I'm in Windoze at the moment, but I know I used -J and another option. The
Mac read it, but the icon just showed up as CDRom, not the name of the
title. I could browse it and read files, but did not see the Mac install
program. Also the program was already installed on the Mac, but required
the CD to run, and it would not run with the mkisofs created copy.
Stew
At 08:28 PM 1/4/01 +0200, you wrote:
>Stew Benedict wrote:
>>
>> Sure can. I hit the problem on a dual OS CD - Windoze and Mac. Using
>> mkisofs, I ended up with a usable Windows version, but the Mac would read
>> it, but not recognize it by name. You are just doing a raw copy of the CD
>> with dd, the Mac was able to use the resulting copy fine.
>
>What options did you use with mkisofs?
>
>Did the fact that Mac ould not recognize the disc by it's name make it
totally
>unusable or what do you mean?
>
>I'm asking this 'cause I just made the discs with mkisofs and I don't have a
>Mac to test them with... Well, maybe I'll read the iso-images with dd to my
>disk for just to be sure.
>
>Peter
>
>
>
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