It seems I have found directions for using brasero
to rip a CD to .iso
file, but according to that, brasero
is three(3) kinds of broken.
- recording image as
cdrdao
does not work, even after reinstalling bothbrasero
andcdrdao
. Brasero closes (crashes?) with assertion error. - same with trying to rip to a
.cue
file. - There is no option for ripping to a
.iso
file.
What gives? I mean, what should I do? I really want .cue
and .iso
files, but I don't know what to think about cdrdao
. Thanks.
Update: This is an audio CD. Do those make good .iso
files?
It got a little hard to use before 10.04 came out. In older versions the option to rip to ISO existed. Not anymore. I strongly suggest using AcetoineISO for that it is like Daemon Tools in Windows but better, you can convert image formats to ISO, mount them in special ways, etc... Any way if you still want to use it, when creating the new image rename .toc to .iso. This is for creating a direct image from a CD.
if you want to transform the .cue .bin .nrg .whatever else to ISO use acetoineISO which makes it very very easy to use. (
sudo apt-get install acetoneiso
ORsudo aptitude install-get install acetoneiso
)If you want to do it via terminal then first install the needed programs:
sudo apt-get install bchunk ccd2iso mdf2iso nrg2iso
orsudo aptitude install bchunk ccd2iso mdf2iso nrg2iso
Then depending on the source format you can do in the terminal:
From CUE+BIN --> ISO:
bchunk source.bin source.cue destination.iso
From MDF --> ISO:
mdf2iso source.mdf destination.iso
From IMG --> ISO:
ccd2iso source.img destination.iso
From NRG --> ISO:
nrg2iso source.nrg destination.iso
Is this an audio CD? Audio CDs are incredibly difficult to copy to a disk image.
.iso
files are possible with data CDs and DVDs.I recommend ripping an audio CD to
.flac
files. FLAC is an audio file format similar to.ogg
,.mp3
etc but it is lossless - this means that, while the files are compressed, there is no loss in quality. The upshot of this is that if you rip a CD to FLAC files, you have enough information to recreate the original audio CD.A .cue file is a text file that stores information about the data in a binary file, the .bin file, making up the so called cue/bin pair, the .cue file must point to the corresponding .bin file and can contain information about the individual track or tracks encoded in the .bin file, in the case of a Compact disc image, the audio can be encoded as tracks in the .bin file, the .cue files contains cueing (INDEX numbers) information along with CD-Text information of individual tracks, .cue files can even be paired with .wav files the so called cue/wav pair it is made popular by a company called Goldenhawk that made the CDrwin writing software, this format along with .nrg and those from various cloning software are the ones to encode audio cd to, .iso can not be used for audio cd imaging unless you have a special mounting software that can read .cue/iso where the .wav files are stored in the .iso, not all CD emulation software will read the .cue/iso, Daemon Tools on Windows will.
If you want to do as dv3500ea suggests, use the banshee media player to rip the cd to .flac format, if you then for any reason need an audio cd image from the ripped tracks or any other tracks in your library, banshee working with brasero can be used to create a cue/bin pair, you do this by selecting the tracks in banshee, right click on the selected tracks and click the WriteCD menu item, brasero will be called up with your tracks ready for writing, you then select the image option, just make sure the image is created in the cue/bin pair format.
after saving and brasero finishes you can use a text editor to open the .cue file and make the path pointing to the .bin file relative instead of absolute,this makes the pair more portable, you must make sure the .cue and the .bin files are in the same folder.