When I use MPF.Check, it always capitalizes every letter and adds underscore to every space character. I will make posts to fix these situations.
For this content, the correct value is:
[T:VOL] Ab2_WLC020108
http://redump.org/disc/132180
1 2026-03-19 02:34:57 (edited by canceled202606220242 2026-03-19 02:35:40)
Where are you getting the correct value from?
Most likely its just the difference between UDF and ISO9660 labels, these are not worth a fix thread over.
3 2026-03-19 02:45:06 (edited by canceled202606220242 2026-03-19 02:47:15)
Where are you getting the correct value from?
I just write the label from file explorer.
Most likely its just the difference between UDF and ISO9660 labels, these are not worth a fix thread over.
I don't know but MPF's GUI application can catch these correctly (or it's Windows/Unix difference). Should I create one thread for all? There are some major ones, and there is only a few of them.
It's just UDF vs ISO9660 then.
If the difference is spaces vs underscore or upper vs lower case, it's not worth fix threads.
It's just UDF vs ISO9660 then.
If the difference is spaces vs underscore or upper vs lower case, it's not worth fix threads.
When submitting initially, which one should I use?
6 2026-03-19 08:37:07 (edited by Edness 2026-03-19 09:29:28)
I personally do correct the volume labels to Joliet/UDF before submitting, but keep in mind the ones shown by Explorer aren't always the actual label - that can be overridden by autorun.ini to say anything they want. Check with ISOBuster to get the real volume labels.
but keep in mind the ones shown by Explorer aren't always the actual label - that can be overridden by autorun.ini to say anything they want.
Woah, I didn't know that! But since it's burned on a disc, isn't it gets impossible to change?
Check with ISOBuster to get the real volume labels.
Okay, I will in the future. Thanks.
When submitting initially, which one should I use?
Whatever MPF spits out is safe to use, better than manually typing out what is in Windows Explorer.
The point of the volume label is just a bit of extra data, to help identify the disc or differentiate between alt releases.
Redump does not aim to put perfect filesystem metadata in comments box, it's a waste of our time to keep it perfectly up to date manually (maybe automated in the future).
You might see some entries say something like
Volume Label: GAME_NAME (ISO), Longer Game Name (UDF)The only time multiple volume labels are worth mentioning are if they differ meaningfully (by more than just ISO9660's limitations of upper case and underscores).