

Nevertheless creating an ISO Image can be a comfortable way of integrating a virtual disc drive into a PC that has no disc player/burner included. It finds the drive but not the disc. The ISO Image Format only works for the basic disc formats (CD, DVD, Blu ray-Disc) and does not support the above mentioned formats. Mount: you must specify the filesystem type This happens when I try to mount: sudo mount -t auto /dev/scd0 /media/bluray I also changed the sata slot, sata cable and the power cable. Ubuntu only automounts blank DVDs, but neither CDROM nor Blurays. Wodim: Overview of accessible drives (1 found) :Ġ dev='/dev/sg2' rwrw- : 'HL-DT-ST' 'BDDVDRW CH08LS10'Ģ,0,0 200) 'HL-DT-ST' 'BDDVDRW CH08LS10' '2.00' Removable CD-ROMįdisk dont even lists it. Ubuntu wont find it under /dev/sd wodim -devices The basic concept of an ISO image is that you can keep an exact digital copy of the disc and later use that image to burn a new disc that has an exact copy of the text. It is a sector-by-sector copy of the disk and no compression is used.

UBUNTU CREATE BLU RAY ISO SOFTWARE
In order to copy Blu-ray to hard drive, you need to prepare Blu-ray copy software first. The ISO image contains a CD, DVD, or Blu-ray disc-the file system itself. I have a bluray/dvd/cdrom drive with SATA. To create free-region Blu-ray ISO images files from commercial Blu-ray discs, you will need to copy Blu-ray contents from protected BDs and then make Blu-ray ISO with these source contents. I will try to test it with a windows system and different cables again. This has nothing to do with a bluray drive in general anymore.

Maybe it is for the best to close this question.
