in a terminal window, cd to the directory with the bittorrent files (example: cd Download/Fedora-14-i386-DVD) and enter: sha256sum -c *CHECKSUM (This is the lazy man's way to do it. The system will try to find all the CDs too, and fail them, but who cares? Just so the DVD you're interested in is OK.) apropos sha256 will give you a list of likely candidates, and man sha256sum will give you a quick & dirty synopsis of the command. Good Luck. (For years, before DVDs came along, the first CD (FTP) of the set would test OK for me, and all the rest would test bad, but they all worked fine. I've had Brasero lie to me as well.) Bill On Fri, 2010-11-12 at 16:20 -0500, Vincent wrote: > Hello All' > I downloaded fedora-14-i386-dvd.iso several time included bitorrent. The > dvd disk were burned from two different computer, they all show error > during the test. The installation were tested on 3 different computer. > The bittorrent when downloaded made a directory "fedora-14-i386-dvd" in > I found 2 files "fedora-14-i386-dvd.iso" and "fedora-14-i386-checksum" > this is the first time I used bittorrent and do not know how to use the > checksum to verify the iso file, this file however, when burned on dvd > and tested during the installation shows error also. Am I doing some > thing wrong? > I appreciate some help. > -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines