Provided by: cbmconvert_2.1.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       cbmconvert - create, extract and convert various Commodore binary archives

SYNOPSIS

       cbmconvert [options] file...

DESCRIPTION

       This manual page documents briefly the cbmconvert command.

       There  are  many  archiving  programs  for the Commodore 64, all of which are incompatible with archiving
       programs on other systems.  The cbmconvert utility tries to address this problem.  It extracts files from
       most known formats and writes them to several different formats, including  some  formats  used  by  some
       Commodore 64 emulators:

       Native (raw) files
              Files with just the raw data.  Written with the -I and -N options, read with the -n option.

       PC64 files
              Also known as "P00" files.  Written with the -P option, read with the -p option.

       Lynx archives
              Lynx  was  originally  developed for the Commodore 64.  It modifies the next-sector links in place
              and combines a number of files on a Commodore disk to a single file that can be  transferred  e.g.
              over  a  modem  connection.  Earlier versions of this format do not specify the length of the last
              contained file, not protecting it from padding that  could  be  introduced  e.g.  by  the  X-modem
              transfer  protocol.  There are no checksums on the data either.  Lynx archives are written with -L
              and read with -l.

       Commodore C2N tape archives
              Written with -C, read with -c.  These files are raw dumps of the data format the Commodore  KERNAL
              routines  maintain.  Block checksums and countdown leaders (0x89..0x81 for the first copy and 9..1
              for the second) are omitted, and the blocks are  not  stored  twice,  but  only  once.   The  data
              consists  of  192-byte tape header blocks, 192-byte data file blocks, and arbitrary-length program
              file blocks.

       Commodore 128 CP/M disk images
              Written with -M, read with -m.

       CBM DOS disk images
              Written with -D, read with -d.  Commodore 1571 and 1581 support have not been tested properly, and
              not all 1581 features have been implemented.

       ARC/SDA (Self-Dissolving Archive)
              Read with -a.  No write support.

       Arkive Archives in this Lynx-like format are read with the -k option.  There is no write support.

       T64    This tape format was introduced by C64S emulator.  Many variations of this  format  exist.   These
              files are read with the -t option.

       cbmconvert reads all files in all input files listed on the command line and writes them in the specified
       format.   As  there  is no interactive user interface, the only way to copy only some files from a set of
       archive files to an archive file or a disk image is to extract all the files to a single-file format such
       as the PC64 format, and to copy  the  desited  individual  files  to  the  output  archive  with  another
       invocation of cbmconvert.

OPTIONS

       cbmconvert follows the usual Unix command line syntax, with options starting with a dash (`-').

       --     Stop processing options.  This is useful if the first file name begins with a dash.

       -I     Output files in native (raw) format, with ISO 9660 compliant file names.

       -P     Output files in PC64 format.

       -N     Output files in native (raw) format.

       -L archive.lnx
              Output files in Lynx format.

       -C archive.c2n
              Output files in Commodore C2N tape format.

       -D4[o] image.d64
              Write  to  a  Commodore 1541 CBM DOS disk image.  The o option specifies that file name collisions
              should be resolved by overwriting existing files.  The default behaviour is keep the old files.

       -D7[o] image.d71
              Write to a Commodore 1571 CBM DOS disk image.

       -D8[o] image.d81
              Write to a Commodore 1581 CBM DOS disk image.

       -M4[o] image.d64
              Write to a Commodore 1541 disk image in the Commodore 128 CP/M format.

       -M7[o] image.d71
              Write to a Commodore 1571 disk image in the Commodore 128 CP/M format.

       -M8[o] image.d81
              Write to a Commodore 1581 disk image in the Commodore 128 CP/M format.

       -i2    Switch disk images when running out of space or a duplicate file name is detected.

       -i1    Switch disk images when running out of space.  This is the default behaviour.

       -i0    Never switch disk images.

       -n     Input files in native (raw) format.

       -p     Input files in PC64 format.

       -a     Input files in ARC/SDA format.

       -k     Input files in Arkive format.

       -l     Input files in Lynx format.

       -t     Input files in T64 format.

       -c     Input files in Commodore C2N format.

       -d     Input files in CBM DOS disk image format.

       -m     Input files in Commodore 128 CP/M disk image format.

       -v2    Verbose mode.  Display all messages.

       -v1    Display warning and error messages.  This is the default option.

       -v0    Display error messages only.

BUGS

       Many of the file formats lack safety measures, such as storing the exact lengths of the contained  files,
       or storing even rudimentary checksums.  Most formats have been reverse-engineered, and there may be other
       implementations  that  accept  files  in a stricter format than cbmconvert produces or produce files that
       cbmconvert does not recognize.

       On disk images, it is common to  decorate  directory  listings  with  unnecessary  entries  that  contain
       Commodore-specific  graphic  characters.   Since subdirectories were not supported by Commodore until the
       1581 disk drive was introduced, the slash character (`/') is valid in Commodore file names but not on the
       Unix system.  For these reasons, it is advisable to avoid the raw file format and the  host  file  system
       whenever possible, and to convert directly from one Commodore-specific format to another.

       The  program  lacks  an interactive user interface.  A shell-like command line interface could be useful,
       and a graphical file manager like interface could be even better.  Are there any volunteers?

       More disk image formats should be supported, and the 1571 and 1581 support should be tested  extensively.
       Unsupported formats include the 8050, the 8250, the 2040 and the Commodore 64 CP/M format for the 1541.

AUTHOR

       The cbmconvert utility was designed and implemented by Marko Mäkelä.

       Support for Commodore 1581 disk images was programmed by Pasi Ojala.

       The ARC/SDA dissolving code was originally written by Chris Smeets.

SEE ALSO

       c2n(1), disk2zip(1), zip2disk(1).

                                               September 18, 2001                                  CBMCONVERT(1)