How to burn read and write files on DVD

I would like to know how to burn DVDs (image files) with the Read and Write setting. I have changed the settings in Get Info for the image files to Read and Write for Owner, Group and Others and yet when I burn the DVD and try and copy the files back onto the hard drive (to test if it works or not) it won't allow me. When I check the Get Info it says Read and Write for owner (greyed out) and Read Only for Group and Others (greyed out too).

I have also tried to change the status of the blank DVD before adding files and after adding the files (but b4 the burn) to Read and Write, this works but then during the burn process the DVD or burner changes my settings to Read Only.

I am burning with Finder and have tried with Toast 10 Titanium. What am I doing wrong, or not doing at all?! I'm going loopy with frustration!

MacBookPro3,1, Mac OS X (10.4.11)

Posted on Sep 13, 2009 4:49 AM

Reply
14 replies

Sep 13, 2009 9:59 AM in response to cbp81

User uploaded file To Apple Discussions! User uploaded file




"I am burning with Finder and have tried with Toast 10 Titanium."

Use Disk Utility to burn.



"I would like to know how to burn DVDs (image files) with the Read and Write setting."

Use Disk Utility Help. Open same up.
At the bottom left of the window, click on the purple button w/the "?" in the middle.
This will bring up the Help Menu.


You can also do a search in Apple's Knowledge Base.
http://support.apple.com/kb/index?page=search






User uploaded file

Sep 13, 2009 3:10 PM in response to cbp81

When you copy files from a DVD to a Mac, the files are newly created on the Mac. Newly created files get the default set of OS X permissions, which are read+write for the user who created them (in this case, the user who copied them from the DVD), and read only for group and others. That's what you are always going to get; it doesn't matter what the permissions may have been on the files at the time the DVD was burned.

If you want to copy files from a DVD and have them automatically granted read+write access for group and others, you can set up a target folder for them and put an ACL on it. Post back if you need more help on how to set it up.

Sep 13, 2009 9:29 PM in response to jsd2

Thanks everyone.
@ Kiraly - Yes, please, tell me how to set up a target folder and an ACL (what's an ACL?). I think your response is the most appropraite because the graphic designer who is trying to take the photograph files off the DVD that I burned says the files are all Read Only and he cannot copy then to his Mac hard drive. As Read Only is an industry standard I think your suggestion will sort this problem.

@jsd2 - The former. My permission settings are overridden - by the DVD's inate Read Only status so I cannot copy the files back to my desktop or my hard drive unless I open them individually and do a Save As. There's a lot of photo files so this isn't a runner.

Sep 13, 2009 11:00 PM in response to cbp81

An ACL is a special set of file/folder permissions that override the standard UNIX permissions. Custom ACLs can be set on files/folders.

But after reading your latest post I don't think this will solve the problem. If I understand correctly, you are burning files to a DVD, giving the DVD to a graphic designer, and the graphic designer is having trouble copying the files from the DVD to his computer. Is that correct? Is his computer a Mac? Exactly what error message is he getting when he tries to copy the files from the DVD?

Sep 14, 2009 2:17 AM in response to Király

Yes, that's correct.

This is the email from the designer:
"+but they're all set to be read only. This means that we can't copy them to our server, the only way we have of transferring them is to open each one individually and do a save as. Could you please send us a version of the disks which are set to read and write?"+

I'm pretty sure they are using a Mac because I have transfered the files onto a PC without any problems and I tried a colleague's new Mac Book Pro which wouldn't let me copy the files onto the hard drive.

Any ideas?

Sep 14, 2009 2:46 AM in response to Király

Kiraly, I agree that the actual problem here might be something else, but as a side issue there seems to be a difference in the way permissions are handled when a file copy is made using Finder compared to when the copy is made using the cp copy in Terminal. At least in my Tiger system, Finder preserved the permission structure, though not the ownership, when it copied a file, whereas cp used the OS defaults.

I tried the following experiment:

From my test user account "t", I created a textfile named ReadWrite.txt, and gave it Read+Write permissions for Owner, Group, and Others. I then burned it using Finder to a DVD which I named PermissionTest, and then unchecked the "Ignore Ownership" box on PermissionTest.

The original ownership and permissions were preserved on the DVD, though of course you couldn't actually write to anything there:
-------------------
xxG5-Computer:~ t$ ls -l /Volumes/PermissionTest/ReadWrite.txt
-rw-rw-rw- 1 t t 15 Sep 13 18:25 /Volumes/PermissionTest/ReadWrite.txt
-----------------

I then copied the file from the DVD to the Desktop using Finder, and the permissions were preserved!

Finder copy:
-------------------------
xxG5-Computer:~ t$ ls -l /Users/t/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
-rw-rw-rw- 1 t t 15 Sep 13 18:25 /Users/t/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
------------------------------------

I then trashed the Finder copy of ReadWrite,txt on the desktop, and made a second copy from the DVD, but this time I used the cp command from Terminal instead of using Finder. This time the permissions were not preserved, but reverted to the OS default:

cp copy:
------------------------------------
xxG5-Computer:~ t$ cp /Volumes/PermissionTest/ReadWrite.txt Desktop
xxG5-Computer:~ t$ ls -l /Users/t/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 t t 15 Sep 13 19:43 /Users/t/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
------------------------------------


I then switched to a different user account "t1", and repeated the above with the same DVD, first copying the ReadWrite.txt file to the desktop using Finder, and then using cp. The ownership of the copied file changed from t to t1 in both cases, but the permission structure again was preserved in the Finder copy but not in the cp copy:

DVD file:
-------------------------
xxG5-Computer:~ t1$ ls -l /Volumes/PermissionTest/ReadWrite.txt
-rw-rw-rw- 1 t t 15 Sep 13 18:25 /Volumes/PermissionTest/ReadWrite.txt
-----------------------------

Finder copy:
---------------------------
xxG5-Computer:~ t1$ ls -l /Users/t1/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
-rw-rw-rw- 1 t1 t1 15 Sep 13 18:25 /Users/t1/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
---------------------

cp copy:
------------------------
xxG5-Computer:~ t1$ cp /Volumes/PermissionTest/ReadWrite.txt Desktop
xxG5-Computer:~ t1$ ls -l /Users/t1/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 t1 t1 15 Sep 13 19:51 /Users/t1/Desktop/ReadWrite.txt
-----------------------------

I got similar results when I tried copying a file with Read+Write permissions for all from a USB flash drive to the Desktop, again with the "Ignore Ownership" box unchecked.

Sep 14, 2009 3:32 AM in response to jsd2

Update, when I insert a virgin DVD RW Finder senses the disk, I click Open and this error message comes up:
"The disk could not be used because the disk drive is not supported (Error code 0x80020025)."

and then it fails to mount on the desktop.

I'm sensing this could be a problem with the drive???

Sep 14, 2009 12:22 PM in response to cbp81

when I burn the DVD and try and copy the files back onto the hard drive (to test if it works or not) it won't allow me


I have transfered the files onto a PC without any problems and I tried a colleague's new Mac Book Pro which wouldn't let me copy the files onto the hard drive.


So several Macs, including your own, are all unable to copy the files off the DVD - is that right?

When you do try to drag a file off a DVD that has been successfully burned, do you get an error message or do you instead get a cursor with a white "prohibit" sign on it, such as:

!http://www0.info.apple.com/images/kbase/25571/prohibited.gif!

If you do see this cursor, have you given your burned DVDs *a very long name* ?? If so, see

*Unable to copy or move files from volume that has a long name*
http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2053

If the current name is long, you can't rename a DVD, so you would have to burn a new one with a shorter name. You don't need a DVD-RW for this. If you decide to try this, restart before you do so.

Sep 20, 2009 4:23 AM in response to cbp81

Glad that worked! 🙂

Weird


Yes, and it can get even weirder! Be sure to throw away all "bad" DVDs - they can temporarily mess up your system further. After Finder fails to copy from a volume with a very long name, it can become temporarily "poisoned" such that it won't then copy from any DVD or external drive, long name or not! Logging out and then logging back in will revive Finder if that happens.

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How to burn read and write files on DVD

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