1 /BELL
Sounds an audible signal when the requested recording operation completes successfully.
2 /FORMAT
/FORMAT[=keyword] /NOFORMAT (default) Requests that rewritable (RW) media be formatted or reformatted prior to use. This qualifier is required for writing to blank rewritable media or rewriting rewritable media. If the target media cannot be formatted, this command qualifier is ignored. If not specified, the appropriate keyword is automatically selected for the fastest formatting speed available for the target recording media. Keywords for the /FORMAT Qualifier lists available keywords. Table 1-1 Keywords for the /FORMAT Qualifier Keyword Function, Comments WAIT Applies to DVD+RW. The default for the /FORMAT qualifier is not to wait for the formatting to complete because waiting is usually unnecessary and far slower. Selecting WAIT causes the entire format to run synchronously to completion before beginning the recording operation. The default is to: o Operate asynchronously o Perform background formatting o Run both the media format operation and the recording operations concurrently ERASE Applies to CD-RW. The default for the /FORMAT qualifier is to perform a quick erasure because a full erasure is usually both unnecessary and far slower. Selecting ERASE causes the CD-RW rewritable disk to be entirely erased as part of the format operation. This erasure is performed and is completed before the recording operation begins. The default is to perform a quick erasure.
3 /LOG
/LOG (default) /NOLOG Shows basic device information and the progress of the recording operation. Use /NOLOG to disable the normal output from the utility.
4 /SPEED
If you must use the lower-speed or poor-quality CD recording media, the /SPEED qualifier is often required for successful completion of the recording process. You might need to select a recording speed below the rated speed of the CD drive itself. Specifically, you might need to select a recording speed that is compatible with both the CD drive and the CD recording media loaded in the drive. The /SPEED qualifier accepts a single keyword for a requested device speed: 1X 2X 4X 8X 16X 32X MAXIMUM The CDDVD utility attempts to match the requested speed to a speed that the device supports. (Not all devices support all speeds, including the lowest speed, 1X, or the highest speed available.) The default speed is the maximum speed that the target device supports. DVD+R/RW drives select the maximum recording speed based on information encoded on the media. You need to specify this qualifier only under one of the following circumstances: o When incompatibilities or recording errors are reported during a previous failed recording operation. o If the CD media in use has a rated recording speed below the drive default recording settings. o If CDDVD application, processor, or system I/O performance constraints exist. CD drives can select speeds faster than those supported by the particular media loaded in the drive. VSI recommends that you select only media that match the recording capabilities of the drive. In other words, do not attempt to exceed the recording speed limits of the particular CD media. Selecting faster media will not make a slow drive record any faster, and selecting faster speeds with slow media can trigger recording errors and corrupt media. If the recording process fails during the recording operation, discard the write-once media and try a slower recording speed. (Note that you can attempt to reformat and rerecord on rewritable media.)
5 /VERIFY
Specifies that the contents of the output media be compared to the contents of the input source after the recording operation. Any data comparison errors detected are displayed.
6 /WRITE
/WRITE (default) /NOWRITE Allows you to test the system and device I/O throughput and the command syntax without recording on the target media. If you specify /NOWRITE and if the target drive supports the underlying test-write hardware capability, all I/O operates as usual although /NOWRITE disables writing to the media. /WRITE is the default, and causes the target optical media to be written.