All releases of GNU xorriso


Release Notes: The handling of intentional deviations from ECMA-119 specifications has been improved. Some rarely-occurring bugs have been fixed.


Release Notes: Handling of timestamps in the Joliet and ISO 9660:1999 trees has been enhanced. xorriso now stores mtime in these trees and in the ECMA-119 tree. Some minor bugs were fixed.


Release Notes: Intermediate opening and closing of of drive device files is now avoided. xorriso operates on QEMU DVD-ROM and on qemu virtio-blk-pci devices. Emulation mode xorrecord now has its own man page and info document.


Release Notes: Bugs were fixed in processing of ACLs. Processing of extattr was enabled on FreeBSD. Vanishing udev links on GNU/Linux no longer disturb ongoing burn runs.


Release Notes: An old bug could cause xorriso to prepare incorrect internal addresses. This happened only with some CD drives, and never in mkisofs emulation mode. The new option -device_links shall be used on modern GNU/Linux systems instead of the option -devices. It lists the drives by their usual udev links rather than by their kernel device addresses.


Release Notes: A severe regression was fixed, which was introduced with version 1.0.6. It caused ISO 9660 images to be unreadable if they were written to a write-only random-access file.


Release Notes: It turns out that GNU xorriso-1.1.0 compiles only on GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris. Users of other X/Open compliant systems will have to get the corrected tarball.


Release Notes: The consumption of stack memory was reduced. Several small bugs were fixed. The most important were a formatting problem on drives by Pioneer Electronics and a misalignment of the size of isohybrid images.


Release Notes: A bug in the mkisofs emulation of xorriso could cause options to be ignored. The problem was freshly introduced with GNU xorriso-1.0.6. Users who downloaded this version are now urged to get GNU xorriso-1.0.8.


Release Notes: This release fixes two bugs, allows Joliet names of up to 103 characters, and burns DVD-R DAO sessions with 2 kB size granularity rather than 32 kB.
A variant of the GNU C Library designed to work well on embedded systems.