docs/69087: sysutils/mkisofs no longer exist
Giorgos Keramidas
keramida at FreeBSD.org
Thu Jul 15 12:50:27 UTC 2004
The following reply was made to PR docs/69087; it has been noted by GNATS.
From: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida at FreeBSD.org>
To: Janos Mohacsi <janos.mohacsi at bsd.hu>
Cc: bug-followup at FreeBSD.org
Subject: Re: docs/69087: sysutils/mkisofs no longer exist
Date: Thu, 15 Jul 2004 15:44:50 +0300
On 2004-07-15 10:23, Janos Mohacsi <mohacsi at niif.hu> wrote:
> sysutils/mkisofs no longer exist (i.e merged to sysutils/cdrtools)
> There are lots of reference to mkisofs that has to be update:
> 1. man page of burncd
> 2. Chapter 16 of FreeBSD Handbook
Does this patch look ok for the Handbook chapter?
%%
Index: chapter.sgml
===================================================================
RCS file: /home/ncvs/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks/chapter.sgml,v
retrieving revision 1.212
diff -u -r1.212 chapter.sgml
--- chapter.sgml 14 Jul 2004 05:33:13 -0000 1.212
+++ chapter.sgml 15 Jul 2004 12:43:07 -0000
@@ -920,13 +920,13 @@
working with systems that do not support those extensions.</para>
<indexterm>
- <primary><filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename></primary>
+ <primary><filename role="package">sysutils/cdrtools</filename></primary>
</indexterm>
- <para>The <filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename>
- program is used to produce a data file containing an ISO 9660 file
+ <para>The <filename role="package">sysutils/cdrtools</filename>
+ port includes &man.mkisofs.8;, a program that you can use to
+ produce a data file containing an ISO 9660 file
system. It has options that support various extensions, and is
- described below. You can install it with the
- <filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename> port.</para>
+ described below.</para>
<indexterm>
<primary>CD burner</primary>
@@ -972,7 +972,9 @@
<sect2 id="mkisofs">
<title>mkisofs</title>
- <para><filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename> produces an ISO 9660 file system
+ <para>The &man.mkisofs.8; program, which is part of the
+ <filename role="package">sysutils/cdrtools</filename> port,
+ produces an ISO 9660 file system
that is an image of a directory tree in the &unix; file system name
space. The simplest usage is:</para>
@@ -1045,7 +1047,7 @@
and <filename>/tmp/myboot</filename> are identical.</para>
<para>There are many other options you can use with
- <filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename> to fine-tune its behavior. In particular:
+ &man.mkisofs.8; to fine-tune its behavior. In particular:
modifications to an ISO 9660 layout and the creation of Joliet
and HFS discs. See the &man.mkisofs.8; manual page for details.</para>
</sect2>
@@ -1213,7 +1215,7 @@
<para>You can copy a data CD to a image file that is
functionally equivalent to the image file created with
- <filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename>, and you can use it to duplicate
+ &man.mkisofs.8;, and you can use it to duplicate
any data CD. The example given here assumes that your CDROM
device is <devicename>acd0</devicename>. Substitute your
correct CDROM device. Under &os; 4.X, a <literal>c</literal> must be appended
@@ -1307,7 +1309,7 @@
Such a CDROM cannot be read under any operating system
except FreeBSD. If you want to be able to mount the CD, or
share data with another operating system, you must use
- <filename role="package">sysutils/mkisofs</filename> as described above.</para>
+ &man.mkisofs.8; as described above.</para>
</sect2>
<sect2 id="atapicam">
%%
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