icedax - a sampling utility that dumps CD audio data into wav
sound files
icedax [-c chans] [-s] [-m]
[-b bits] [-r rate] [-a divider]
[-t track[+endtrack]] [-i index]
[-o offset] [-d duration] [-x]
[-q] [-w] [-v optlist] [-V] [-Q]
[-J] [-L cddbmode] [-R] [-P
sectors] [-F] [-G] [-T] [-e] [-p
percentage] [-n sectors] [-l buffers]
[-N] [-J] [-H] [-g] [-B] [-D
device] [-A auxdevice] [-I interface]
[-O audiotype] [-C input-endianess] [-E
output-endianess] [-M count] [-S speed]
[-paranoia] [cddbp-server=servername]
[cddbp-port=portnumber] [filename(s) or
directories]
icedax stands for InCrEdible Digital Audio eXtractor. It
can retrieve audio tracks (CDDA) from CDROM drives that are capable
of reading audio data digitally to the host (see README for a list of
drives).
- dev=device
- -D device
- -device
device
- uses device as the source for CDDA reading. For example
/dev/cdrom or Bus,ID,Lun. The device specification can also
have influence on the selection of the driver interface (eg. on Linux).
See the -I option for details.
The setting of the environment variable CDDA_DEVICE is
overridden by this option.
- -A auxdevice
- -auxdevice
auxdevice
- uses auxdevice as CDROM drive for ioctl usage.
- -I interface
- -interface
interface
- specifies the interface for CDROM access: generic_scsi or (on
Linux, and FreeBSD systems) cooked_ioctl.
Using the cooked_ioctl is not recommended as this makes
icedax mainly depend on the audio extraction quality of the
operating system which is usually extremely bad.
- -c channels
--channels
- uses 1 for mono, or 2 for stereo recording, or s for
stereo recording with both channels swapped.
- -s --stereo
- sets to stereo recording.
- -m --mono
- sets to mono recording.
- -x --max
- sets maximum (CD) quality.
- -b bits
--bits-per-sample
- sets bits per sample per channel: 8, 12 or 16.
- -r rate
--rate
- sets rate in samples per second. Possible values are listed with the
-R option.
- -a divider
--divider
- sets rate to 44100Hz / divider. Possible values are listed with the
-R option.
- -R --dump-rates
- shows a list of all sample rates and their dividers.
- -P sectors
--set-overlap
- sets the initial number of overlap sectors for jitter
correction.
- -n sectors
--sectors-per-request
- reads sectors per request.
- -l buffers
--buffers-in-ring
- uses a ring buffer with buffers total.
- -t track+endtrack
--track
- selects the start track and optionally the end track.
- -i index
--index
- selects the start index.
- -o offset
--offset
- starts offset sectors behind start track (one sector equivalents
1/75 seconds).
- -O audiotype
--output-format
- can be wav (for wav files) or aiff (for apple/sgi aiff
files) or aifc (for apple/sgi aifc files) or au or
sun (for sun .au PCM files) or cdr or raw (for
headerless files to be used for cd writers).
- -C endianess
--cdrom-endianess
- sets endianess of the input samples to 'little', 'big' or 'guess' to
override defaults.
- -E endianess
--output-endianess
- sets endianess of the output samples to 'little' or 'big' to override
defaults.
- -d duration
--duration
- sets recording time in seconds or frames. Frames (sectors) are indicated
by a 'f' suffix (like 75f for 75 sectors). 0 sets the time for
whole track.
- -B --bulk
--alltracks
- copies each track into a separate file.
- -w --wait
- waits for signal, then start recording.
- -F --find-extremes
- finds extreme amplitudes in samples.
- -G --find-mono
- finds if input samples are in mono.
- -T --deemphasize
- undo the effect of pre-emphasis in the input samples.
- -e --echo
- copies audio data to sound device e.g. /dev/dsp.
- -p percentage
--set-pitch
- changes pitch of audio data copied to sound device.
- -v itemlist
--verbose-level
- prints verbose information about the CD. Level is a list of comma
separated suboptions. Each suboption controls the type of information to
be reported.
Suboption |
Description |
disable |
no information is given, warnings appear however |
all |
all information is given |
toc |
show table of contents |
summary |
show a summary of the recording parameters |
indices |
determine and display index offsets |
catalog |
retrieve and display the media catalog number MCN |
trackid |
retrieve and display all International Standard Recording Codes
ISRC |
sectors |
show the table of contents in start sector notation |
titles |
show the table of contents with track titles (when available) |
- -N --no-write
- does not write to a file, it just reads (for debugging purposes).
- -J --info-only
- does not write to a file, it just gives information about the disc.
- -L cddb mode --cddb
- does a cddbp album- and track title lookup based on the cddb id. The
parameter cddb mode defines how multiple entries shall be handled.
Parameter |
Description |
0 |
interactive mode. The user selects the entry to use. |
1 |
first fit mode. The first entry is taken unconditionally. |
-
cddbp-server=servername
- sets the server to be contacted for title lookups.
-
cddbp-port=portnumber
- sets the port number to be used for title lookups.
- -H --no-infofile
- does not write an info file and a cddb file.
- -g --gui
- formats the output to be better parsable by gui frontends.
- -M count --md5
- enables calculation of MD-5 checksum for 'count' bytes from a beginning of
a track.
- -S speed --speed
- sets the cdrom device to one of the selectable speeds for reading.
- -q --quiet
- quiet operation, no screen output.
- -V --verbose-SCSI
- enable SCSI command logging to the console. This is mainly used for
debugging.
- -Q --silent-SCSI
- suppress SCSI command error reports to the console. This is mainly used
for guis.
- -scanbus
- Scan all SCSI devices on all SCSI busses and print the inquiry strings.
This option may be used to find SCSI address of the CD/DVD-Recorder on a
system. The numbers printed out as labels are computed by: bus * 100 +
target
- --devices
- Like -scanbus but works in a more native way, respecting the device name
specification on the current operating system. See wodim(1) for
details.
- -paranoia
- use the paranoia library instead of icedax's routines for reading.
- -h --help
- display version of icedax on standard output.
- Defaults depend on
the
- Makefile and environment variable settings (currently
CDDA_DEVICE ).
CDDA_DEVICE is used to set the device name. The device
naming is compatible with the one used by the wodim tool.
- CDDBP_SERVER
- is used for cddbp title lookups when supplied.
- CDDBP_PORT
- is used for cddbp title lookups when supplied.
- RSH
- If the RSH environment variable is present, the remote connection
will not be created via rcmd(3) but by calling the program pointed
to by RSH. Use e.g. RSH=/usr/bin/ssh to create a secure
shell connection.
Note that this forces icedax to create a pipe to the
rsh(1) program and disallows icedax to directly access the
network socket to the remote server. This makes it impossible to set up
performance parameters and slows down the connection compared to a
root initiated rcmd(3) connection.
- RSCSI
- If the RSCSI environment variable is present, the remote SCSI
server will not be the program /opt/schily/sbin/rscsi but the
program pointed to by RSCSI. Note that the remote SCSI server
program name will be ignored if you log in using an account that has been
created with a remote SCSI server program as login shell.
icedax uses the following exit codes to indicate various
degrees of success:
Exitcode |
Description |
0 |
no errors encountered, successful operation. |
1 |
usage or syntax error. icedax got inconsistent arguments. |
2 |
permission (un)set errors. permission changes failed. |
3 |
read errors on the cdrom/burner device encountered. |
4 |
write errors while writing one of the output files encountered. |
5 |
errors with soundcard handling (initialization/write). |
6 |
errors with stat() system call on the read device (cooked ioctl). |
7 |
pipe communication errors encountered (in forked mode). |
8 |
signal handler installation errors encountered. |
9 |
allocation of shared memory failed (in forked mode). |
10 |
dynamic heap memory allocation failed. |
11 |
errors on the audio cd medium encountered. |
12 |
device open error in ioctl handling detected. |
13 |
race condition in ioctl interface handling detected. |
14 |
error in ioctl() operation encountered. |
15 |
internal error encountered. Please report back!!! |
16 |
error in semaphore operation encountered (install / request). |
17 |
could not get the scsi transfer buffer. |
18 |
could not create pipes for process communication (in forked mode). |
icedax is able to read parts of an audio CD or
multimedia CDROM (containing audio parts) directly digitally. These
parts can be written to a file, a pipe, or to a sound device.
icedax stands for CDDA to WAV (where
CDDA stands for compact disc digital audio and WAV is a sound
sample format introduced by MS Windows). It allows copying CDDA audio
data from the CDROM drive into a file in WAV or other formats.
The latest versions try to get higher real-time scheduling
priorities to ensure smooth (uninterrupted) operation. These priorities are
available for super users and are higher than those of 'normal' processes.
Thus delays are minimized.
If your CDROM is on device DEV and it is loaded with an
audio CD, you may simply invoke icedax dev=DEV and it will create the
sound file audio.wav recording the whole track beginning with track 1
in stereo at 16 bit at 44100 Hz sample rate, if your file system has enough
space free. Otherwise recording time will be limited. For details see files
README and README.INSTALL
- Options
- Most of the options are used to control the format of the WAV file. In the
following text all of them are described.
- Select Device
- -D device selects the CDROM drive device to be used. The
specifier given should correspond to the selected interface (see below).
CHANGE! For the cooked_ioctl interface this is the cdrom device
descriptor as before. The SCSI devices used with the generic SCSI
interface however are now addressed with their SCSI-Bus, SCSI-Id,
and SCSI-Lun instead of the generic SCSI device descriptor!!!
One example for a SCSI CDROM drive on bus 0 with SCSI ID 3 and lun 0 is
-D0,3,0.
- Select Auxiliary
device
- -A auxdevice is necessary for CD-Extra handling. For
Non-SCSI-CDROM drives this is the same device as given by -D (see above).
For SCSI-CDROM drives it is the CDROM drive (SCSI) device (i.e.
/dev/sr0 ) corresponding to the SCSI device (i.e. 0,3,0 ).
It has to match the device used for sampling.
- Select
Interface
- -I interface selects the CDROM drive interface. For SCSI
drives use generic_scsi (cooked_ioctl may not yet be available for all
devices): generic_scsi and cooked_ioctl. The first uses the
generic SCSI interface, the latter uses the ioctl of the CDROM driver. The
latter variant works only when the kernel driver supports CDDA
reading. This entry has to match the selected CDROM device (see
above).
- Enable echo to
soundcard
- -e copies audio data to the sound card while recording, so you hear
it nearly simultaneously. The soundcard gets the same data that is
recorded. This is time critical, so it works best with the -q
option. To use icedax as a pseudo CD player without recording in a
file you could use icedax -q -e -t2 -d0 -N to play the whole second
track. This feature reduces the recording speed to at most onefold speed.
You cannot make better recordings than your sound card can play (since the
same data is used).
- Change pitch of echoed
audio
- -p percentage changes the pitch of all audio echoed to a sound
card. Only the copy to the soundcard is affected, the recorded audio
samples in a file remain the same. Normal pitch, which is the default, is
given by 100%. Lower percentages correspond to lower pitches, i.e. -p 50
transposes the audio output one octave lower. See also the script
pitchplay as an example. This option was contributed by Raul
Sobon.
- Select mono or stereo
recording
- -m or -c 1 selects mono recording (both stereo channels are
mixed), -s or -c 2 or -c s selects stereo recording.
Parameter s will swap both sound channels.
- Select maximum
quality
- -x will set stereo, 16 bits per sample at 44.1 KHz (full CD
quality). Note that other format options given later can change this
setting.
- Select sample
quality
- -b 8 specifies 8 bit (1 Byte) for each sample in each channel;
-b 12 specifies 12 bit (2 Byte) for each sample in each channel;
-b 16 specifies 16 bit (2 Byte) for each sample in each channel
(Ensure that your sample player or sound card is capable of playing 12-bit
or 16-bit samples). Selecting 12 or 16 bits doubles file size. 12-bit
samples are aligned to 16-bit samples, so they waste some disk space.
- Select sample
rate
- -r samplerate selects a sample rate. samplerate can
be in a range between 44100 and 900. Option -R lists all available
rates.
- Select sample rate
divider
- -a divider selects a sample rate divider. divider can
be minimally 1 and maximally 50.5 and everything between in steps of 0.5.
Option -R lists all available rates.
- To make the sound smoother at lower sampling rates, icedax sums
over n samples (where n is the specific dividend). So for
22050 Hertz output we have to sum over 2 samples, for 900 Hertz we have to
sum over 49 samples. This cancels higher frequencies. Standard sector size
of an audio CD (ignoring additional information) is 2352 Bytes. In order
to finish summing for an output sample at sector boundaries the rates
above have to be chosen. Arbitrary sampling rates in high quality would
require some interpolation scheme, which needs much more sophisticated
programming.
- List a table of all sampling
rates
- -R shows a list of all sample rates and their dividers. Dividers
can range from 1 to 50.5 in steps of 0.5.
- Select start track and
optionally end track
- -t n+m selects n as the start track and optionally
m as the last track of a range to be recorded. These tracks must be
from the table of contents. This sets the track where recording begins.
Recording can advance through the following tracks as well (limited by the
optional end track or otherwise depending on recording time). Whether one
file or different files are then created depends on the -B option
(see below).
- Select start
index
- -i n selects the index to start recording with. Indices
other than 1 will invoke the index scanner, which will take some time to
find the correct start position. An offset may be given additionally (see
below).
- Set recording time
- -d n sets recording time to n seconds or set recording time
for whole track if n is zero. In order to specify the duration in
frames (sectors) also, the argument can have an appended 'f'. Then the
numerical argument is to be taken as frames (sectors) rather than seconds.
Please note that if track ranges are being used they define the recording
time as well thus overriding any -d option specified times.
- Recording time is defined as the time the generated sample will play (at
the defined sample rate). Since it's related to the amount of generated
samples, it's not the time of the sampling process itself (which can be
less or more). It's neither strictly coupled with the time information on
the audio CD (shown by your hifi CD player). Differences can occur by the
usage of the -o option (see below). Notice that recording time will
be shortened, unless enough disk space exists. Recording can be aborted at
anytime by pressing the break character (signal SIGQUIT).
.IP "Record all tracks of a complete audio CD in separate files"
-B copies each track into a separate file. A base name can be
given. File names have an appended track number and an extension
corresponding to the audio format. To record all audio tracks of a CD, use
a sufficient high duration (i.e. -d99999).
- Set start sector
offset
- -o sectors increments start sector of the track by
sectors. By this option you are able to skip a certain amount at
the beginning of a track so you can pick exactly the part you want. Each
sector runs for 1/75 seconds, so you have very fine control. If your
offset is so high that it would not fit into the current track, a warning
message is issued and the offset is ignored. Recording time is not
reduced. (To skip introductory quiet passages automagically, use the
-w option see below.)
- Wait for signal
option
- -w Turning on this option will suppress all silent output at
startup, reducing possibly file size. icedax will watch for any
signal in the output signal and switches on writing to file.
- Find extreme samples
- -F Turning on this option will display the most negative and the
most positive sample value found during recording for both channels. This
can be useful for readjusting the volume. The values shown are not reset
at track boundaries, they cover the complete sampling process. They are
taken from the original samples and have the same format (i.e. they are
independent of the selected output format).
- Find if input samples are
in mono
- -G If this option is given, input samples for both channels will be
compared. At the end of the program the result is printed. Differences in
the channels indicate stereo, otherwise when both channels are equal it
will indicate mono.
- Undo the pre-emphasis in the
input samples
- -T Some older audio CDs are recorded with a modified frequency
response called pre-emphasis. This is found mostly in classical
recordings. The correction can be seen in the flags of the Table Of
Contents often. But there are recordings, that show this setting only in
the subchannels. If this option is given, the index scanner will be
started, which reads the q-subchannel of each track. If pre-emphasis is
indicated in the q-subchannel of a track, but not in the TOC, pre-emphasis
will be assumed to be present, and subsequently a reverse filtering is
done for this track before the samples are written into the audio
file.
- Set audio format
- -O audiotype can be wav (for wav files) or au or
sun (for sun PCM files) or cdr or raw (for headerless
files to be used for cd writers). All file samples are coded in linear
pulse code modulation (as done in the audio compact disc format). This
holds for all audio formats. Wav files are compatible to Wind*ws sound
files, they have lsb,msb byte order as being used on the audio cd. The
default filename extension is '.wav'. Sun type files are not like the
older common logarithmically coded .au files, but instead as mentioned
above linear PCM is used. The byte order is msb,lsb to be compatible. The
default filename extension is '.au'. The AIFF and the newer variant AIFC
from the Apple/SGI world store their samples in bigendian format
(msb,lsb). In AIFC no compression is used. Finally the easiest 'format',
the cdr aka raw format. It is done per default in msb,lsb byte order to
satisfy the order wanted by most cd writers. Since there is no header
information in this format, the sample parameters can only be identified
by playing the samples on a soundcard or similar. The default filename
extension is '.cdr' or '.raw'.
- Select cdrom drive
reading speed
- -S speed allows to switch the cdrom drive to a certain level of
speed in order to reduce read errors. The argument is transfered verbatim
to the drive. Details depend very much on the cdrom drives. An argument of
0 for example is often the default speed of the drive, a value of 1 often
selects single speed.
- Enable MD5
checksums
- -M count enables calculation of MD-5 checksum for 'count' bytes
from the beginning of a track. This was introduced for quick comparisons
of tracks.
- Use Monty's libparanoia for
reading of sectors
- -paranoia selects an alternate way of extracting audio sectors.
Monty's library is used with the following default options:
PARANOIA_MODE_FULL, but without PARANOIA_MODE_NEVERSKIP
for details see Monty's libparanoia documentation. In this
case the option -P has no effect.
- Do linear or overlapping reading
of sectors
- (This applies unless option -paranoia is used.) -P sectors
sets the given number of sectors for initial overlap sampling for jitter
correction. Two cases are to be distinguished. For nonzero values, some
sectors are read twice to enable icedax's jitter correction. If an
argument of zero is given, no overlap sampling will be used. For nonzero
overlap sectors icedax dynamically adjusts the setting during sampling
(like cdparanoia does). If no match can be found, icedax retries the read
with an increased overlap. If the amount of jitter is lower than the
current overlapped samples, icedax reduces the overlap setting, resulting
in a higher reading speed. The argument given has to be lower than the
total number of sectors per request (see option -n below). Icedax
will check this setting and issues a error message otherwise. The case of
zero sectors is nice on low load situations or errorfree (perfect) cdrom
drives and perfect (not scratched) audio cds.
- Set the transfer
size
- -n sectors will set the transfer size to the specified sectors per
request.
- Set number of ring buffer
elements
- -l buffers will allocate the specified number of ring buffer
elements.
- Set endianess of input
samples
- -C endianess will override the default settings of the input
format. Endianess can be set explicitly to "little" or
"big" or to the automatic endianess detection based on voting
with "guess".
- Set endianess of output
samples
- -E endianess (endianess can be "little" or
"big") will override the default settings of the output
format.
- Verbose option
- -v itemlist prints more information. A list allows selection of
different information items.
disable keeps quiet
toc displays the table of contents
summary displays a summary of recording parameters
indices invokes the index scanner and displays start
positions of indices
catalog retrieves and displays a media catalog
number
trackid retrieves and displays international standard
recording codes
sectors displays track start positions in absolute
sector notation
To combine several requests just list the suboptions separated
with commas.
- The table of contents
- The display will show the table of contents with number of tracks and
total time (displayed in mm:ss.hh format,
mm=minutes, ss=seconds, hh=rounded 1/100 seconds).
The following list displays track number and track time for each entry.
The summary gives a line per track describing the type of the track.
track preemphasis copypermitted tracktype chans
The track column holds the track number.
preemphasis shows if that track has been given a non linear
frequency response. NOTE: You can undo this effect with the -T
option. copy-permitted indicates if this track is allowed to
copy. tracktype can be data or audio. On multimedia CDs (except
hidden track CDs) both of them should be present. channels is
defined for audio tracks only. There can be two or four channels.
- No file output
- -N this debugging option switches off writing to a file.
- No infofile
generation
- -H this option switches off creation of an info file and a cddb
file.
- Generation of
simple output for gui frontends
- -g this option switches on simple line formatting, which is needed
to support gui frontends (like xcd-roast).
- Verbose SCSI
logging
- -V this option switches on logging of SCSI commands. This will
produce a lot of output (when SCSI devices are being used). This is needed
for debugging purposes. The format is the same as being used with the
cdrecord program from Joerg Schilling or the wodim tool. See there for
details.
- Quiet option
- -q suppresses all screen output except error messages. That reduces
cpu time resources.
- Just show information
option
- -J does not write a file, it only prints information about the disc
(depending on the -v option). This is just for information
purposes.
- Lookup album and track
titles option
- -L cddbp mode Icedax tries to retrieve performer, album-, and track
titles from a cddbp server. The default server right now is
'freedb.freedb.org'. It is planned to have more control over the server
handling later. The parameter defines how multiple entries are
handled:
0 interactive mode, the user chooses one of the entries.
1 take the first entry without asking.
- Set server for title
lookups
- cddbp-server servername When using -L or --cddb, the server being
contacted can be set with this option.
- Set portnumber for title
lookups
- cddbp-port portnumber When using -L or --cddb, the server port
being contacted can be set with this option.
Don't create samples you cannot read. First check your sample
player software and sound card hardware. I experienced problems with very
low sample rates (stereo <= 1575 Hz, mono <= 3675 Hz) when trying to
play them with standard WAV players for sound blaster (maybe they are not
legal in WAV format). Most CD-Writers insist on audio samples in a
bigendian format. Now icedax supports the -E endianess option to
control the endianess of the written samples.
If your hardware is fast enough to run icedax uninterrupted and
your CD drive is one of the 'perfect' ones, you will gain speed when
switching all overlap sampling off with the -P 0 option. Further fine
tuning can be done with the -n sectors option. You can specify how
much sectors should be requested in one go.
Icedax supports pipes now. Use a filename of - to
let icedax output its samples to standard output.
Conversion to other sound formats can be done using the sox
program package (although the use of sox -x to change the byte order
of samples should be no more necessary; see option -E to change the
output byteorder).
If you want to sample more than one track into different files in
one run, this is currently possible with the -B option. When
recording time exceeds the track limit a new file will be opened for the
next track.
Icedax can generate a lot of files for various purposes.
Audio files:
There are audio files containing samples with default extensions
These files are not generated when option (-N) is given. Multiple files may
be written when the bulk copy option (-B) is used. Individual file names can
be given as arguments. If the number of file names given is sufficient to
cover all included audio tracks, the file names will be used verbatim.
Otherwise, if there are less file names than files needed to write the
included tracks, the part of the file name before the extension is extended
with '_dd' where dd represents the current track number.
Cddb and Cdindex files:
If icedax detects cd-extra or cd-text (album/track) title
information, then .cddb and .cdindex files are generated unless suppressed
by the option -H. They contain suitable formatted entries for submission to
audio cd track title databases in the internet. The CDINDEX and CDDB(tm)
systems are currently supported. For more information please visit
www.musicbrainz.org and www.freedb.com.
Inf files:
The inf files are describing the sample files and the part from
the audio cd, it was taken from. They are a means to transfer information to
a cd burning program like wodim. For example, if the original audio cd had
pre-emphasis enabled, and icedax -T did remove the pre-emphasis, then the
inf file has pre-emphasis not set (since the audio file does not have it
anymore), while the .cddb and the .cdindex have pre-emphasis set as the
original does.
IMPORTANT: it is prohibited to sell copies of copyrighted
material by noncopyright holders. This program may not be used to circumvent
copyrights. The user acknowledges this constraint when using the
software.
Generation of md5 checksums is currently broken.
Performance may not be optimal on slower systems.
The index scanner may give timeouts.
The resampling (rate conversion code) uses polynomial
interpolation, which is not optimal.
Icedax should use threads.
Icedax currently cannot sample hidden audio tracks (track 1 index
0).
Thanks goto Project MODE (http://www.mode.net/) and Fraunhofer
Institut fuer integrierte Schaltungen (FhG-IIS) (http://www.iis.fhg.de/) for
financial support. Plextor Europe and Ricoh Japan provided cdrom disk drives
and cd burners which helped a lot to develop this software. Rammi has helped
a lot with the debugging and showed a lot of stamina when hearing 100 times
the first 16 seconds of the first track of the Krupps CD. Libparanoia
contributed by Monty (Christopher Montgomery) xiphmont@mit.edu.
Heiko Eissfeldt heiko@colossus.escape.de
This manpage describes the program implementation of icedax
as shipped by the cdrkit distribution. See
http://alioth.debian.org/projects/debburn/ for details. It is a
spinoff from the original program cdda2wav as distributed in the cdrtools
package [1]. However, the cdrtools developers are not involved in the
development of this spinoff and therefore shall not be made responsible for
any problem caused by it. Do not try to get support for this program by
contacting the original authors.
If you have support questions, send them to
debburn-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org
If you have definitely found a bug, send a mail to this list or
to
submit@bugs.debian.org
writing at least a short description into the Subject and
"Package: cdrkit" into the first line of the mail body.
[1] Cdrtools 2.01.01a08 from May 2006,
http://cdrecord.berlios.de