Ringed Disc Dumping Guide
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===Dumping=== | ===Dumping=== | ||
- | '''Step 1''': First attempt to dump the ring protected disc in DIC/MPF using a compatible Plextor drive. This is to acquire information about the disc and generate logs, the actual dump does not matter and is not complete. If the dump does complete without errors, it is not a ring protected disc. During the dump, DIC may/should freeze once it reaches the sector that the ring protection starts. At this point, pause DIC by clicking into the console window, and eject the disc from the drive. Afterwards, continue the DIC dump by pressing enter in the console window. This allows DIC to skip the ring entirely as there is no disc in the drive. Once you believe DIC has passed all of that ring's protected sectors, pause DIC again, insert the disc, and wait for Windows to detect the disc. Once the disc has been detected by Windows it is safe to continue the DIC dump. Repeat for multiple rings. Once DIC is finished you will have generated logs for the disc containing information such as the offset and PVD. | + | '''Step 1''': First attempt to dump the ring protected disc in DIC/MPF using a compatible Plextor drive. This is to acquire information about the disc and generate logs, the actual dump does not matter and is not complete. If the dump does complete without errors, it is not a ring protected disc. During the dump, DIC may/should freeze once it reaches the sector that the ring protection starts. At this point, pause DIC by clicking into the console window (May not work in Linux), and eject the disc from the drive. Afterwards, continue the DIC dump by pressing enter in the console window. This allows DIC to skip the ring entirely as there is no disc in the drive. Once you believe DIC has passed all of that ring's protected sectors, pause DIC again, insert the disc, and wait for Windows to detect the disc. Once the disc has been detected by Windows it is safe to continue the DIC dump. Repeat for multiple rings. Once DIC is finished you will have generated logs for the disc containing information such as the offset and PVD. |
Revision as of 21:18, 27 July 2021
Ringed Discs have physical separators[1], preventing the disc to be properly dumped by typical means. This guide is for data only discs, data + audio tracks needs a different procedure to get the right .cue file. Note: this guide is not for Dreamcast / GD-Roms which also have rings, see GD-Rom Dumping Guide.
Contents |
CD Dumping
Hardware Required
- Compatible Plextor
- Liteon SOHD-167T
Tools Required
- DIC/MPF
- CloneCD (Free Trial)
- ECCEDC.exe (Optional)
- CDArchive
Dumping
Step 1: First attempt to dump the ring protected disc in DIC/MPF using a compatible Plextor drive. This is to acquire information about the disc and generate logs, the actual dump does not matter and is not complete. If the dump does complete without errors, it is not a ring protected disc. During the dump, DIC may/should freeze once it reaches the sector that the ring protection starts. At this point, pause DIC by clicking into the console window (May not work in Linux), and eject the disc from the drive. Afterwards, continue the DIC dump by pressing enter in the console window. This allows DIC to skip the ring entirely as there is no disc in the drive. Once you believe DIC has passed all of that ring's protected sectors, pause DIC again, insert the disc, and wait for Windows to detect the disc. Once the disc has been detected by Windows it is safe to continue the DIC dump. Repeat for multiple rings. Once DIC is finished you will have generated logs for the disc containing information such as the offset and PVD.
Step 2: Move the disc over to the SOHD-167T drive, this will be used for the rest of the guide. Open CloneCD, select "Read to Image file," select the SOHD-167T drive at the top, select the "Protected PC Game" profile, and click Next. Save the IMAGE file wherever you'd like in an easy to access spot for future Command Prompt access. Allow CloneCD to finish dumping, this may take a while and may appear like it is making no progress, but let it continue. CloneCD will skip the ring protected sectors and generate a (nearly) complete dump. The drive will eject the disc on completion, remember to insert it back when the dump is complete.
Step 3: Open the CloneCD log after (or before) it finishes by clicking "Tool > Log ..." in the CloneCD window. The log will show what sectors were skipped but it may not be exact. To see what exact sectors are missing we will want to run the CloneCD IMAGE.IMG file through ECCEDC.exe. Open a command prompt window (Win + R, type CMD, Enter). Navigate to where you placed ECCEDC.exe and run the command: "ECCEDC.exe checkex <location of IMAGE.cue file>". ECCEDC will generate a log in that location (IMAGE.cue_EdcEcc_Track_1.txt), navigate to it and open it (I recommend Notepad++ because the file is large and makes Notepad lag). Press CTRL + F to open the Find window and search for the first line that says "2336 bytes have been already replaced at 0x55". This is where the ring protection starts. Make a note somewhere of the sector this starts and ends in (It may only be one sector). Repeat for all rings. When you are done you should have a range that the ring protection covers (Ex. 215808-220474).
Step 4: Open an elevated Command Prompt window. In the Windows search bar, type "CMD", right click "Command Prompt" and click "Open as Administrator". Navigate in CMD to where you placed CDArchive and run the following command after filling in the required information:
Template:
cdarchive.exe --mode=ext --extrdrive=<DriveLetter> --extrstart=0 --extrend=<LASTSectorOfRingProtection> --extroverread=0 --extrretries=50 --extrskip=1000 --extrdirection=b --extrdiscmode="cd" --extrsectdir="<SectorExtractionDirectory>" --extrrefcue="<LocationOfIMAGE.cue>"
Example:
cdarchive.exe --mode=ext --extrdrive=E --extrstart=0 --extrend=220474 --extroverread=0 --extrretries=50 --extrskip=1000 --extrdirection=b --extrdiscmode="cd" --extrsectdir="D:\CDArchive\Extracted" --extrrefcue="D:\Dumps\IMAGE.cue"
CDArchive will attempt to read sectors at the end of the ring protection. If CDArchive gets stuck on one sector after multiple attempts, you may move on to the start of the protection and attempt to read those sectors. Repeat for all rings. This process will likely take several hours. If your drive feels like it is overheating, give it a break and let it cool down. Hot drives don't work as well for reading sectors.
Step 5: While still in the command prompt and navigated to where CDArchive is, run the following command filling in the required information:
Template:
cdarchive.exe --mode=mer --merdiscmode=cd --mersrcdir="<SectorExtractionDirectory>" --meroutcue="<LocationOfIMAGE.cue>"
Example:
cdarchive.exe --mode=mer --merdiscmode=cd --mersrcdir="D:\CDArchive\Extracted" --meroutcue="D:\Dumps\IMAGE.cue"
This will merge all the newly required sectors and complete the dump.
CDArchive Variables
--mode -> Could be "ext" (extract) or "mer" (merge), to extract or merge sectors; --extrdrive -> Drive Letter for SOHD-167T --extrstart -> Start of sector range you want CDArchive to scan --extrend -> End of sector range you want CDArchive to scan --extroverread -> ??? --extrretries -> Number of times CDArchive will attempt to read a sector before moving on --extrskip -> ??? --extrdirection -> Can be "f" (Forwards) or "b" (Backwards) for which direction you want CDArchive to scan. Backwards is recommended. --extrdiscmode -> Media type (CD or DVD) --extrsectdir -> Folder where you will place the extracted sectors (remember to create this folder before running this application) --extrrefcue -> is for the CloneCD cue file related to the previous image file
DVD Dumping
Hardware Required
- Any DVD Drive (Unconfirmed)
CDArchive is used for dumping Ring Protected DVDs. As it's explained here in the command line you'll have to use "--extrdiscmode=dvd" and a special cue file with this information:
FILE "FILE.ISO" BINARY TRACK 01 MODE3/2048 INDEX 01 00:00:00
See the CD Dumping section for command examples and templates.