Compact Disk Recording

Please Note: Since this document was written, Linux computers have replaced Solaris ones as the default in the public labs. All of these Linux machines have CD burners. They should be easier to use than the Solaris ones as they have more support in the GNOME user interface for removable media. Hopefully the background info found here about CD file systems should still be educational. (09/2007)


One Compact Disk Recordable (CD-R) and two Rewritable (CD-RW) drives are available on the Sun Microsystems workstations titanium.pha.jhu.edu, located in Bloomberg room 430 and tungsten.pha.jhu.edu, which is in room 332.

It is hoped that these drives will make it easier to archive scientific data in a (fairly) permanent format that can be viewed on many different kinds of computers. These drives are not to be used to duplicate copyrighted material.

This web page contains some of the information needed to use the drives to create new Compact Disks. There are many different kinds of CD's, and one uses different software packages to create new disks. Therefore, this page contains many pointers to other web pages, where you can learn what you need to know to create the kind of disk that you desire. No technical support is provided by the Computer Center for these drives beyond this document. (There is an examples document with a few sample commands.) Burning CD's is not hard, but you do have to learn a bit first, and then verify that your new CD's work on the drive on your computer.


Our Drives

We have two Yamaha CRW2100S drives and one Plextor brand Plexwriter 8/20 unit. The Yamahas can do 40X (read) 16X (write-once) 10X (rewrite) while the Plextor can do 20X (read) and 8X (write-once). Here are two Yamaha pages for their CRW2100S drive: description and support page.

workstation location drive address
(SCSI bus number, target number, Logical Unit Number)
drive model drive capability
tungsten 332 1,3,0 Yamaha CRW2100S 40x (CD-ROM) 16x (CD-R) 10x (CD-RW)
titanium 430 2,3,0 Yamaha CRW2100S 40x (CD-ROM) 16x (CD-R) 10x (CD-RW)
titanium 430 1,2,0 Plextor 8/20 20x (CD-ROM) 8x (CD-R)

Basic CD Creation Process

Overview of CD File Systems

A file system is a self-contained, structured set of files and directories. Multiple file systems can be accessible (a state called mounted) on a computer at the same time. For example, a floppy disk contains a (small) file system. Inserting it into a personal computer causes the operating system to mount the file system. One can then view and modify the files thereon. In the context of creating CD's, realize that a file system can be stored as a single large file within another file system, i.e. on a UNIX hard disk. See this section of the very handy CD-R FAQ for more info about file systems.

Technical Support

Unfortunately, the Computer Center does not have the staff time to assist people using this drive, or to adequately document the procedures needed to create disks of various formats. We wish we could do it, but there is simply not enough time. Many kinds of disks are easy to make! But there is no avoiding the fact that you must learn a bit on your own.

Detailed corrections to this web page are happily accepted. Most questions sent Computer Center staffers about this drive will not be answered. We do not have any more experience creating CD's than you do. It is a specialized body of knowledge. One has to read the on-line resources and experiment. Sorry if that sounds harsh, but it has already taken a lot of time to to build the software as well as to learn and summarize the information on this page.

If you develop detailed procedures for creating disks of a particular format, please consider writing them down on a web page so we can make links to it, or incorporate the information here.

A mailing list, cdr@pha.jhu.edu, has been created so that CD-R drive users can share their questions and tips with each other. This is an unmoderated Majordomo-managed mailing list. You can add yourself to it by sending an email message to majordomo@pha.jhu.edu with this text in the BODY of the message (not the subject line, which can contain anything):
subscribe cdr your-userid@pha.jhu.edu
(See this page for more information about Majordomo mailing lists.)

Links to CD-R Documentation

Read this web page completely for an overview. See the Examples document.
Then go to the CD-Writing HOWTO page (aimed at Linux users but still has some very good simple explanations in the early sections).
The most complete, general reference is the CD-R FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) page. This is a good place to learn background material by simply finding questions that you share and then reading the answers.
Finally, read the manual pages for the specific cdr-related software packages we have installed.

Available Software

The Computer Center maintains a software inventory web page. For more information about each package, such as links to other web pages, go to the CD-R section of the inventory.

Shared Disk Space

Several gigabytes of disk space are available in /data1/titanium/CDR-SCRATCH and /data1/tungsten/CDR-SCRATCH. You can use this space to assemble files into images that can then be written to the CD-R. Obviously, this is a shared resource, and therefore you need to do your part in keeping it clean. If people complain that some user is filling up the file system, your files could be deleted without warning as the file system is cleaned up. Therefore, you are hereby warned that you should not place your only copy of your data in this scratch area. You should be able to recreate anything you store in this area!

THE CONTENTS OF THE /EXPORT/DATA1/CDR-SCRATCH DIRECTORIES WILL BE DELETED EVERY MONDAY MORNING AT 3:35 A.M.

Some tips for avoiding problems with this disk space: