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error message Too many UDF File Entry AD `s to fit in buffer!


His_Shadow

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Hello,

 

I wanted to convert a file to an ISO.

It is an image file (. Tib) this is about 360GB in size.

I have made ??the following settings:

Data Type: MODE1/2048

File system: UDF

UDF Revision: 1:02

Recurse Subdirectories

 

 

under Advanced:

 

Folder / file name length

level 1

Character set: standard

and

Allow the file size limits are exceeded:

several of dimensions

 

I get the following error message:

 

Too many UDF File Entry AD `s to fit in buffer!

 

What can / should I do?

 

my system has 8GB RAM. I must take a system with more memory or is it possibly also on the 32bit version of Image Burn? There is this all about?

 

greez

 

Michel

 

 


Hallo,

 

ich wollte eine Datei in ein ISO konvertieren. 

Es ist eine Image Datei (.tib) diese ist ca. 360GB groß.

Folgende Einstellungen habe ich vorgenommen:

Dateityp: Mode1/2048

Dateisystem: UDF

UDF-Revision: 1.02

 

unter erweitert:

 

Ordner- / Dateinamen-länge

Level 1

Zeichensatz: Standart

und

Erlauben das Dateien Größenlimits überschritten werden:

Mehere Ausmaße

 

Ich bekomme folgende Fehlermeldung:

 

Too many UDF File Entry AD`s to fit in buffer!

 

Was kann / muss ich tun??

 

mein System hat 8GB Ram. Muß ich ein System mit mehr speicher nehmen oder liegt es evtl. auch an der 32bit version von Image Burn? Gibt es diese überhaupt?

 

Greez

 

Michel


 

ImgBurn.log

Edited by His_Shadow
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What are you hoping to achieve by wrapping such a large file up in an ISO? You'll just end up with another 360gb file that you can't do anything with - unless they've suddenly started doing 500gb disc that I don't know about ?!

 

Files that size belong on hard disks, not optical discs.

 

If you want to back it up over loads of discs, you'll need to split it up into smaller disc sized chunks and burn each one individually. Personally, I'd stick to just storing it on a spare hdd or two.

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Acronis recovery media has network support doesn't it?

 

So can't you just point it at a network share on your PC where that 360gb file is?

 

Oh and btw, the options on the ISO9660 tab don't do anything if ISO9600 isn't being included as a file system! You're just using UDF, so that guide is wrong.

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I don't see why the network would be slower, you'd only be accessing the same physical file, be it from a network share or once wrapped up in an ISO and then mounted via a virtual optical drive.

 

You could also give VMware direct access to the physical hdd the .tib file is stored on.

 

The manual *is* wrong, it's talking about changing things on the ISO9660 tab (step 4) when you aren't even including the ISO9660 file system in the image you're creating (as per step 3). Well ok, it's not wrong, wrong, but it's getting you to do things which have no effect on the resulting ISO image.

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