Dreamcast How to burn Dreamcast games on Linux?

KenaiPhoenix

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Hi, I recently got here the CDi copy of Daytona USA (I plan to get an original copy of the game in the near future) and wanted to burn it into one of my CD-R.

However I got into problem: i cant find a way to burn it, when I try to burn it with K3b (I use linux as OS) and select the .cue, the file is too big for the drive. And I cant find a way to get the CDi to work.

Is there any other linux user here that can help me?

Thanks
 
To burn .cdi (DiscJuggler) images on Linux, you need to first convert them to a more common format (like .iso) or use software that supports .cdi directly.
Option 1: Convert .cdi to .iso using cdi2iso
Step-by-step:

Install cdi2iso:

On Debian/Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install cdi2iso

On Arch:

sudo pacman -S cdi2iso

Convert the .cdi file:

cdi2iso input.cdi output.iso

Burn the .iso:

Using Brasero (GUI):

brasero

Or using wodim (CLI):

wodim dev=/dev/cdrom speed=4 -v -eject output.iso
 
Last edited:
To burn .cdi (DiscJuggler) images on Linux, you need to first convert them to a more common format (like .iso) or use software that supports .cdi directly.
Option 1: Convert .cdi to .iso using cdi2iso
Step-by-step:

Install cdi2iso:

On Debian/Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install cdi2iso

On Arch:

sudo pacman -S cdi2iso

Convert the .cdi file:

cdi2iso input.cdi output.iso

Burn the .iso:

Using Brasero (GUI):

brasero

Or using wodim (CLI):

wodim dev=/dev/cdrom speed=4 -v -eject output.iso
You do not need to convert a cdi image. They are good to go.

1) Have a distro that makes wine easy to use (I use garuda)
2) install ImgBurn with wine (the cdi plugin is also there on imgburn website, follow instructions when it tells you what you need)
3) Tools --> Settings --> I/O and change the interface to SPTI so it recognizes your optical drive.
4) Use MAX burning rate, do NOT use low speeds as recommended online. Again, thanks to @popckorn for this help in the linux thread where we actually talked about this a couple weeks ago :loldog

I burn dreamcast games with pretty much 100% success on linux, even some from the repo that say they don't work on original hardware...
 
You do not need to convert a cdi image. They are good to go.

1) Have a distro that makes wine easy to use (I use garuda)
2) install ImgBurn with wine (the cdi plugin is also there on imgburn website, follow instructions when it tells you what you need)
3) Tools --> Settings --> I/O and change the interface to SPTI so it recognizes your optical drive.
4) Use MAX burning rate, do NOT use low speeds as recommended online. Again, thanks to @popckorn for this help in the linux thread where we actually talked about this a couple weeks ago :loldog

I burn dreamcast games with pretty much 100% success on linux, even some from the repo that say they don't work on original hardware...
Even much easier
 
Even much easier
I wouldn't say "easier" because it took me awhile to figure all that out ::sadkirby But it is reliable. And even my shitbox laptop optical drive has ~100% success after @popckorn helped me out with that last "piece" of the puzzle.

I am not sure how converting a cdi to iso would even work, but I'm not a dc expert... I just know my burn of the repo RDC cdi version of ecco worked on original hardware yet the description said you needed the boot disc version for og hardware. So I must be doing something right O_o
 
PowerISO will work fine for it and has native support with Linux
 
It's been about a decade since I used Ubuntu, but if there's a Linux version if ImgBurn, use that, and set the burn speed to as low as possible. That's how I did it after following an old guide and it worked 10/10 times.
 
If I remember back in the day ImgBurn v2.5.8.0 for Windows required a plugin to burn .cdi disc images. I learn something everyday for Linux, thanks @Glimbo @popckorn. Back in the day we used DiscJuggler or IsoBuster for the DC scene.
 
if there's a Linux version if ImgBurn
There is not. You need to use wine.
use that, and set the burn speed to as low as possible.
This is wrong and outdated, in my experience using imgBurn. I'm not a hardware expert, but from my experience (~20 successful burns that worked first try, others needed a reset but then worked, on og dc hardware), modern discs and drives require the MAX native speed for best results, if you want to go the imgBurn route.

Sorry to be harsh, but advice like that caused me to waste a lot of time and dics ::sadkirby And I want to spare others the same frustration.
 

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