I have a Linux TAR file that I would like to convert directly into an ISO. Is there a way to do this, preferably, without having to extract the contents of the file.

  1. Free Iso Converter

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Free Iso Converter

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What I have and why I want to do it. I have a copy of FreeDB and I am looking to convert it into an SQL database. This is being done on a Windows platform, but I do have several Linux systems. I am going to write a program to read all of the files (several million of them), but I estimated that I will need about 80GBs of space to extract a 4.5GB tar file because of the file count & size. This will give my poor Windows server a fit (and make a mess of my FAT table at the same time).

To get around this, I am looking to convert the file to an ISO (another linear file system), and mount the ISO as a drive. If I am unable to do this, I will try to write in some support for the TAR format and read the file directly. But that takes time, and I値l have to deal with hard linking. Not something I would look forward to.

I am fairly new to Linux, so an explanation of any commands and piping would also be welcomed with open arms. Also, will ISO even handle that many files?

Is there a way to do it without extracting the files from the TAR though? That's the bit I'm trying to avoid. I'm just thinking out load here, but is there any sort of util that can read though the tar and create a FAT based on what it finds?

I ask this because a long time ago I built a CD for a company that had a hybrid partition. One was an ISO format and one was a Mac format (this was a while ago before Mac supported ISO), and both partitions addressed the same locations on the disk (so I could fit about 600MBs rather than 320 & 320).

Iso file to tar converter

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