On 1/14/06, J. K. Cliburn <jcliburn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I am using mkisofs to create an iso file of a video dvd, but getting > > the following: > > > > $ mkisofs -o ~/Desktop/dzrt.iso -V "DZRT" -dvd-video -v ~/Desktop/dzrt > > INFO: ISO-8859-1 character encoding detected by locale settings. > > Assuming ISO-8859-1 encoded filenames on source filesystem, > > use -input-charset to override. > > mkisofs 2.01 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) > > Scanning /home/psmith/Desktop/dzrt > > Scanning /home/psmith/Desktop/dzrt/VIDEO_TS > > Scanning /home/psmith/Desktop/dzrt/AUDIO_TS > > mkisofs: No such file or directory. Faild to open > > /home/psmith/Desktop/dzrt//VIDEO_TS/VIDEO_TS.IFO > > mkisofs: Can't open VMG info for '/home/psmith/Desktop/dzrt/'. > > mkisofs: Unable to parse DVD-Video structures. > > mkisofs: Unable to make a DVD-Video image. > > > > It seems to be a bug of mkisofs, as it (internally) uses two > > consecutive slashes: > > > > mkisofs: No such file or directory. Faild to open > > /home/psmith/Desktop/dzrt//VIDEO_TS/VIDEO_TS.IFO > > The double slashes shouldn't matter. It looks like your VIDEO_TS.IFO > file is missing, indicating the dvd file structure is incorrect. Did > you run something like 'dvdauthor <dir_name> -T' on the top level dvd > directory? Thanks. I have now a clue: the name of the files are in lowercase letters. Does it matter? In case it matters, how can I automatically convert the name of the files to uppercase letters? Paul