this one, and start by asking what should be a simple enough question to be able to get a definite Yes or No answer to, and should be able to verify with a simple experiment.
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Is it possible to use a standard Windows 98 Boot Disk with standard El Torito Floppy Emulation to create a bootable DVD?
If the answer is Yes, I would greatly appreciate it if someone could actually test this for me and give me a detailed report on the process used, software/hardware/media used, and the results, as all of my tests have been unsuccessful. I would prefer to use this method, as it was my original intent. If I can get a standard floppy working this way, then I can work on finding out if my custom one works or not.
If the answer is No, then we can move on to discussion of MKISOFS and GRUB4DOS.
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cdob, on Feb 14 2010, 09:47 AM, said:
SHSUCDX support lowercase ISO9660 names too.
Anyway it's unclear still: hardware or software.
Did you read the CD to a image and write a DVD so far?
Win98 Jo.sys does work at a floppy emulation 4.29gb DVD.
mkisofs -v -D -N -V WIN9XDVD -b floppy.ima -hide floppy.ima -hide boot.catalog -split-output -o WIN9XDVD.ISO D:\temp\WIN98
manpage
Quote
Split the output image into several files of approximately 1 GB. This helps to create DVD sized ISO-9660 images on operating systems without large file support. Cdrecord will concatenate more than one file into a single track if writing to a DVD. To make -split-output work, the -o filename option must be specified. The resulting output images will be named: filename_00,filename_01,filename_02...
I know what standard DOS filenames are.
What is puzzling to me about this, is that I have created DVD's before using mixed case and length file names (of course the DOS files were only accessed in DOS and vice versa) and never encountered a problem like this.
It seems that MKISOFS and/or the -iso-level 4 option translated ALL of my DOS filenames within the ISO to lowercase, even though they showed up as uppercase before under normal DOS conditions. This is idiotic.
I assume -iso-level 3 will not do this? Or will it translate all of the lowercase names to uppercase?
This must be a "bug" (from DOS/Windows standpoint) somehow left over from MKISOFS being a Linux command, as Linux is case sensitive.
I stand by what I said earlier, MKISOFS belongs in the trash bin.
You say it is possible to use standard floppy emulation on a DVD. I'm very glad to hear that, (per my question above) could you please give a more detailed report on how it is done?
I read the CD that I had successfully created earlier using my custom floppy image and standard El Torito emulation to an ISO. Then tried burning it to a DVDRW on a different machine. Nero refused to burn it, ejected my DVDRW and requested a CD or CDRW. MagicISO burned it to the DVDRW and reported success, but the disc was unreadable on any system I put it in.



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