Loren Posted June 27, 2007 Posted June 27, 2007 Imgburn is determined to finalize a disc no matter what. There is nothing you can do to simply abort a burn even if you get repeated errors attempting to finalize it. Of course if you don't finalize the disc it's just a coaster but if you know it's failed anyway there should be a way of saying to completely abort. At least my burner is external so I can unplug it and get out. If it's internal you're stuck--even if you kill the task the drive will be locked. IIRC the only way out of that one is to reboot. While this is operating as designed that doesn't exempt it from being a bug. It's simply a design bug instead of a coding bug.
LIGHTNING UK! Posted June 27, 2007 Posted June 27, 2007 I'm not so sure that's true. If it errors out, you can abort it. This is a program suggestion more than a bug. I'll move it for you.
blutach Posted June 27, 2007 Posted June 27, 2007 I'd actually 2nd the idea of an abort button but if the drive is hanging, I'm not sure there's much that can be done other than a power down. Regards
LIGHTNING UK! Posted June 27, 2007 Posted June 27, 2007 If the flag is set to show the burn failed, it'll now prompt before performing sync cache and the finalise disc commands (subject to further testing). I'm not so sure it's a good idea because drives can get confused if a write operation doesn't finish off properly and you just end up with loads of 'command sequence error' errors.
Loren Posted June 27, 2007 Author Posted June 27, 2007 I'm not so sure that's true. If it errors out, you can abort it. This is a program suggestion more than a bug. I'll move it for you. The problem is that if it can't finalize the disk you're stuck in an infinite loop. Tell it to cancel and it finalizes again. It's *NOT* the drive hanging--it eventually gives up and comes back with the error about not being able to finalize. I'm not saying to dump it out in the middle of an operation, I'm saying to optionally not attempt to finalize on an abort.
LIGHTNING UK! Posted June 27, 2007 Posted June 27, 2007 It's not infinite. There's a little fall back mechanism where if one variation of the command fails, another one is attempted. In the generic I/O error boxes, there's no way to differentiate between you telling it not to retry the same command (i.e. 'cancel'), or to totally give up. Depending on exactly which command you 'cancel', there should only be a few extra (slightly different) attempts at that specific function (be it closing the track, closing the session, closing the disc etc). Just don't have any failures and it won't be an issue! It's certainly not one for me.
Loren Posted June 28, 2007 Author Posted June 28, 2007 It's not infinite. There's a little fall back mechanism where if one variation of the command fails, another one is attempted. In the generic I/O error boxes, there's no way to differentiate between you telling it not to retry the same command (i.e. 'cancel'), or to totally give up. Depending on exactly which command you 'cancel', there should only be a few extra (slightly different) attempts at that specific function (be it closing the track, closing the session, closing the disc etc). Just don't have any failures and it won't be an issue! It's certainly not one for me. I've got a spindle of questionable disks--about 1 in 3 burn fine, the rest fail with power calibration errors while finalizing. Unfortunately the label is long gone, I don't know where to return them nor could I prove whose disks they are so it's either get what I can out of them or toss the whole spindle.
Shamus_McFartfinger Posted June 28, 2007 Posted June 28, 2007 The disks sound pretty dodgy. How about posting whatever part of the log you have saved so we can have a look at the media for you?
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