| MOUNT_CD9660(8) | System Manager's Manual | MOUNT_CD9660(8) | 
mount_cd9660 —
| mount_cd9660 | [ -ooptions]
      special node | 
mount_cd9660 command attaches the ISO-9660 file
  system residing on the device special to the global
  file system namespace at the location indicated by
  node. Both special and
  node are converted to absolute paths before use.
The options are as follows:
-o-o flag followed by a
      comma separated string of options. Besides options mentioned in
      mount(8) man page, following
      cd9660-specific options are supported:
    extattgensIn either case, files may be opened without giving a
            version number, in which case you get the last one, or by explicitly
            stating a version number (albeit it's quite difficult to know it, if
            you are not using the gens option), in which
            case you get the specified version.
nocasetransnomaplcase.nojolietInterpretation of Joliet extensions is enabled by default, Unicode file names are encoded into UTF-8.
nomaplcasenomaplcase turns off this mapping.norripnrrnorrip. For compatibility with Solaris
          only.rrcaseinsFor compatibility with previous releases, following obsolete flags are still recognized:
mount_cd9660 utility first appeared
  4.4BSD. Support for Joliet file system appeared in
  NetBSD 1.4. Options nomaplcase
  and rrcaseins were added in NetBSD
  1.5. UTF-8 encoding of Unicode file names for Joliet file systems was
  added in NetBSD 3.0.
EBADF causing, e.g., "ls -l" to
  fail with "Bad file descriptor".
The cd9660 file system does not support the original "High Sierra" ("CDROM001") format.
POSIX device node mapping is currently not supported.
Version numbers are not stripped if Rockridge extensions are in use. In this case, you have to use the original name of the file as recorded on disk, i.e. use uppercase and append the version number to the file.
There is no ECMA support.
| June 30, 2018 | NetBSD 10.0 |