The 'Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol' (RRIP,
IEEE P1282) is an extension to the
ISO 9660 volume format which adds
POSIX file system semantics. The standard takes its name from the fictional town in
Mel Brooks' film ''
Blazing Saddles.
The extension adds support for storing
Unix-specific file information on ISO 9660 CD-ROMs. The availability of this information allows for better integration with a local
Unix filesystem when a mount operation is performed (also see
Mount point).
These extensions are, briefly:
★ Longer file names (up to 255 characters)
★ Fewer restrictions on characters allowed in filenames
★ UNIX-style
file modes,
user ids and group ids
★
Symbolic links
★ Deeper directory hierarchy
Amiga Extensions on Rock Ridge
ISOAmiga Rock Ridge specific extensions support the additional
Amiga-bits for files. There is support for attribute "P" that stands for "pure" bit (indicating re-entrant command) and attribute "S" for script bit (indicating
batch file). This includes the protection flags plus an optional comment field. These extensions were introduced by
Angela Schmidt with the help of Andrew Young,
the primary author of the Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol and System Use Sharing Protocol.
The Amiga extensions are recognized by Amiga program
MasterISO, and should also be recognized by
MakeCD and Frying Pan, but the support by latter two programs is uncredited.
Amiga filesystems supporting the extensions are
AmiCDFS,
AsimCDFS and
CacheCDFS.
Users who want to access comments and protection bits of their Amiga files present on CDs could simply
mount some new
logical units associated to the same
physical unit, but using Amiga CacheCDFS as filesystem.
External links
★ [ftp://ftp.ymi.com/pub/rockridge/rrip112.ps RRIP Draft Standard 1.12] at ftp.ymi.com via
FTP
★ for Amiga Extensions on Rock Ridge see
"Documents related to MakeCD program"