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The file casper/filesystem.squashfs is corrupt


converting the OS with all software installed to iso fileIs it possible to use the Raring install image as a package repo (like the old alternate CD)?Mounting the persistence partition (casper-rw) read-onlyCorrupt Ubuntu Server ISO imagesISO file extraction/casper/vmlinuz.efi: not found for ubuntu 14.04.2 LTSHow to convert Ubuntu WinRAR file to ISO fileIs the 16.04 iso file corrupt? 4/28/16 its not working for meI downloaded Ubuntu but I can't find the ISO fileHow create Ubuntu DVD for Mac? (16.04.1 / Xenial Xerus)













0















I tried burning Lubuntu 12.04 to a CD-RW with Xfburn and braseo, but it keeps be corrupted. I tried to check my hashes but:



Lubuntu 12.04 i386$ md5sum -c md5sum.txt | grep -v "OK$"
md5sum: ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: Input/output error
./casper/filesystem.squashfs: FAILED open or read
md5sum: WARNING: 1 listed file could not be read


My disc has enough room. Also, the iso's checksum is fine.



~/Desktop$ md5sum -c MD5SUMS.txt
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: FAILED open or read
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso: OK <--------------------------------This is the file
md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
md5sum: WARNING: 7 listed files could not be read


What is going on?










share|improve this question
















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    0















    I tried burning Lubuntu 12.04 to a CD-RW with Xfburn and braseo, but it keeps be corrupted. I tried to check my hashes but:



    Lubuntu 12.04 i386$ md5sum -c md5sum.txt | grep -v "OK$"
    md5sum: ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: Input/output error
    ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: WARNING: 1 listed file could not be read


    My disc has enough room. Also, the iso's checksum is fine.



    ~/Desktop$ md5sum -c MD5SUMS.txt
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
    lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso: OK <--------------------------------This is the file
    md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
    lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
    md5sum: WARNING: 7 listed files could not be read


    What is going on?










    share|improve this question
















    bumped to the homepage by Community 1 min ago


    This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.


















      0












      0








      0








      I tried burning Lubuntu 12.04 to a CD-RW with Xfburn and braseo, but it keeps be corrupted. I tried to check my hashes but:



      Lubuntu 12.04 i386$ md5sum -c md5sum.txt | grep -v "OK$"
      md5sum: ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: Input/output error
      ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: WARNING: 1 listed file could not be read


      My disc has enough room. Also, the iso's checksum is fine.



      ~/Desktop$ md5sum -c MD5SUMS.txt
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso: OK <--------------------------------This is the file
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: WARNING: 7 listed files could not be read


      What is going on?










      share|improve this question
















      I tried burning Lubuntu 12.04 to a CD-RW with Xfburn and braseo, but it keeps be corrupted. I tried to check my hashes but:



      Lubuntu 12.04 i386$ md5sum -c md5sum.txt | grep -v "OK$"
      md5sum: ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: Input/output error
      ./casper/filesystem.squashfs: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: WARNING: 1 listed file could not be read


      My disc has enough room. Also, the iso's checksum is fine.



      ~/Desktop$ md5sum -c MD5SUMS.txt
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-i386.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-alternate-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64+mac.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-amd64.iso: FAILED open or read
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso: OK <--------------------------------This is the file
      md5sum: lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: No such file or directory
      lubuntu-12.04-desktop-powerpc.iso: FAILED open or read
      md5sum: WARNING: 7 listed files could not be read


      What is going on?







      iso






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 20 '14 at 13:53









      Braiam

      52.4k20138223




      52.4k20138223










      asked Jan 20 '14 at 13:46









      PyRulezPyRulez

      149423




      149423





      bumped to the homepage by Community 1 min ago


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







      bumped to the homepage by Community 1 min ago


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          0














          Input/output error is not uncommon at the very end of a CD.
          (Caused often by write type "TAO", which creates two non-data blocks
          at the end of the range, which the drive advertises as readable.
          Aka "Read-ahead bug". Traditionally made harmless by 300 kB of padding.
          It should not happen if you have chosen write type "SAO".)



          Make sure that you try to read only as many bytes from the CD
          as are stored in the original .iso image file.



          The size of an ISO image is supposed to be integer divisible by 2048.
          E.g. if your .iso file has a size of 4,581,523,456 bytes, then it
          has 2,237,072 blocks. So use



          dd if=/dev/sr0 bs=2048 count=2237072 | md5sum



          (assuming your CD drive has address /dev/sr0)



          When the reading is done (hopefully without i/o error), then
          lookup the resulting MD5 checksum in your file "md5sums.txt".
          E.g. "a87d2796b7acf90fbe48dcaeb27dc7cc"



          Command line example for writing CD with write type SAO:



          xorriso -as cdrecord -v /dev/sr0 -sao -eject lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso



          The same option will also work with programs cdrecord or wodim,
          instead of "xorriso -as cdrecord".






          share|improve this answer
























          • Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

            – PyRulez
            Jan 25 '14 at 13:42











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          active

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          active

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          active

          oldest

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          0














          Input/output error is not uncommon at the very end of a CD.
          (Caused often by write type "TAO", which creates two non-data blocks
          at the end of the range, which the drive advertises as readable.
          Aka "Read-ahead bug". Traditionally made harmless by 300 kB of padding.
          It should not happen if you have chosen write type "SAO".)



          Make sure that you try to read only as many bytes from the CD
          as are stored in the original .iso image file.



          The size of an ISO image is supposed to be integer divisible by 2048.
          E.g. if your .iso file has a size of 4,581,523,456 bytes, then it
          has 2,237,072 blocks. So use



          dd if=/dev/sr0 bs=2048 count=2237072 | md5sum



          (assuming your CD drive has address /dev/sr0)



          When the reading is done (hopefully without i/o error), then
          lookup the resulting MD5 checksum in your file "md5sums.txt".
          E.g. "a87d2796b7acf90fbe48dcaeb27dc7cc"



          Command line example for writing CD with write type SAO:



          xorriso -as cdrecord -v /dev/sr0 -sao -eject lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso



          The same option will also work with programs cdrecord or wodim,
          instead of "xorriso -as cdrecord".






          share|improve this answer
























          • Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

            – PyRulez
            Jan 25 '14 at 13:42
















          0














          Input/output error is not uncommon at the very end of a CD.
          (Caused often by write type "TAO", which creates two non-data blocks
          at the end of the range, which the drive advertises as readable.
          Aka "Read-ahead bug". Traditionally made harmless by 300 kB of padding.
          It should not happen if you have chosen write type "SAO".)



          Make sure that you try to read only as many bytes from the CD
          as are stored in the original .iso image file.



          The size of an ISO image is supposed to be integer divisible by 2048.
          E.g. if your .iso file has a size of 4,581,523,456 bytes, then it
          has 2,237,072 blocks. So use



          dd if=/dev/sr0 bs=2048 count=2237072 | md5sum



          (assuming your CD drive has address /dev/sr0)



          When the reading is done (hopefully without i/o error), then
          lookup the resulting MD5 checksum in your file "md5sums.txt".
          E.g. "a87d2796b7acf90fbe48dcaeb27dc7cc"



          Command line example for writing CD with write type SAO:



          xorriso -as cdrecord -v /dev/sr0 -sao -eject lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso



          The same option will also work with programs cdrecord or wodim,
          instead of "xorriso -as cdrecord".






          share|improve this answer
























          • Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

            – PyRulez
            Jan 25 '14 at 13:42














          0












          0








          0







          Input/output error is not uncommon at the very end of a CD.
          (Caused often by write type "TAO", which creates two non-data blocks
          at the end of the range, which the drive advertises as readable.
          Aka "Read-ahead bug". Traditionally made harmless by 300 kB of padding.
          It should not happen if you have chosen write type "SAO".)



          Make sure that you try to read only as many bytes from the CD
          as are stored in the original .iso image file.



          The size of an ISO image is supposed to be integer divisible by 2048.
          E.g. if your .iso file has a size of 4,581,523,456 bytes, then it
          has 2,237,072 blocks. So use



          dd if=/dev/sr0 bs=2048 count=2237072 | md5sum



          (assuming your CD drive has address /dev/sr0)



          When the reading is done (hopefully without i/o error), then
          lookup the resulting MD5 checksum in your file "md5sums.txt".
          E.g. "a87d2796b7acf90fbe48dcaeb27dc7cc"



          Command line example for writing CD with write type SAO:



          xorriso -as cdrecord -v /dev/sr0 -sao -eject lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso



          The same option will also work with programs cdrecord or wodim,
          instead of "xorriso -as cdrecord".






          share|improve this answer













          Input/output error is not uncommon at the very end of a CD.
          (Caused often by write type "TAO", which creates two non-data blocks
          at the end of the range, which the drive advertises as readable.
          Aka "Read-ahead bug". Traditionally made harmless by 300 kB of padding.
          It should not happen if you have chosen write type "SAO".)



          Make sure that you try to read only as many bytes from the CD
          as are stored in the original .iso image file.



          The size of an ISO image is supposed to be integer divisible by 2048.
          E.g. if your .iso file has a size of 4,581,523,456 bytes, then it
          has 2,237,072 blocks. So use



          dd if=/dev/sr0 bs=2048 count=2237072 | md5sum



          (assuming your CD drive has address /dev/sr0)



          When the reading is done (hopefully without i/o error), then
          lookup the resulting MD5 checksum in your file "md5sums.txt".
          E.g. "a87d2796b7acf90fbe48dcaeb27dc7cc"



          Command line example for writing CD with write type SAO:



          xorriso -as cdrecord -v /dev/sr0 -sao -eject lubuntu-12.04-desktop-i386.iso



          The same option will also work with programs cdrecord or wodim,
          instead of "xorriso -as cdrecord".







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jan 25 '14 at 10:41









          Thomas SchmittThomas Schmitt

          68135




          68135













          • Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

            – PyRulez
            Jan 25 '14 at 13:42



















          • Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

            – PyRulez
            Jan 25 '14 at 13:42

















          Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

          – PyRulez
          Jan 25 '14 at 13:42





          Actually, I think it was a disc scratch. I new CD-R fixed it.

          – PyRulez
          Jan 25 '14 at 13:42


















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