cdrkit

cdrkit is a collection of computer programs for CD and DVD authoring that work on Unix-like systems. cdrkit is released under the GNU General Public License version 2. Fedora, Gentoo Linux, Mandriva Linux, and Ubuntu all include cdrkit. Joerg Jaspert is cdrkit's leader and release manager.

cdrkit
Developer(s)Debian Project
Stable release
1.1.11 / October 17, 2010 (2010-10-17)
Operating systemUnix-like
TypeCD/DVD-writing
LicenseGPL version 2
WebsiteN/A

It was created in 2006 by Debian developers as a fork of cdrtools based on the last GPL-licensed version when cdrtools licensing changed.[1]

Features

The cdrkit includes many features for CD and DVD writing, such as

  • creation of audio, data, and mixed (audio and data) CDs
  • burning CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-r.
  • usage without root identity is possible in many cases, some device drivers still may fail, show unexplainable problems[2]
  • can use device node instead of scsi id numbers on Linux[2]

Components

Major components include:

  • wodim (an acronym for write optical disk media), which was forked from the cdrecord program in cdrtools.
  • icedax (an acronym for incredible digital audio extractor), which was forked from the cdda2wav program in cdrtools.
  • genisoimage (short for generate ISO image), which was forked from the mkisofs program in cdrtools.

Front-ends

Other software can use cdrkit tools in the back-end. cdrkit tools will maintain interface compatibility with cdrtools 2.01.01a08 at least for the near future.[3] Numerous programs can therefore use it, including Brasero (the default GNOME Desktop CD/DVD application), K3b (the default KDE desktop application), and X-CD-Roast (desktop environment independent).

History

A license dispute arose between the Debian maintainers and the since deceased[4] cdrtools author Jörg Schilling.[5] The Debian developers said that the GPL license is not compatible with the CDDL license that covers part of the cdrtools code.[5] In contrast, cdrtools maintainer Jörg Schilling stated that there is no problem with the license,[6] and also felt that the Debian fork is not legally redistributable.[7] The Red Hat legal team differed with Schilling's position, saying that he has not provided them with any proof of either license or copyright violation in cdrkit.[8]

Schilling also said that the cdrkit fork reintroduced various bugs from the first versions of cdrtools, which were already fixed in later cdrtools versions.[9] Debian developers considered that some of these changes were necessary to solve existing problems, rather than being bugs.[10]

References

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