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How cdrom table of contents work?


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Is the table of contents just the first block of sectors on a cdrom or is it stored outside of the rest of the data?



I’ve been reading pages like this: http://www.herongyang.com/CD-DVD/CD-TOC-Where-Is-Located.html to try to understand, but I’m still not sure whether the lead-in/lead-out sections are just special regions of the spiral(main data area) or are physically different parts the disc.



Will dd, for example, capture the TOC of a cdrom? Is this why cd images need those sidecar files(cue, toc, etc.)?










share|improve this question























  • dd in general will rip the whole drive to an image, bit for bit. This includes everything in there, so that when mounted, it would be as if the original disc was present in the machine. The .cue and .bin files you speak of reside in the filesystem of the CD-ROM - and dd captures the whole thing raw, so while it wont be in terms of files, once the image file is mounted you will see the files exactly as they are.

    – QuickishFM
    yesterday
















0















Is the table of contents just the first block of sectors on a cdrom or is it stored outside of the rest of the data?



I’ve been reading pages like this: http://www.herongyang.com/CD-DVD/CD-TOC-Where-Is-Located.html to try to understand, but I’m still not sure whether the lead-in/lead-out sections are just special regions of the spiral(main data area) or are physically different parts the disc.



Will dd, for example, capture the TOC of a cdrom? Is this why cd images need those sidecar files(cue, toc, etc.)?










share|improve this question























  • dd in general will rip the whole drive to an image, bit for bit. This includes everything in there, so that when mounted, it would be as if the original disc was present in the machine. The .cue and .bin files you speak of reside in the filesystem of the CD-ROM - and dd captures the whole thing raw, so while it wont be in terms of files, once the image file is mounted you will see the files exactly as they are.

    – QuickishFM
    yesterday














0












0








0








Is the table of contents just the first block of sectors on a cdrom or is it stored outside of the rest of the data?



I’ve been reading pages like this: http://www.herongyang.com/CD-DVD/CD-TOC-Where-Is-Located.html to try to understand, but I’m still not sure whether the lead-in/lead-out sections are just special regions of the spiral(main data area) or are physically different parts the disc.



Will dd, for example, capture the TOC of a cdrom? Is this why cd images need those sidecar files(cue, toc, etc.)?










share|improve this question














Is the table of contents just the first block of sectors on a cdrom or is it stored outside of the rest of the data?



I’ve been reading pages like this: http://www.herongyang.com/CD-DVD/CD-TOC-Where-Is-Located.html to try to understand, but I’m still not sure whether the lead-in/lead-out sections are just special regions of the spiral(main data area) or are physically different parts the disc.



Will dd, for example, capture the TOC of a cdrom? Is this why cd images need those sidecar files(cue, toc, etc.)?







compact-disc dd disk-image optical-drive optical-media






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked yesterday









zallikzallik

71117




71117













  • dd in general will rip the whole drive to an image, bit for bit. This includes everything in there, so that when mounted, it would be as if the original disc was present in the machine. The .cue and .bin files you speak of reside in the filesystem of the CD-ROM - and dd captures the whole thing raw, so while it wont be in terms of files, once the image file is mounted you will see the files exactly as they are.

    – QuickishFM
    yesterday



















  • dd in general will rip the whole drive to an image, bit for bit. This includes everything in there, so that when mounted, it would be as if the original disc was present in the machine. The .cue and .bin files you speak of reside in the filesystem of the CD-ROM - and dd captures the whole thing raw, so while it wont be in terms of files, once the image file is mounted you will see the files exactly as they are.

    – QuickishFM
    yesterday

















dd in general will rip the whole drive to an image, bit for bit. This includes everything in there, so that when mounted, it would be as if the original disc was present in the machine. The .cue and .bin files you speak of reside in the filesystem of the CD-ROM - and dd captures the whole thing raw, so while it wont be in terms of files, once the image file is mounted you will see the files exactly as they are.

– QuickishFM
yesterday





dd in general will rip the whole drive to an image, bit for bit. This includes everything in there, so that when mounted, it would be as if the original disc was present in the machine. The .cue and .bin files you speak of reside in the filesystem of the CD-ROM - and dd captures the whole thing raw, so while it wont be in terms of files, once the image file is mounted you will see the files exactly as they are.

– QuickishFM
yesterday










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