Dvd Cp Reading Input/output Error
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Community Ubuntu Official Flavours Support New to Ubuntu [ubuntu] [SOLVED] DVD input/output error Having an Issue With Posting ? Do you want to help us debug the posting issues ? < is the place to
Dd Input Output Error Dvd
report it, thanks ! Results 1 to 9 of 9 Thread: [SOLVED] DVD input/output error Thread Tools Show Printable Version Subscribe to this Thread… Display Linear Mode Switch to Hybrid Mode Switch to Threaded Mode May 29th, 2008 #1 Commander_Bob View Profile View Forum Posts Private Message Visit Homepage Gee! These Aren't Roasted! Join Date Dec 2007 Location California Beans 128 DistroUbuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal [SOLVED] DVD input/output error I need reading directory input output error to convert a DVD for an iPod but when I try to copy it I get an input/output error. I tried making an iso but the iso does the same thing. Also when I try to play the dvd the video is messed up. I am using Ubuntu 8.04. Thanks, Justin Adv Reply May 29th, 2008 #2 OffAxis View Profile View Forum Posts Private Message Grande Half-n-Half Cinnamon Ubuntu Join Date Jan 2007 Location CA Beans 846 DistroUbuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala Re: DVD input/output error Could be a bad disc or a filthy lens on the DVD player. Have you tried a different DVD? Did it work? Adv Reply May 29th, 2008 #3 didac View Profile View Forum Posts Private Message Gee! These Aren't Roasted! Join Date Mar 2008 Location Aguobu Iwollo Beans 165 DistroUbuntu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon Re: DVD input/output error If you use Kubuntu, you can try http://www.roadkil.net/downloads/unstopcp.gz which will make an iso image of your dvd. The bad sectors will still be bad sectors, you'll still get garbage at times, but you can now convert the dvd to iPod. If you have Ubuntu, and wine installed, you can get the windows version at http://roadkil.net/download.php?File=unstopcp Adv Reply May 29th, 2008 #4 Commander_Bob View Profile View F
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Cp Writing Input Output Error
workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack input output error linux Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Unix & Linux Questions error splicing file: input/output error Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Unix & Linux Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for users of Linux, FreeBSD and other Un*x-like operating systems. Join them; https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=811688 it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Can't copy files from a loop-mounted ISO image: Input/Output error up vote 1 down vote favorite Please advise - why do I get an "Input/output error" when I try to copy http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/97413/cant-copy-files-from-a-loop-mounted-iso-image-input-output-error some files from my ISO mount to /var/tmp I mount the .iso file under /mnt and try to copy files from the isolinux directory to /var/tmp: [root@localhost tmp]# mount -o loop,ro RedHat-5.8.1-01_x32.iso /mnt [root@localhost tmp]# [root@localhost tmp]# cd /mnt [root@localhost mnt]# cd isolinux [root@localhost isolinux]# ls boot.cat general.msg isolinux.bin memtest param.msg splash.lss boot.msg initrd.img isolinux.cfg options.msg rescue.msg vmlinuz [root@localhost isolinux]# cp -rp vmlinuz initrd.img /var/tmp cp: reading `vmlinuz': Input/output error cp: reading `initrd.img': Input/output error linux mount iso share|improve this question edited Oct 24 '13 at 12:21 Joseph R. 21.7k24485 asked Oct 24 '13 at 12:13 yael 2328 3 It seems your ISO image is somehow corrupt. I tried this with a known-to-work Debian ISO image and it worked without problems. Incidentally, you don't really need the -r switch for your cp but that's not what's causing the problem. –Joseph R. Oct 24 '13 at 12:25 I agree that the most likely answer is corrupt media, but the next most likely, at least in my opinion, is a filesystem issue, especially considering the reference to loop mounts. Sometime
Common F23 Bugs Common F24 Bugs Communicate with Fedora The Documents Bug Reports Fedora Update System (Bodhi) Fedora Build System (Koji) Official Spins FedoraForum.org > http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?t=241604 Fedora 23/24 > Using Fedora Input/output error when trying to copy DVD contents http://hyperlogos.org/page/Recovering-damaged-CDs-or-DVDs-Linux with DD FedoraForum Search User Name Remember Me? Password Forgot Password? Join Us! Register All Albums FAQ Today's Posts Search Using Fedora General support for current versions. Ask questions about Fedora that do not belong in any other forum. Google™ Search FedoraForum Search Red Hat Bugzilla Search Search output error Forums Show Threads Show Posts Tag Search Advanced Search Go to Page... Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes #1 3rd March 2010, 11:16 PM jonrpick Offline Registered User Join Date: Jun 2008 Posts: 171 Input/output error when trying to copy DVD contents with DD Here's what I'm getting... I even threw some video DVDs at it input output error to make sure it wasn't the disc. Code: [pickens@acer1 Videos]$ dd if=/dev/sr0 of=POTC.iso dd: reading `/dev/sr0': Input/output error 5088+0 records in 5088+0 records out 2605056 bytes (2.6 MB) copied, 1.67727 s, 1.6 MB/s [pickens@acer1 Videos]$ I am getting the same thing on my laptop running Mandriva, oddly enough. Two different drives, two different computers, two different distros and multiple DVDs. What could be the problem?? __________________ Desktop machine: Zotac MiniITX MB / Pentium Dual Core E2200 (Soon to be Core 2 Duo), 4GB RAM, 640GB SATA, nVidia integrated GPU. Fedora 13, adding Mandriva Powerpack and Puppy soon. Netbook: HP Mini 311: 3GB RAM, 160GB SATA. Nvidia ION LE Graphics. XP SP3 and F13...adding Mandriva soon. My avatar is indicative of my attitude... [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] jonrpick View Public Profile Find all posts by jonrpick #2 3rd March 2010, 11:34 PM Nokia Offline Registered User Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: /dev/realm/{Abba,Carpenters,...stage} Posts: 3,285 DRM protected disc ? __________________ For safer browsing, use OpenDNS nameservers 208.67.222.222 and 208.67.220.220 SELinux User Guide AutoPager Nokia View Public Profile Find all posts by Nokia #3 3rd March 2
optical disc, retrying until they recover every possible file. The leading tool is probably Isobuster, but there are dozens of candidates for the title. There are few automated (or even user-friendly) data recovery tools on Linux or UNIX(tm) platforms, but common tools which are often even included with the core system or which are installable through the official package system are often sufficient for performing this critical task. One particularly frustrating way to lose data is by burning it to an optical disc and storing it. One often attempts to preserve data this way, only to have cheap media or a cheap storage container (especially binders) destroy the disc beyond repair. Sometimes, however, the data around the error (or at least up to it, which is sometimes still better than nothing) may still be readable if you use a tool more complicated than the 'cp' command (or selecting and dragging files in the file manager of your choice.) Copying an entire disc One excellent starting point is to use GNU dd (from GNU coreutils) or other, similarly capable implementations to recover the data on a damaged optical disc (though perhaps not one so damaged as the one on the right.) A handful of the available options are especially helpful. Here's a possibly excessive example command line for copying a whole disc: dd if=/dev/sr0 of=image.iso bs=2048 conv=noerror,notrunc iflag=nonblock dd is an exceptionally useful utility. The GNU dd manpage says of dd that it will "Copy a file, converting and formatting according to the operands." We don't do any conversion, but we do specify some options as to how to go about reading the data: From my first cd-rom drive (if=/dev/sr0) I read to an appropriately named ISO file (of=image.iso). I specify a block size (bs=2048 means 2048 bytes, or 2 KiB) and some options (conv=noerror,notrunc): noerror causes dd to continue after a read error, and notrunc will avoid any automatic truncation of the output file. iflag=nonblock sets an "input flag" that causes dd to use non-blocking I/O, which should minimize the impact on your system at the possible expense of speed during the copy. Since I always assume that the copy will take a more or less indefinite period of time, this does not offend me at all, but I admit that it also helps to have an external DVD burner lying around as a backup in case I change my mind and decide that I really need my DVD-ROM. This is what it looks like when there's errors: dd: reading `/dev/sr0': Input/output error
2306+0 records in
2306+0 records out
4722688 bytes (4.7 MB) copied, 88.0203 seconds, 53.7 kB/s
dd: reading `/dev/sr0': Input/output