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There are different levels to this standard.
Level 1 | File names are restricted to 8 characters with a 3 character extension, upper case letters, numbers and underscore; maximum depth of directories is 8. |
Level 2 | File names may be up to 31 characters. |
Level 3 | The third level allows files to be fragmented (used on CD-Rs written by the software "Direct CD" for Windows, for example). |
All levels restrict names to upper case letters and underscores ("_"). Some CD mastering applications allow the user to use almost any ASCII character. While this does not strictly conform to the ISO 9660 standard, most operating systems that can read ISO 9660 file systems support the use of most ASCII characters as an extension.
Disk images of ISO 9660 file systems often have the extension .iso
, but not necessarily.
There are extensions to ISO 9660 to deal with the limitations. The most common ones are Rock Ridge and Joliet:
Rock Ridge supports the preservation of Unix permissions and longer ASCII coded names, while Joliet supports names stored in Unicode, thus allowing almost any character to be used, even from non-roman scripts.
ISO 13490[?] is basically ISO 9660 with multisession support.
Most operating systems support reading of ISO 9660 formatted discs, but only a few support the extensions such as Rock Ridge and Joliet. Operating systems that do not support the extensions will usually show the basic (non-extended) features of a plain ISO 9660 disc.
Here are some operating systems and their support for ISO 9660 and extensions:
P.S. Since the burning software K3b allows the creation of ISO Level 3 disks on a Mandrake 9.0 machine, I'd say that Linux (at least with kernel 2.4) supports that format correctly.
See the CD Recording FAQ (http://www.cdrfaq.org/)
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