Article ID: 145767 - Last Review: November 15, 2006 - Revision: 1.1 Problems Accessing Shared CD-ROMThis article was previously published under Q145767 SYMPTOMS
When you try to view files on or set up programs from a shared CD-ROM
drive on the network, you may experience one or more of the following
symptoms:
CAUSE
This behavior can occur if the CD-ROM being shared is not fully ISO 9660
compliant, the computer sharing the CD-ROM drive is using a real-mode
Mscdex.exe device driver with a file version of 2.25 (or earlier), and the
Mscdex.exe device driver is being started with the /S parameter to allow
the CD-ROM drive to be shared on the network.
RESOLUTION
Share the CD-ROM drive from a computer running Microsoft Windows NT
Workstation or Server version 3.5 (or later), or from a computer running
Windows 95 using the 32-bit Compact Disk File System driver (Cdfs.vxd).
MORE INFORMATION
The real-mode Mscdex.exe driver is compliant with ISO 9660, which does not
allow for directory entries that span sectors. Therefore, excess bytes at
the end of each directory sector are zero-filled. Mscdex.exe requires at
least one of these zero-byte fillers at the end of each directory sector in
order to traverse the shared CD-ROM directory on a network server.
If a CD-ROM is mastered with disk authoring tools that do not comply completely with the ISO 9660 specification, a file may be written to the CD- ROM with a directory entry that is in perfect alignment with a sector boundary on the disk, not allowing for at least one zero-byte filler at the end of the directory sector. The Windows NT Workstation and Server version 3.5 and Windows 95 32-bit compact disk file systems allow the sharing of non-ISO 9660-compliant CD- ROMS. | Article Translations
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