Sound and Video

cdparanoia: A Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA) extraction tool (or ripper).

Name:cdparanoia Vendor:Scientific Linux
Version:alpha9.8 License:GPL
Release:24 URL:http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/index.html
Summary
Cdparanoia (Paranoia III) reads digital audio directly from a CD, then writes the data to a file or pipe in WAV, AIFC or raw 16 bit linear PCM format. Cdparanoia doesn't contain any extra features (like the ones included in the cdda2wav sampling utility). Instead, cdparanoia's strength lies in its ability to handle a variety of hardware, including inexpensive drives prone to misalignment, frame jitter and loss of streaming during atomic reads. Cdparanoia is also good at reading and repairing data from damaged CDs.

Arch: x86_64

Download:cdparanoia-alpha9.8-24.x86_64.rpm
Build Date:Mon Mar 14 14:29:45 2005
Packager:
Size:94 KiB

Changelog

* Wed Oct 6 19:00:00 2004 Peter Jones <pjones{%}redhat{*}com> alpha9.8-24
- workaround for sgio read size issues in newer kernels.
* Fri Oct 1 19:00:00 2004 Peter Jones <pjones{%}redhat{*}com> alpha9.8-23
- "This time, with a meaningful changelog" release.  Just like -22.
- new SG_IO code in rawhide.  This means ripping will no longer use the 
  "cooked ioctl" mode that it has since we moved to 2.6, instead utilizing
  the real scsi-based command set to talk to most drives.  This should
  result in better error correction handling, and usage of much more
  commonly used kernel features.
- environment variable "CDDA_TRANSPORT" added.  If you set this to "cooked",
  cdparanoia will try to use the "cooked ioctl" mode instead of SCSI/SG_IO
  based modes first, and then fall back to SG_IO.
- It'd be good if this got some testing.  A prior version of the SG_IO code
  was known to fail on some USB drives.  This version should mitigate that
  quite a bit, but I lack the hardware to test it for sure.
* Wed Jul 7 19:00:00 2004 Peter Jones <pjones{%}redhat{*}com> alpha9.8-21sgio1
- a new set of sgio patches

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