| This is mtools.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from mtools.texi. |
| |
| This manual is for Mtools (version 4.0.26, November 2020), which is a |
| collection of tools to allow Unix systems to manipulate MS-DOS files. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2007, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright |
| (C) 1996-2005,2007-2011,2013 Alain Knaff. |
| |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this |
| document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, |
| Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software |
| Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, |
| and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in |
| the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". |
| INFO-DIR-SECTION DOS |
| START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY |
| * Mtools: (mtools). Mtools: utilities to access DOS disks in Unix. |
| END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Top, Next: Location, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir) |
| |
| Mtools doc |
| ********** |
| |
| This is mtools' documentation. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Location:: |
| * Common features:: |
| * Configuration:: |
| * Commands:: |
| * Compiling mtools:: |
| * Porting mtools:: |
| * Command Index:: |
| * Variable Index:: |
| * Concept Index:: |
| |
| Introduction |
| ************ |
| |
| Mtools is a collection of tools to allow Unix systems to manipulate |
| MS-DOS files: read, write, and move around files on an MS-DOS file |
| system (typically a floppy disk). Where reasonable, each program |
| attempts to emulate the MS-DOS equivalent command. However, unnecessary |
| restrictions and oddities of DOS are not emulated. For instance, it is |
| possible to move subdirectories from one subdirectory to another. |
| |
| Mtools is sufficient to give access to MS-DOS file systems. For |
| instance, commands such as 'mdir a:' work on the 'a:' floppy without any |
| preliminary mounting or initialization (assuming the default |
| '/etc/mtools.conf' works on your machine). With mtools, one can change |
| floppies too without unmounting and mounting. |
| |
| This manual is for Mtools (version 4.0.26, November 2020), which is a |
| collection of tools to allow Unix systems to manipulate MS-DOS files. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2007, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright |
| (C) 1996-2005,2007-2011,2013 Alain Knaff. |
| |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this |
| document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, |
| Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software |
| Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, |
| and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in |
| the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Location:: Where to find mtools and early bug fixes |
| * Common features:: Common features of all mtools commands |
| * Configuration:: How to configure mtools for your environment |
| * Commands:: The available mtools commands |
| * Compiling mtools:: Architecture specific compilation flags |
| * Porting mtools:: Porting mtools to architectures which are not |
| yet supported |
| |
| * Command Index:: Command Index |
| * Variable Index:: Variable Index |
| * Concept Index:: Concept Index |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Location, Next: Common features, Prev: Top, Up: Top |
| |
| 1 Where to get mtools |
| ********************* |
| |
| Mtools can be found at the following places (and their mirrors): |
| http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/mtools/mtools-4.0.26.tar.gz |
| |
| These patches are named 'mtools-'VERSION'-'DDMM'.taz', where version |
| stands for the base version, DD for the day and MM for the month. Due |
| to a lack of space, I usually leave only the most recent patch. |
| |
| There is an mtools mailing list at info-mtools @ gnu.org . Please |
| send all bug reports to this list. You may subscribe to the list at |
| https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-mtools. (N.B. Please remove |
| the spaces around the "@". I left them there in order to fool |
| spambots.) Announcements of new mtools versions will also be sent to |
| the list, in addition to the Linux announce newsgroups. The mailing |
| list is archived at http://lists.gnu.org/pipermail/info-mtools/ |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Common features, Next: Configuration, Prev: Location, Up: Top |
| |
| 2 Common features of all mtools commands |
| **************************************** |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * arguments:: What the command line parameters of mtools |
| mean |
| * drive letters:: Which drives are defined by default |
| * directory:: Current working directory |
| * long names:: VFAT-style long filenames |
| * name clashes:: Name clash handling, and associated command |
| line options |
| * case sensitivity:: Case sensitivity |
| * high capacity formats:: How to fit more data on your floppies |
| * exit codes:: Exit codes |
| * bugs:: Happens to everybody |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: arguments, Next: drive letters, Prev: Common features, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.1 Options and filenames |
| ========================= |
| |
| MS-DOS filenames are composed of a drive letter followed by a colon, a |
| subdirectory, and a filename. Only the filename part is mandatory, the |
| drive letter and the subdirectory are optional. Filenames without a |
| drive letter refer to Unix files. Subdirectory names can use either the |
| ''/'' or ''\'' separator. The use of the ''\'' separator or wildcards |
| requires the names to be enclosed in quotes to protect them from the |
| shell. However, wildcards in Unix filenames should not be enclosed in |
| quotes, because here we *want* the shell to expand them. |
| |
| The regular expression "pattern matching" routines follow the |
| Unix-style rules. For example, ''*'' matches all MS-DOS files in lieu |
| of ''*.*''. The archive, hidden, read-only and system attribute bits |
| are ignored during pattern matching. |
| |
| All options use the '-' (minus) as their first character, not '/' as |
| you'd expect in MS-DOS. |
| |
| Most mtools commands allow multiple filename parameters, which |
| doesn't follow MS-DOS conventions, but which is more user-friendly. |
| |
| Most mtools commands allow options that instruct them how to handle |
| file name clashes. *Note name clashes::, for more details on these. |
| All commands accept the '-V' flags which prints the version, and most |
| accept the '-v' flag, which switches on verbose mode. In verbose mode, |
| these commands print out the name of the MS-DOS files upon which they |
| act, unless stated otherwise. *Note Commands::, for a description of |
| the options which are specific to each command. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: drive letters, Next: directory, Prev: arguments, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.2 Drive letters |
| ================= |
| |
| The meaning of the drive letters depends on the target architectures. |
| However, on most target architectures, drive A is the first floppy |
| drive, drive B is the second floppy drive (if available), drive J is a |
| Jaz drive (if available), and drive Z is a Zip drive (if available). On |
| those systems where the device name is derived from the SCSI id, the Jaz |
| drive is assumed to be at SCSI target 4, and the Zip at SCSI target 5 |
| (factory default settings). On Linux, both drives are assumed to be the |
| second drive on the SCSI bus (/dev/sdb). The default settings can be |
| changes using a configuration file (*note Configuration::). |
| |
| The drive letter : (colon) has a special meaning. It is used to |
| access image files which are directly specified on the command line |
| using the '-i' options. |
| |
| Example: |
| mcopy -i my-image-file.bin ::file1 ::file2 . |
| |
| This copies 'file1' and 'file2' from the image file |
| ('my-image-file.bin') to the '/tmp' directory. |
| |
| You can also supply an offset within the image file by including |
| '@@'OFFSET into the file name. |
| |
| Example: |
| mcopy -i my-image-file.bin@@1M ::file1 ::file2 . |
| |
| This looks for the image at the offset of 1M in the file, rather than |
| at its beginning. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: directory, Next: long names, Prev: drive letters, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.3 Current working directory |
| ============================= |
| |
| The 'mcd' command (*note mcd::) is used to establish the device and the |
| current working directory (relative to the MS-DOS file system), |
| otherwise the default is assumed to be 'A:/'. However, unlike MS-DOS, |
| there is only one working directory for all drives, and not one per |
| drive. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: long names, Next: name clashes, Prev: directory, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.4 VFAT-style long file names |
| ============================== |
| |
| This version of mtools supports VFAT style long filenames. If a Unix |
| filename is too long to fit in a short DOS name, it is stored as a VFAT |
| long name, and a companion short name is generated. This short name is |
| what you see when you examine the disk with a pre-7.0 version of DOS. |
| The following table shows some examples of short names: |
| |
| Long name MS-DOS name Reason for the change |
| --------- ---------- --------------------- |
| thisisatest THISIS~1 filename too long |
| alain.knaff ALAIN~1.KNA extension too long |
| prn.txt PRN~1.TXT PRN is a device name |
| .abc ABC~1 null filename |
| hot+cold HOT_CO~1 illegal character |
| |
| As you see, the following transformations happen to derive a short |
| name: |
| * Illegal characters are replaced by underscores. The illegal |
| characters are ';+=[]',\"*\\<>/?:|'. |
| * Extra dots, which cannot be interpreted as a main name/extension |
| separator are removed |
| * A '~'N number is generated, |
| * The name is shortened so as to fit in the 8+3 limitation |
| |
| The initial Unix-style file name (whether long or short) is also |
| called the "primary" name, and the derived short name is also called the |
| "secondary" name. |
| |
| Example: |
| mcopy /etc/motd a:Reallylongname |
| Mtools creates a VFAT entry for Reallylongname, and uses REALLYLO as |
| a short name. Reallylongname is the primary name, and REALLYLO is the |
| secondary name. |
| mcopy /etc/motd a:motd |
| Motd fits into the DOS filename limits. Mtools doesn't need to |
| derivate another name. Motd is the primary name, and there is no |
| secondary name. |
| |
| In a nutshell: The primary name is the long name, if one exists, or |
| the short name if there is no long name. |
| |
| Although VFAT is much more flexible than FAT, there are still names |
| that are not acceptable, even in VFAT. There are still some illegal |
| characters left ('\"*\\<>/?:|'), and device names are still reserved. |
| |
| Unix name Long name Reason for the change |
| --------- ---------- --------------------- |
| prn prn-1 PRN is a device name |
| ab:c ab_c-1 illegal character |
| |
| As you see, the following transformations happen if a long name is |
| illegal: |
| * Illegal characters are replaces by underscores, |
| * A '-'N number is generated, |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: name clashes, Next: case sensitivity, Prev: long names, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.5 Name clashes |
| ================ |
| |
| When writing a file to disk, its long name or short name may collide |
| with an already existing file or directory. This may happen for all |
| commands which create new directory entries, such as 'mcopy', 'mmd', |
| 'mren', 'mmove'. When a name clash happens, mtools asks you what it |
| should do. It offers several choices: |
| |
| 'overwrite' |
| Overwrites the existing file. It is not possible to overwrite a |
| directory with a file. |
| 'rename' |
| Renames the newly created file. Mtools prompts for the new |
| filename |
| 'autorename' |
| Renames the newly created file. Mtools chooses a name by itself, |
| without prompting |
| 'skip' |
| Gives up on this file, and moves on to the next (if any) |
| |
| To chose one of these actions, type its first letter at the prompt. |
| If you use a lower case letter, the action only applies for this file |
| only, if you use an upper case letter, the action applies to all files, |
| and you won't be prompted again. |
| |
| You may also chose actions (for all files) on the command line, when |
| invoking mtools: |
| |
| '-D o' |
| Overwrites primary names by default. |
| '-D O' |
| Overwrites secondary names by default. |
| '-D r' |
| Renames primary name by default. |
| '-D R' |
| Renames secondary name by default. |
| '-D a' |
| Autorenames primary name by default. |
| '-D A' |
| Autorenames secondary name by default. |
| '-D s' |
| Skip primary name by default. |
| '-D S' |
| Skip secondary name by default. |
| '-D m' |
| Ask user what to do with primary name. |
| '-D M' |
| Ask user what to do with secondary name. |
| |
| Note that for command line switches lower/upper differentiates |
| between primary/secondary name whereas for interactive choices, |
| lower/upper differentiates between just-this-time/always. |
| |
| The primary name is the name as displayed in Windows 95 or Windows |
| NT: i.e. the long name if it exists, and the short name otherwise. The |
| secondary name is the "hidden" name, i.e. the short name if a long name |
| exists. |
| |
| By default, the user is prompted if the primary name clashes, and the |
| secondary name is autorenamed. |
| |
| If a name clash occurs in a Unix directory, mtools only asks whether |
| to overwrite the file, or to skip it. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: case sensitivity, Next: high capacity formats, Prev: name clashes, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.6 Case sensitivity of the VFAT file system |
| ============================================ |
| |
| The VFAT file system is able to remember the case of the filenames. |
| However, filenames which differ only in case are not allowed to coexist |
| in the same directory. For example if you store a file called |
| LongFileName on a VFAT file system, mdir shows this file as |
| LongFileName, and not as Longfilename. However, if you then try to add |
| LongFilename to the same directory, it is refused, because case is |
| ignored for clash checks. |
| |
| The VFAT file system allows you to store the case of a filename in |
| the attribute byte, if all letters of the filename are the same case, |
| and if all letters of the extension are the same case too. Mtools uses |
| this information when displaying the files, and also to generate the |
| Unix filename when mcopying to a Unix directory. This may have |
| unexpected results when applied to files written using an pre-7.0 |
| version of DOS: Indeed, the old style filenames map to all upper case. |
| This is different from the behavior of the old version of mtools which |
| used to generate lower case Unix filenames. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: high capacity formats, Next: exit codes, Prev: case sensitivity, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.7 high capacity formats |
| ========================= |
| |
| Mtools supports a number of formats which allow storage of more data on |
| disk than usual. Due to different operating system abilities, these |
| formats are not supported on all operating systems. Mtools recognizes |
| these formats transparently where supported. |
| |
| In order to format these disks, you need to use an operating system |
| specific tool. For Linux, suitable floppy tools can be found in the |
| 'fdutils' package at the following locations~: |
| http://www.fdutils.linux.lu/. |
| |
| See the manual pages included in that package for further detail: Use |
| 'superformat' to format all formats except XDF, and use 'xdfcopy' to |
| format XDF. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * more sectors:: Putting more sectors per track on the disk |
| * bigger sectors:: Use bigger sectors to save header space |
| * 2m:: Use a standard first track |
| * XDF:: OS/2's eXtended density format |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: more sectors, Next: bigger sectors, Prev: high capacity formats, Up: high capacity formats |
| |
| 2.7.1 More sectors |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The oldest method of fitting more data on a disk is to use more sectors |
| and more cylinders. Although the standard format uses 80 cylinders and |
| 18 sectors (on a 3 1/2 high density disk), it is possible to use up to |
| 83 cylinders (on most drives) and up to 21 sectors. This method allows |
| to store up to 1743K on a 3 1/2 HD disk. However, 21 sector disks are |
| twice as slow as the standard 18 sector disks because the sectors are |
| packed so close together that we need to interleave them. This problem |
| doesn't exist for 20 sector formats. |
| |
| These formats are supported by numerous DOS shareware utilities such |
| as 'fdformat' and 'vgacopy'. In his infinite hubris, Bill Gate$ |
| believed that he invented this, and called it 'DMF disks', or 'Windows |
| formatted disks'. But in reality, it has already existed years before! |
| Mtools supports these formats on Linux, on SunOS and on the DELL Unix |
| PC. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: bigger sectors, Next: 2m, Prev: more sectors, Up: high capacity formats |
| |
| 2.7.2 Bigger sectors |
| -------------------- |
| |
| By using bigger sectors it is possible to go beyond the capacity which |
| can be obtained by the standard 512-byte sectors. This is because of |
| the sector header. The sector header has the same size, regardless of |
| how many data bytes are in the sector. Thus, we save some space by |
| using _fewer_, but bigger sectors. For example, 1 sector of 4K only |
| takes up header space once, whereas 8 sectors of 512 bytes have also 8 |
| headers, for the same amount of useful data. |
| |
| This method permits storage of up to 1992K on a 3 1/2 HD disk. |
| |
| Mtools supports these formats only on Linux. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: 2m, Next: XDF, Prev: bigger sectors, Up: high capacity formats |
| |
| 2.7.3 2m |
| -------- |
| |
| The 2m format was originally invented by Ciriaco Garcia de Celis. It |
| also uses bigger sectors than usual in order to fit more data on the |
| disk. However, it uses the standard format (18 sectors of 512 bytes |
| each) on the first cylinder, in order to make these disks easier to |
| handle by DOS. Indeed this method allows you to have a standard sized |
| boot sector, which contains a description of how the rest of the disk |
| should be read. |
| |
| However, the drawback of this is that the first cylinder can hold |
| less data than the others. Unfortunately, DOS can only handle disks |
| where each track contains the same amount of data. Thus 2m hides the |
| fact that the first track contains less data by using a "shadow FAT". |
| (Usually, DOS stores the FAT in two identical copies, for additional |
| safety. XDF stores only one copy, but tells DOS that it stores two. |
| Thus the space that would be taken up by the second FAT copy is saved.) |
| This also means that you should *never use a 2m disk to store anything |
| else than a DOS file system*. |
| |
| Mtools supports these formats only on Linux. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: XDF, Prev: 2m, Up: high capacity formats |
| |
| 2.7.4 XDF |
| --------- |
| |
| XDF is a high capacity format used by OS/2. It can hold 1840 K per |
| disk. That's lower than the best 2m formats, but its main advantage is |
| that it is fast: 600 milliseconds per track. That's faster than the 21 |
| sector format, and almost as fast as the standard 18 sector format. In |
| order to access these disks, make sure mtools has been compiled with XDF |
| support, and set the 'use_xdf' variable for the drive in the |
| configuration file. *Note Compiling mtools::, and *note miscellaneous |
| variables::, for details on how to do this. Fast XDF access is only |
| available for Linux kernels which are more recent than 1.1.34. |
| |
| Mtools supports this format only on Linux. |
| |
| *Caution / Attention distributors*: If mtools is compiled on a Linux |
| kernel more recent than 1.3.34, it won't run on an older kernel. |
| However, if it has been compiled on an older kernel, it still runs on a |
| newer kernel, except that XDF access is slower. It is recommended that |
| distribution authors only include mtools binaries compiled on kernels |
| older than 1.3.34 until 2.0 comes out. When 2.0 will be out, mtools |
| binaries compiled on newer kernels may (and should) be distributed. |
| Mtools binaries compiled on kernels older than 1.3.34 won't run on any |
| 2.1 kernel or later. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: exit codes, Next: bugs, Prev: high capacity formats, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.8 Exit codes |
| ============== |
| |
| All the Mtools commands return 0 on success, 1 on utter failure, or 2 on |
| partial failure. All the Mtools commands perform a few sanity checks |
| before going ahead, to make sure that the disk is indeed an MS-DOS disk |
| (as opposed to, say an ext2 or MINIX disk). These checks may reject |
| partially corrupted disks, which might otherwise still be readable. To |
| avoid these checks, set the MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK environmental variable or |
| the corresponding configuration file variable (*note global variables::) |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: bugs, Prev: exit codes, Up: Common features |
| |
| 2.9 Bugs |
| ======== |
| |
| An unfortunate side effect of not guessing the proper device (when |
| multiple disk capacities are supported) is an occasional error message |
| from the device driver. These can be safely ignored. |
| |
| The fat checking code chokes on 1.72 Mb disks mformatted with |
| pre-2.0.7 mtools. Set the environmental variable |
| MTOOLS_FAT_COMPATIBILITY (or the corresponding configuration file |
| variable, *note global variables::) to bypass the fat checking. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Configuration, Next: Commands, Prev: Common features, Up: Top |
| |
| 3 How to configure mtools for your environment |
| ********************************************** |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * configuration file location:: |
| * default values:: |
| * global variables:: |
| * per drive variables:: |
| * parsing order:: |
| * old style configuration:: |
| |
| 3.1 Description |
| =============== |
| |
| This sections explains the syntax of the configurations files for |
| mtools. The configuration files are called '/etc/mtools.conf' and |
| '~/.mtoolsrc'. If the environmental variable 'MTOOLSRC' is set, its |
| contents is used as the filename for a third configuration file. These |
| configuration files describe the following items: |
| |
| * Global configuration flags and variables |
| * Per drive flags and variables |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * configuration file location:: Where mtools looks for its configuration files |
| * general syntax:: The layout of the configuration files |
| * default values:: Why you don't need a configuration file in most cases |
| * global variables:: Variables that are independent of the drive |
| * per drive variables:: Variables that are specific to a given drive |
| * parsing order:: Location of configuration files and parsing order |
| * old style configuration:: Backwards compatibility |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: configuration file location, Next: general syntax, Prev: Configuration, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.2 Location of the configuration files |
| ======================================= |
| |
| '/etc/mtools.conf' is the system-wide configuration file, and |
| '~/.mtoolsrc' is the user's private configuration file. |
| |
| On some systems, the system-wide configuration file is called |
| '/etc/default/mtools.conf' instead. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * general syntax:: |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: general syntax, Next: default values, Prev: configuration file location, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.2.1 General configuration file syntax |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| The configuration files is made up of sections. Each section starts |
| with a keyword identifying the section followed by a colon. Then follow |
| variable assignments and flags. Variable assignments take the following |
| form: |
| name=value |
| Flags are lone keywords without an equal sign and value following |
| them. A section either ends at the end of the file or where the next |
| section begins. |
| |
| Lines starting with a hash ('#') are comments. Newline characters |
| are equivalent to whitespace (except where ending a comment). The |
| configuration file is case insensitive, except for item enclosed in |
| quotes (such as filenames). |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: default values, Next: global variables, Prev: general syntax, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.3 Default values |
| ================== |
| |
| For most platforms, mtools contains reasonable compiled-in defaults for |
| physical floppy drives. Thus, you usually don't need to bother with the |
| configuration file, if all you want to do with mtools is to access your |
| floppy drives. On the other hand, the configuration file is needed if |
| you also want to use mtools to access your hard disk partitions and |
| DOSEMU image files. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: global variables, Next: per drive variables, Prev: default values, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.4 Global variables |
| ==================== |
| |
| Global flags may be set to 1 or to 0. |
| |
| The following global flags are recognized: |
| |
| 'MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK' |
| If this is set to 1, mtools skips most of its sanity checks. This |
| is needed to read some Atari disks which have been made with the |
| earlier ROMs, and which would not be recognized otherwise. |
| 'MTOOLS_FAT_COMPATIBILITY' |
| If this is set to 1, mtools skips the fat size checks. Some disks |
| have a bigger FAT than they really need to. These are rejected if |
| this option is not set. |
| 'MTOOLS_LOWER_CASE' |
| If this is set to 1, mtools displays all-upper-case short filenames |
| as lowercase. This has been done to allow a behavior which is |
| consistent with older versions of mtools which didn't know about |
| the case bits. |
| 'MTOOLS_NO_VFAT' |
| If this is set to 1, mtools won't generate VFAT entries for |
| filenames which are mixed-case, but otherwise legal dos filenames. |
| This is useful when working with DOS versions which can't grok VFAT |
| long names, such as FreeDOS. |
| 'MTOOLS_DOTTED_DIR' |
| In a wide directory, prints the short name with a dot instead of |
| spaces separating the basename and the extension. |
| 'MTOOLS_NAME_NUMERIC_TAIL' |
| If this is set to one (default), generate numeric tails for all |
| long names (~1). If set to zero, only generate numeric tails if |
| otherwise a clash would have happened. |
| 'MTOOLS_TWENTY_FOUR_HOUR_CLOCK' |
| If 1, uses the European notation for times (twenty four hour |
| clock), else uses the UK/US notation (am/pm) |
| 'MTOOLS_LOCK_TIMEOUT' |
| How long, in seconds, to wait for a locked device to become free. |
| Defaults to 30. |
| |
| Example: Inserting the following line into your configuration file |
| instructs mtools to skip the sanity checks: |
| MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK=1 |
| |
| Global variables may also be set via the environment: |
| export MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK=1 |
| |
| Global string variables may be set to any value: |
| 'MTOOLS_DATE_STRING' |
| The format used for printing dates of files. By default, is |
| dd-mm-yyyy. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: per drive variables, Next: parsing order, Prev: global variables, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.5 Per drive flags and variables |
| ================================= |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * general information:: What a drive description looks like |
| * location information:: Where is the drive data physically stored |
| * geometry description:: Describes the physical characteristics of |
| the media |
| * open flags:: Flags passed to the open system call when the |
| device is opened |
| * miscellaneous variables:: Variables which don't fit in either category |
| * miscellaneous flags:: Switch variables, which can be enabled or disabled |
| * multiple descriptions:: How to supply several descriptions for a |
| drive, to be tried one after the other. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: general information, Next: location information, Prev: per drive variables, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.1 General information |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Per drive flags and values may be described in a drive section. A drive |
| section starts with 'drive' "DRIVELETTER" : |
| |
| Then follow variable-value pairs and flags. |
| |
| This is a sample drive description: |
| drive a: |
| file="/dev/fd0" use_xdf=1 |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: location information, Next: geometry description, Prev: general information, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.2 Location information |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| For each drive, you need to describe where its data is physically stored |
| (image file, physical device, partition, offset). |
| |
| 'file' |
| The name of the file or device holding the disk image. This is |
| mandatory. The file name should be enclosed in quotes. |
| |
| 'partition' |
| Tells mtools to treat the drive as a partitioned device, and to use |
| the given partition. Only primary partitions are accessible using |
| this method, and they are numbered from 1 to 4. For logical |
| partitions, use the more general 'offset' variable. The |
| 'partition' variable is intended for removable media such as |
| Syquest disks, ZIP drives, and magneto-optical disks. Although |
| traditional DOS sees Syquest disks and magneto-optical disks as |
| 'giant floppy disks' which are unpartitioned, OS/2 and Windows NT |
| treat them like hard disks, i.e. partitioned devices. The |
| 'partition' flag is also useful DOSEMU hdimages. It is not |
| recommended for hard disks for which direct access to partitions is |
| available through mounting. |
| |
| 'offset' |
| Describes where in the file the MS-DOS file system starts. This is |
| useful for logical partitions in DOSEMU hdimages, and for ATARI ram |
| disks. By default, this is zero, meaning that the file system |
| starts right at the beginning of the device or file. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: geometry description, Next: open flags, Prev: location information, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.3 Disk Geometry Configuration |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| Geometry information describes the physical characteristics about the |
| disk. Its has three purposes: |
| |
| formatting |
| The geometry information is written into the boot sector of the |
| newly made disk. However, you may also describe the geometry |
| information on the command line. *Note mformat::, for details. |
| filtering |
| On some Unixes there are device nodes which only support one |
| physical geometry. For instance, you might need a different node |
| to access a disk as high density or as low density. The geometry |
| is compared to the actual geometry stored on the boot sector to |
| make sure that this device node is able to correctly read the disk. |
| If the geometry doesn't match, this drive entry fails, and the next |
| drive entry bearing the same drive letter is tried. *Note multiple |
| descriptions::, for more details on supplying several descriptions |
| for one drive letter. |
| |
| If no geometry information is supplied in the configuration file, |
| all disks are accepted. On Linux (and on SPARC) there exist device |
| nodes with configurable geometry ('/dev/fd0', '/dev/fd1' etc), and |
| thus filtering is not needed (and ignored) for disk drives. |
| (Mtools still does do filtering on plain files (disk images) in |
| Linux: this is mainly intended for test purposes, as I don't have |
| access to a Unix which would actually need filtering). |
| |
| If you do not need filtering, but want still a default geometry for |
| mformatting, you may switch off filtering using the 'mformat_only' |
| flag. |
| |
| If you want filtering, you should supply the 'filter' flag. If you |
| supply a geometry, you must supply one of both flags. |
| |
| initial geometry |
| On devices that support it (usually floppy devices), the geometry |
| information is also used to set the initial geometry. This initial |
| geometry is applied while reading the boot sector, which contains |
| the real geometry. If no geometry information is supplied in the |
| configuration file, or if the 'mformat_only' flag is supplied, no |
| initial configuration is done. |
| |
| On Linux, initial geometry is not really needed, as the |
| configurable devices are able to auto-detect the disk type |
| accurately enough (for most common formats) to read the boot |
| sector. |
| |
| Wrong geometry information may lead to very bizarre errors. That's |
| why I strongly recommend that you add the 'mformat_only' flag to your |
| drive description, unless you really need filtering or initial geometry. |
| |
| The following geometry related variables are available: |
| |
| 'cylinders' |
| 'tracks' |
| The number of cylinders. ('cylinders' is the preferred form, |
| 'tracks' is considered obsolete) |
| 'heads' |
| The number of heads (sides). |
| 'sectors' |
| The number of sectors per track. |
| |
| Example: the following drive section describes a 1.44M drive: |
| |
| drive a: |
| file="/dev/fd0H1440" |
| fat_bits=12 |
| cylinders=80 heads=2 sectors=18 |
| mformat_only |
| |
| The following shorthand geometry descriptions are available: |
| |
| '1.44m' |
| high density 3 1/2 disk. Equivalent to: 'fat_bits=12 cylinders=80 |
| heads=2 sectors=18' |
| '1.2m' |
| high density 5 1/4 disk. Equivalent to: 'fat_bits=12 cylinders=80 |
| heads=2 sectors=15' |
| '720k' |
| double density 3 1/2 disk. Equivalent to: 'fat_bits=12 |
| cylinders=80 heads=2 sectors=9' |
| '360k' |
| double density 5 1/4 disk. Equivalent to: 'fat_bits=12 |
| cylinders=40 heads=2 sectors=9' |
| |
| The shorthand format descriptions may be amended. For example, '360k |
| sectors=8' describes a 320k disk and is equivalent to: 'fat_bits=12 |
| cylinders=40 heads=2 sectors=8' |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: open flags, Next: miscellaneous variables, Prev: geometry description, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.4 Open Flags |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Moreover, the following flags are available: |
| |
| 'sync' |
| All i/o operations are done synchronously |
| 'nodelay' |
| The device or file is opened with the O_NDELAY flag. This is |
| needed on some non-Linux architectures. |
| 'exclusive' |
| The device or file is opened with the O_EXCL flag. On Linux, this |
| ensures exclusive access to the floppy drive. On most other |
| architectures, and for plain files it has no effect at all. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: miscellaneous variables, Next: miscellaneous flags, Prev: open flags, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.5 General Purpose Drive Variables |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| The following general purpose drive variables are available. Depending |
| to their type, these variables can be set to a string (precmd) or an |
| integer (all others) |
| |
| 'fat_bits' |
| The number of FAT bits. This may be 12 or 16. This is very rarely |
| needed, as it can almost always be deduced from information in the |
| boot sector. On the contrary, describing the number of fat bits |
| may actually be harmful if you get it wrong. You should only use |
| it if mtools gets the auto-detected number of fat bits wrong, or if |
| you want to mformat a disk with a weird number of fat bits. |
| 'codepage' |
| Describes the DOS code page used for short filenames. This is a |
| number between 1 and 999. By default, code page 850 is used. The |
| reason for this is because this code page contains most of the |
| characters that are also available in ISO-Latin-1. You may also |
| specify a global code page for all drives by using the global |
| 'default_codepage' parameter (outside of any drive description). |
| This parameters exists starting at version 4.0.0 |
| 'precmd' |
| On some variants of Solaris, it is necessary to call 'volcheck -v' |
| before opening a floppy device, in order for the system to notice |
| that there is indeed a disk in the drive. 'precmd="volcheck -v"' |
| in the drive clause establishes the desired behavior. |
| |
| 'blocksize' |
| This parameter represents a default block size to be always used on |
| this device. All I/O is done with multiples of this block size, |
| independently of the sector size registered in the file system's |
| boot sector. This is useful for character devices whose sector |
| size is not 512, such as for example CD-ROM drives on Solaris. |
| |
| Only the 'file' variable is mandatory. The other parameters may be |
| left out. In that case a default value or an auto-detected value is |
| used. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: miscellaneous flags, Next: multiple descriptions, Prev: miscellaneous variables, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.6 General Purpose Drive Flags |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| A flag can either be set to 1 (enabled) or 0 (disabled). If the value |
| is omitted, it is enabled. For example, 'scsi' is equivalent to |
| 'scsi=1' |
| |
| 'nolock' |
| Instruct mtools to not use locking on this drive. This is needed |
| on systems with buggy locking semantics. However, enabling this |
| makes operation less safe in cases where several users may access |
| the same drive at the same time. |
| |
| 'scsi' |
| When set to 1, this option tells mtools to use raw SCSI I/O instead |
| of the standard read/write calls to access the device. Currently, |
| this is supported on HP-UX, Solaris and SunOS. This is needed |
| because on some architectures, such as SunOS or Solaris, PC media |
| can't be accessed using the 'read' and 'write' system calls, |
| because the OS expects them to contain a Sun specific "disk label". |
| |
| As raw SCSI access always uses the whole device, you need to |
| specify the "partition" flag in addition |
| |
| On some architectures, such as Solaris, mtools needs root |
| privileges to be able to use the 'scsi' option. Thus mtools should |
| be installed setuid root on Solaris if you want to access Zip/Jaz |
| drives. Thus, if the 'scsi' flag is given, 'privileged' is |
| automatically implied, unless explicitly disabled by 'privileged=0' |
| |
| Mtools uses its root privileges to open the device, and to issue |
| the actual SCSI I/O calls. Moreover, root privileges are only used |
| for drives described in a system-wide configuration file such as |
| '/etc/mtools.conf', and not for those described in '~/.mtoolsrc' or |
| '$MTOOLSRC'. |
| |
| 'privileged' |
| When set to 1, this instructs mtools to use its setuid and setgid |
| privileges for opening the given drive. This option is only valid |
| for drives described in the system-wide configuration files (such |
| as '/etc/mtools.conf', not '~/.mtoolsrc' or '$MTOOLSRC'). |
| Obviously, this option is also a no op if mtools is not installed |
| setuid or setgid. This option is implied by 'scsi=1', but again |
| only for drives defined in system-wide configuration files. |
| Privileged may also be set explicitly to 0, in order to tell mtools |
| not to use its privileges for a given drive even if 'scsi=1' is |
| set. |
| |
| Mtools only needs to be installed setuid if you use the |
| 'privileged' or 'scsi' drive variables. If you do not use these |
| options, mtools works perfectly well even when not installed setuid |
| root. |
| |
| 'vold' |
| |
| Instructs mtools to interpret the device name as a vold identifier |
| rather than as a filename. The vold identifier is translated into |
| a real filename using the 'media_findname()' and |
| 'media_oldaliases()' functions of the 'volmgt' library. This flag |
| is only available if you configured mtools with the |
| '--enable-new-vold' option before compilation. |
| |
| 'swap' |
| |
| Consider the media as a word-swapped Atari disk. |
| |
| 'use_xdf' |
| If this is set to a non-zero value, mtools also tries to access |
| this disk as an XDF disk. XDF is a high capacity format used by |
| OS/2. This is off by default. *Note XDF::, for more details. |
| 'mformat_only' |
| Tells mtools to use the geometry for this drive only for |
| mformatting and not for filtering. |
| |
| 'filter' |
| Tells mtools to use the geometry for this drive both for |
| mformatting and filtering. |
| |
| 'remote' |
| Tells mtools to connect to floppyd (*note floppyd::). |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: multiple descriptions, Prev: miscellaneous flags, Up: per drive variables |
| |
| 3.5.7 Supplying multiple descriptions for a drive |
| ------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| It is possible to supply multiple descriptions for a drive. In that |
| case, the descriptions are tried in order until one is found that fits. |
| Descriptions may fail for several reasons: |
| |
| 1. because the geometry is not appropriate, |
| 2. because there is no disk in the drive, |
| 3. or because of other problems. |
| |
| Multiple definitions are useful when using physical devices which are |
| only able to support one single disk geometry. Example: |
| drive a: file="/dev/fd0H1440" 1.44m |
| drive a: file="/dev/fd0H720" 720k |
| |
| This instructs mtools to use /dev/fd0H1440 for 1.44m (high density) |
| disks and /dev/fd0H720 for 720k (double density) disks. On Linux, this |
| feature is not really needed, as the /dev/fd0 device is able to handle |
| any geometry. |
| |
| You may also use multiple drive descriptions to access both of your |
| physical drives through one drive letter: |
| |
| drive z: file="/dev/fd0" |
| drive z: file="/dev/fd1" |
| |
| With this description, 'mdir z:' accesses your first physical drive |
| if it contains a disk. If the first drive doesn't contain a disk, |
| mtools checks the second drive. |
| |
| When using multiple configuration files, drive descriptions in the |
| files parsed last override descriptions for the same drive in earlier |
| files. In order to avoid this, use the 'drive+' or '+drive' keywords |
| instead of 'drive'. The first adds a description to the end of the list |
| (i.e. it will be tried last), and the first adds it to the start of the |
| list. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: parsing order, Next: old style configuration, Prev: per drive variables, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.6 Location of configuration files and parsing order |
| ===================================================== |
| |
| The configuration files are parsed in the following order: |
| 1. compiled-in defaults |
| 2. '/etc/mtools.conf' |
| 3. '~/.mtoolsrc'. |
| 4. '$MTOOLSRC' (file pointed by the 'MTOOLSRC' environmental variable) |
| |
| Options described in the later files override those described in the |
| earlier files. Drives defined in earlier files persist if they are not |
| overridden in the later files. For instance, drives A and B may be |
| defined in '/etc/mtools.conf' and drives C and D may be defined in |
| '~/.mtoolsrc' However, if '~/.mtoolsrc' also defines drive A, this new |
| description would override the description of drive A in |
| '/etc/mtools.conf' instead of adding to it. If you want to add a new |
| description to a drive already described in an earlier file, you need to |
| use either the '+drive' or 'drive+' keyword. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: old style configuration, Prev: parsing order, Up: Configuration |
| |
| 3.7 Backwards compatibility with old configuration file syntax |
| ============================================================== |
| |
| The syntax described herein is new for version 'mtools-3.0'. The old |
| line-oriented syntax is still supported. Each line beginning with a |
| single letter is considered to be a drive description using the old |
| syntax. Old style and new style drive sections may be mixed within the |
| same configuration file, in order to make upgrading easier. Support for |
| the old syntax will be phased out eventually, and in order to discourage |
| its use, I purposefully omit its description here. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Commands, Next: Compiling mtools, Prev: Configuration, Up: Top |
| |
| 4 Command list |
| ************** |
| |
| This section describes the available mtools commands, and the command |
| line parameters that each of them accepts. Options which are common to |
| all mtools commands are not described here, *note arguments:: for a |
| description of those. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * floppyd:: floppy daemon to run on your X server box |
| * floppyd_installtest:: small utility to check for the presence of floppyd |
| * mattrib:: change MS-DOS file attribute flags |
| * mbadblocks:: tests a floppy disk, and marks the bad blocks in the FAT |
| * mcat:: same as cat. Only useful with floppyd. |
| * mcd:: change MS-DOS directory |
| * mclasserase:: erase memory card |
| * mcopy:: copy MS-DOS files to/from Unix |
| * mdel:: delete an MS-DOS file |
| * mdeltree:: recursively delete an MS-DOS directory |
| * mdir:: display an MS-DOS directory |
| * mdu:: list space occupied by directory and its contents |
| * mformat:: add an MS-DOS file system to a low-level formatted floppy disk |
| * minfo:: get information about an MS-DOS file system. |
| * mlabel:: make an MS-DOS volume label |
| * mkmanifest:: makes a list of short name equivalents |
| * mmd:: make an MS-DOS subdirectory |
| * mmount:: mount an MS-DOS disk |
| * mpartition:: create an MS-DOS as a partition |
| * mrd:: remove an MS-DOS subdirectory |
| * mmove:: move or rename an MS-DOS file or subdirectory |
| * mren:: rename an existing MS-DOS file |
| * mshortname:: shows the short name of a file |
| * mshowfat:: shows the FAT map of a file |
| * mtoolstest:: tests and displays the configuration |
| * mtype:: display contents of an MS-DOS file |
| * mzip:: zip disk specific commands |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: floppyd, Next: floppyd_installtest, Prev: Commands, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.1 Floppyd |
| =========== |
| |
| 'Floppyd' is used as a server to grant access to the floppy drive to |
| clients running on a remote machine, just as an X server grants access |
| to the display to remote clients. It has the following syntax: |
| |
| 'floppyd' ['-d'] ['-l'] ['-s' PORT] ['-r' USER] ['-b' IPADDR] ['-x' |
| DISPLAY] DEVICENAMES |
| |
| 'floppyd' is always associated with an X server. It runs on the same |
| machine as its X server, and listens on port 5703 and above. |
| |
| 4.1.1 Authentication |
| -------------------- |
| |
| 'floppyd' authenticates remote clients using the 'Xauthority' protocol. |
| Xhost authentication is not supported. Each floppyd is associated with |
| an X server. When a remote client attempts to connect to floppyd, it |
| sends floppyd the X authority record corresponding to floppyd's X |
| server. Floppyd in turn then tries to open up a connection to the X |
| server in order to verify the authenticity of the xauth record. If the |
| connection to the X server succeeds, the client is granted access. |
| 'DISPLAY'. |
| |
| *Caution*: In order to make authentication work correctly, the local |
| host should *not* be listed in the 'xhost' list of allowed hosts. |
| Indeed, hosts listed in 'xhost' do not need a correct 'Xauthority' |
| cookie to connect to the X server. As 'floppyd' runs on the same host |
| as the X server, all its probe connection would succeed even for clients |
| who supplied a bad cookie. This means that your floppy drive would be |
| open to the world, i.e. a huge security hole. If your X server does |
| not allow you to remove 'localhost:0' and ':0' from the 'xhost' list, |
| you can prevent floppyd from probing those display names with the '-l' |
| option. |
| |
| 4.1.2 Command line options |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| 'd' |
| Daemon mode. Floppyd runs its own server loop. Do not supply this |
| if you start floppyd from 'inetd.conf' |
| 's PORT' |
| Port number for daemon mode. Default is 5703 + DISPLAYNUMBER. |
| This flag implies daemon mode. For example, for display |
| 'hitchhiker:5', the port would be 5708. |
| 'b IPADDR' |
| Bind address (for multi homed hosts). This flag implies daemon |
| mode |
| 'r USER' |
| Run the server under as the given user |
| 'x DISPLAY' |
| X display to use for authentication. By default, this is taken |
| from the 'DISPLAY' variable. If neither the 'x' attribute is |
| present nor 'DISPLAY' is set, floppyd uses ':0.0'. |
| |
| DEVICENAMES is a list of device nodes to be opened. Default is |
| '/dev/fd0'. Multiple devices are only supported on mtools versions |
| newer than 3.9.11. |
| |
| 4.1.3 Connecting to floppyd |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| In order to use floppyd, add the flag 'remote' to the device description |
| in your '~/.mtoolsrc' file. If the flag 'remote' is given, the 'file' |
| parameter of the device description is taken to be a remote address. |
| It's format is the following: |
| HOSTNAME':'DISPLAYNUMBER['/'[BASEPORT]['/'DRIVE]]. When using this |
| entry, mtools connects to port BASEPORT+DISPLAYNUMBER at HOSTNAME. By |
| default BASEPORT is 5703. The drive parameter is to distinguish among |
| multiple drives associated with a single display (only mtools versions |
| more recent than 3.9.11) |
| |
| 4.1.4 Examples: |
| --------------- |
| |
| The following starts a floppy daemon giving access to '/dev/fd0', |
| listening on the default port 5703, tied to the default X servers: |
| |
| floppyd -d /dev/fd0 |
| |
| Each of the following starts a floppy daemon giving access to |
| '/dev/fd1', tied to the :1 local X servers, and listening on port 5704. |
| We assume that the local host is named 'hitchhiker'. |
| |
| floppyd -d /dev/fd0 |
| floppyd -d -x :1 -p 5704 /dev/fd0 |
| |
| If you want to start floppyd by 'inetd' instead of running it as a |
| daemon, insert the following lines into '/etc/services': |
| # floppy daemon |
| floppyd-0 5703/tcp # floppy daemon for X server :0 |
| floppyd-1 5704/tcp # floppy daemon for X server :1 |
| |
| And insert the following into '/etc/inetd.conf' (assuming that you |
| have defined a user named floppy in your '/etc/passwd'): |
| |
| # floppy daemon |
| floppyd-0 stream tcp wait floppy /usr/sbin/floppyd floppyd /dev/fd0 |
| floppyd-1 stream tcp wait floppy /usr/sbin/floppyd floppyd -x :1 /dev/fd0 |
| |
| Note that you need to supply the X display names for the second |
| floppyd. This is because the port is opened by inetd.conf, and hence |
| floppyd cannot know its number to interfere the display number. |
| |
| On the client side, insert the following into your '~/.mtoolsrc' to |
| define a drive letter accessing floppy drive in your X terminal: |
| drive x: file="$DISPLAY" remote |
| |
| If your X terminal has more than one drive, you may access the |
| additional drives as follows: |
| drive y: file="$DISPLAY//1" remote |
| drive z: file="$DISPLAY//2" remote |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: floppyd_installtest, Next: mattrib, Prev: floppyd, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.2 Floppyd_installtest |
| ======================= |
| |
| 'Floppyd_installtest' is used to check for the presence of a running |
| floppyd daemon. This is useful, if you have a small front-end script to |
| mtools, which decides whether to use floppyd or not. |
| |
| 'floppyd_installtest' ['-f'] Connect-String |
| |
| If the '-f' option is specified, 'floppyd_installtest' does a full |
| X-Cookie authentication and complains if this does not work. |
| |
| The connect-String has the format described in the floppyd-section: |
| HOSTNAME':'DISPLAYNUMBER['/'BASEPORT] |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mattrib, Next: mbadblocks, Prev: floppyd_installtest, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.3 Mattrib |
| =========== |
| |
| 'Mattrib' is used to change MS-DOS file attribute flags. It has the |
| following syntax: |
| |
| 'mattrib' ['-a|+a'] ['-h|+h'] ['-r|+r'] ['-s|+s'] ['-/'] ['-p'] |
| ['-X'] MSDOSFILE [ MSDOSFILES ... ] |
| |
| 'Mattrib' adds attribute flags to an MS-DOS file (with the ''+'' |
| operator) or remove attribute flags (with the ''-'' operator). |
| |
| 'Mattrib' supports the following attribute bits: |
| |
| 'a' |
| Archive bit. Used by some backup programs to indicate a new file. |
| 'r' |
| Read-only bit. Used to indicate a read-only file. Files with this |
| bit set cannot be erased by 'DEL' nor modified. |
| 's' |
| System bit. Used by MS-DOS to indicate a operating system file. |
| 'h' |
| Hidden bit. Used to make files hidden from 'DIR'. |
| |
| 'Mattrib' supports the following command line flags: |
| '/' |
| Recursive. Recursively list the attributes of the files in the |
| subdirectories. |
| 'X' |
| Concise. Prints the attributes without any whitespace padding. If |
| neither the "/" option is given, nor the MSDOSFILE contains a |
| wildcard, and there is only one MS-DOS file parameter on the |
| command line, only the attribute is printed, and not the filename. |
| This option is convenient for scripts |
| 'p' |
| Replay mode. Outputs a series of 'mformat' commands that will |
| reproduce the current situation, starting from a situation as left |
| by untarring the MS-DOS file system. Commands are only output for |
| attribute settings that differ from the default (archive bit set |
| for files, unset for directories). This option is intended to be |
| used in addition to tar. The 'readonly' attribute is not taken |
| into account, as tar can set that one itself. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mbadblocks, Next: mcat, Prev: mattrib, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.4 Mbadblocks |
| ============== |
| |
| The 'mbadblocks' command is used to mark some clusters on an MS-DOS |
| filesystem bad. It has the following syntax: |
| |
| 'mbadblocks' ['-s' SECTORLIST|'-c' CLUSTERLIST|-w] DRIVE':' |
| |
| If no command line flags are supplied, 'Mbadblocks' scans an MS-DOS |
| filesystem for bad blocks by simply trying to read them and flag them if |
| read fails. All blocks that are unused are scanned, and if detected bad |
| are marked as such in the FAT. |
| |
| This command is intended to be used right after 'mformat'. It is not |
| intended to salvage data from bad disks. |
| |
| 4.4.1 Command line options |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| 'c FILE' |
| Use a list of bad clusters, rather than scanning for bad clusters |
| itself. |
| 's FILE' |
| Use a list of bad sectors (counted from beginning of filesystem), |
| rather than trying for bad clusters itself. |
| 'w' |
| Write a random pattern to each cluster, then read it back and flag |
| cluster as bad if mismatch. Only free clusters are tested in such |
| a way, so any file data is preserved. |
| |
| 4.4.2 Bugs |
| ---------- |
| |
| 'Mbadblocks' should (but doesn't yet :-( ) also try to salvage bad |
| blocks which are in use by reading them repeatedly, and then mark them |
| bad. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mcat, Next: mcd, Prev: mbadblocks, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.5 Mcat |
| ======== |
| |
| The 'mcat' command is used to copy an entire disk image from or to the |
| floppy device. It uses the following syntax: |
| |
| 'mcat' ['-w'] DRIVE':' |
| |
| 'Mcat' performs the same task as the Unix 'cat' command. It is |
| included into the mtools package, since 'cat' cannot access remote |
| floppy devices offered by the mtools floppy daemon. Now it is possible |
| to create boot floppies remotely. |
| |
| The default operation is reading. The output is written to stdout. |
| |
| If the '-w' option is specified, mcat reads a disk-image from stdin |
| and writes it to the given device. *Use this carefully!* Because of |
| the low-level nature of this command, it will happily destroy any data |
| written before on the disk without warning! |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mcd, Next: mclasserase, Prev: mcat, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.6 Mcd |
| ======= |
| |
| The 'mcd' command is used to change the mtools working directory on the |
| MS-DOS disk. It uses the following syntax: |
| |
| mcd [MSDOSDIRECTORY] |
| |
| Without arguments, 'mcd' reports the current device and working |
| directory. Otherwise, 'mcd' changes the current device and current |
| working directory relative to an MS-DOS file system. |
| |
| The environmental variable 'MCWD' may be used to locate the file |
| where the device and current working directory information is stored. |
| The default is '$HOME/.mcwd'. Information in this file is ignored if |
| the file is more than 6 hours old. |
| |
| 'Mcd' returns 0 on success or 1 on failure. |
| |
| Unlike MS-DOS versions of 'CD', 'mcd' can be used to change to |
| another device. It may be wise to remove old '.mcwd' files at logout. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mclasserase, Next: mcopy, Prev: mcd, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.7 Mclasserase |
| =============== |
| |
| The 'mclasserase' command is used to wipe memory cards by overwriting it |
| three times: first with '0xff', then with '0x00', then with '0xff' |
| again. The command uses the following syntax: |
| |
| mclasserase [-d] MSDOSDRIVE |
| |
| MS-DOS drive is optional, if none is specified, use 'A:'. If more |
| than one drive are specified, all but the last are ignored. |
| |
| 'Mclasserase' accepts the following command line options: |
| |
| 'd' |
| Stop after each erase cycle, for testing purposes |
| 'p' |
| Not yet implemented |
| |
| 'Mclasserase' returns 0 on success or -1 on failure. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mcopy, Next: mdel, Prev: mclasserase, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.8 Mcopy |
| ========= |
| |
| The 'mcopy' command is used to copy MS-DOS files to and from Unix. It |
| uses the following syntax: |
| |
| mcopy [-bspanvmQT] [-D CLASH_OPTION] SOURCEFILE TARGETFILE |
| mcopy [-bspanvmQT] [-D CLASH_OPTION] SOURCEFILE [ SOURCEFILES... ] TARGETDIRECTORY |
| mcopy [-tnvm] MSDOSSOURCEFILE |
| |
| 'Mcopy' copies the specified file to the named file, or copies |
| multiple files to the named directory. The source and target can be |
| either MS-DOS or Unix files. |
| |
| The use of a drive letter designation on the MS-DOS files, 'a:' for |
| example, determines the direction of the transfer. A missing drive |
| designation implies a Unix file whose path starts in the current |
| directory. If a source drive letter is specified with no attached file |
| name (e.g. 'mcopy a: .'), all files are copied from that drive. |
| |
| If only a single, MS-DOS source parameter is provided (e.g. "mcopy |
| a:foo.exe"), an implied destination of the current directory (''.'') is |
| assumed. |
| |
| A filename of ''-'' means standard input or standard output, |
| depending on its position on the command line. |
| |
| 'Mcopy' accepts the following command line options: |
| |
| 't' |
| Text file transfer. Mcopy translates incoming carriage return/line |
| feeds to line feeds when copying from MS-DOS to Unix, and |
| vice-versa when copying from Unix to MS-DOS. |
| 'b' |
| Batch mode. Optimized for huge recursive copies, but less secure |
| if a crash happens during the copy. |
| 's' |
| Recursive copy. Also copies directories and their contents |
| 'p' |
| Preserves the attributes of the copied files |
| 'Q' |
| When mcopying multiple files, quits as soon as one copy fails (for |
| example due to lacking storage space on the target disk) |
| 'a' |
| Text (ASCII) file transfer. 'ASCII' translates incoming carriage |
| return/line feeds to line feeds. |
| 'T' |
| Text (ASCII) file transfer with character set conversion. Differs |
| from '-a' in the 'ASCII' also translates incoming PC-8 characters |
| to ISO-8859-1 equivalents as far as possible. When reading DOS |
| files, untranslatable characters are replaced by ''#''; when |
| writing DOS files, untranslatable characters are replaced by ''.''. |
| 'n' |
| No confirmation when overwriting Unix files. 'ASCII' doesn't warn |
| the user when overwriting an existing Unix file. If the target |
| file already exists, and the '-n' option is not in effect, 'mcopy' |
| asks whether to overwrite the file or to rename the new file (see |
| *note name clashes::) for details). In order to switch off |
| confirmation for DOS files, use '-o'. |
| 'm' |
| Preserve the file modification time. |
| 'v' |
| Verbose. Displays the name of each file as it is copied. |
| |
| 4.8.1 Bugs |
| ---------- |
| |
| Unlike MS-DOS, the '+' operator (append) from MS-DOS is not supported. |
| However, you may use 'mtype' to produce the same effect: |
| mtype a:file1 a:file2 a:file3 >unixfile |
| mtype a:file1 a:file2 a:file3 | mcopy - a:msdosfile |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mdel, Next: mdeltree, Prev: mcopy, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.9 Mdel |
| ======== |
| |
| The 'mdel' command is used to delete an MS-DOS file. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mdel' ['-v'] MSDOSFILE [ MSDOSFILES ... ] |
| |
| 'Mdel' deletes files on an MS-DOS file system. |
| |
| 'Mdel' asks for verification prior to removing a read-only file. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mdeltree, Next: mdir, Prev: mdel, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.10 Mdeltree |
| ============= |
| |
| The 'mdeltree' command is used to delete an MS-DOS file. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mdeltree' ['-v'] MSDOSDIRECTORY [MSDOSDIRECTORIES...] |
| |
| 'Mdeltree' removes a directory and all the files and subdirectories |
| it contains from an MS-DOS file system. An error occurs if the |
| directory to be removed does not exist. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mdir, Next: mdu, Prev: mdeltree, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.11 Mdir |
| ========= |
| |
| The 'mdir' command is used to display an MS-DOS directory. Its syntax |
| is: |
| |
| 'mdir' ['-/'] ['-f'] ['-w'] ['-a'] ['-b'] MSDOSFILE [ MSDOSFILES...] |
| |
| 'Mdir' displays the contents of MS-DOS directories, or the entries |
| for some MS-DOS files. |
| |
| 'Mdir' supports the following command line options: |
| |
| '/' |
| Recursive output, just like MS-DOS' '-s' option |
| 'w' |
| Wide output. With this option, 'mdir' prints the filenames across |
| the page without displaying the file size or creation date. |
| 'a' |
| Also list hidden files. |
| 'f' |
| Fast. Do not try to find out free space. On larger disks, finding |
| out the amount of free space takes up some non trivial amount of |
| time, as the whole FAT must be read in and scanned. The '-f' flag |
| bypasses this step. This flag is not needed on FAT32 file systems, |
| which store the size explicitly. |
| 'b' |
| Concise listing. Lists each directory name or filename, one per |
| line (including the filename extension). This switch displays no |
| heading information and no summary. Only a newline separated list |
| of pathnames is displayed. |
| |
| An error occurs if a component of the path is not a directory. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mdu, Next: mformat, Prev: mdir, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.12 Mdu |
| ======== |
| |
| 'Mdu' is used to list the space occupied by a directory, its |
| subdirectories and its files. It is similar to the 'du' command on |
| Unix. The unit used are clusters. Use the minfo command to find out |
| the cluster size. |
| |
| 'mdu' ['-a'] [ MSDOSFILES ... ] |
| |
| 'a' |
| All files. List also the space occupied for individual files. |
| 's' |
| Only list the total space, don't give details for each |
| subdirectory. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mformat, Next: mkmanifest, Prev: mdu, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.13 Mformat |
| ============ |
| |
| The 'mformat' command is used to add an MS-DOS file system to a |
| low-level formatted diskette. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mformat' ['-t' CYLINDERS|'-T' TOT_SECTORS] ['-h' HEADS] ['-s' SECTORS] |
| ['-f' SIZE] ['-1'] ['-4'] ['-8'] |
| ['-v' VOLUME_LABEL] |
| ['-F'] ['-S' SIZECODE] |
| ['-M' SOFTWARE_SECTOR_SIZE] |
| ['-N' SERIAL_NUMBER] ['-a'] |
| ['-C'] ['-H' HIDDEN_SECTORS] ['-I' FSVERSION] |
| ['-r' ROOT_SECTORS] ['-L' FAT_LEN] |
| ['-B' BOOT_SECTOR] ['-k'] |
| ['-m' MEDIA_DESCRIPTOR] |
| ['-K' BACKUP_BOOT] |
| ['-R' NB_RESERVED_SECTORS] |
| ['-c' CLUSTERS_PER_SECTOR] |
| ['-d' FAT_COPIES] |
| ['-X'] ['-2' SECTORS_ON_TRACK_0] ['-3'] |
| ['-0' RATE_ON_TRACK_0] ['-A' RATE_ON_OTHER_TRACKS] |
| DRIVE: |
| |
| 'Mformat' adds a minimal MS-DOS file system (boot sector, FAT, and |
| root directory) to a diskette that has already been formatted by a Unix |
| low-level format. |
| |
| The following options are supported: (The S, 2, 1 and M options may |
| not exist if this copy of mtools has been compiled without the USE_2M |
| option) |
| |
| The following options are the same as for MS-DOS's format command: |
| |
| 'v' |
| Specifies the volume label. A volume label identifies the disk and |
| can be a maximum of 11 characters. If you omit the -v switch, |
| mformat will assign no label to the disk. |
| 'f' |
| Specifies the size of the DOS file system to format. Only a |
| certain number of predefined sizes are supported by this flag; for |
| others use the -h/-t/-s flags. The following sizes are supported: |
| 160 |
| 160K, single-sided, 8 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 |
| 1/4 DD) |
| 180 |
| 160K, single-sided, 9 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 |
| 1/4 DD) |
| 320 |
| 320K, double-sided, 8 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 |
| 1/4 DD) |
| 360 |
| 360K, double-sided, 9 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 |
| 1/4 DD) |
| 720 |
| 720K, double-sided, 9 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 3 |
| 1/2 DD) |
| 1200 |
| 1200K, double-sided, 15 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 5 |
| 1/4 HD) |
| 1440 |
| 1440K, double-sided, 18 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 3 |
| 1/2 HD) |
| 2880 |
| 2880K, double-sided, 36 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 3 |
| 1/2 ED) |
| |
| 't' |
| Specifies the number of tracks on the disk. |
| 'T' |
| Specifies the number of total sectors on the disk. Only one of |
| these 2 options may be specified (tracks or total sectors) |
| 'h' |
| The number of heads (sides). |
| 's' |
| Specifies the number of sectors per track. If the 2m option is |
| given, number of 512-byte sector equivalents on generic tracks |
| (i.e. not head 0 track 0). If the 2m option is not given, number |
| of physical sectors per track (which may be bigger than 512 bytes). |
| |
| '1' |
| Formats a single side (equivalent to -h 1) |
| |
| '4' |
| Formats a 360K double-sided disk (equivalent to -f 360). When used |
| together with -the 1 switch, this switch formats a 180K disk |
| |
| '8' |
| Formats a disk with 8 sectors per track. |
| |
| MS-DOS format's 'q', 'u' and 'b' options are not supported, and 's' |
| has a different meaning. |
| |
| The following options are specific to mtools: |
| |
| 'F' |
| Format the partition as FAT32. |
| |
| 'S' |
| The size code. The size of the sector is 2 ^ (sizecode + 7). |
| 'X' |
| formats the disk as an XDF disk. *Note XDF::, for more details. |
| The disk has first to be low-level formatted using the xdfcopy |
| utility included in the fdutils package. XDF disks are used for |
| instance for OS/2 install disks. |
| '2' |
| 2m format. The parameter to this option describes the number of |
| sectors on track 0, head 0. This option is recommended for sectors |
| bigger than normal. |
| '3' |
| don't use a 2m format, even if the current geometry of the disk is |
| a 2m geometry. |
| '0' |
| Data transfer rate on track 0 |
| 'A' |
| Data transfer rate on tracks other than 0 |
| 'M' |
| software sector size. This parameter describes the sector size in |
| bytes used by the MS-DOS file system. By default it is the |
| physical sector size. |
| 'N' |
| Uses the requested serial number, instead of generating one |
| automatically |
| 'a' |
| If this option is given, an Atari style serial number is generated. |
| Ataris store their serial number in the OEM label. |
| 'C' |
| creates the disk image file to install the MS-DOS file system on |
| it. Obviously, this is useless on physical devices such as |
| floppies and hard disk partitions, but is interesting for image |
| files. |
| 'H' |
| number of hidden sectors. This parameter is useful for formatting |
| hard disk partition, which are not aligned on track boundaries |
| (i.e. first head of first track doesn't belong to the partition, |
| but contains a partition table). In that case the number of hidden |
| sectors is in general the number of sectors per cylinder. This is |
| untested. |
| 'I' |
| Sets the fsVersion id when formatting a FAT32 drive. In order to |
| find this out, run minfo on an existing FAT32 drive, and mail me |
| about it, so I can include the correct value in future versions of |
| mtools. |
| 'c' |
| Sets the size of a cluster (in sectors). If this cluster size |
| would generate a FAT that too big for its number of bits, mtools |
| automatically increases the cluster size, until the FAT is small |
| enough. If no cluster size is specified explicitly, mtools uses a |
| default value as described in section "Number of sectors per |
| cluster" below. |
| 'd' |
| Sets the number of FAT copies. Default is 2. This setting can |
| also be specified using the 'MTOOLS_NFATS' environment variable. |
| 'r' |
| Sets the size of the root directory (in sectors). Only applicable |
| to 12 and 16 bit FATs. This setting can also be specified using |
| the 'MTOOLS_DIR_LEN' environment variable. |
| 'L' |
| Sets the length of the FAT. |
| 'B' |
| Use the boot sector stored in the given file or device, instead of |
| using its own. Only the geometry fields are updated to match the |
| target disks parameters. |
| 'k' |
| Keep the existing boot sector as much as possible. Only the |
| geometry fields and other similar file system data are updated to |
| match the target disks parameters. |
| 'K' |
| Sets the sector number where the backup of the boot sector should |
| be stored (only relevant on FAT32). |
| 'R' |
| Sets the number of reserved sectors for this filesystem. This must |
| be at least 1 for non-FAT32 disks, and at least 3 for FAT disks (in |
| order to accommodate the boot sector, the info sector and the |
| backup boot sector). |
| |
| 'm' |
| Use a non-standard media descriptor byte for this disk. The media |
| descriptor is stored at position 21 of the boot sector, and as |
| first byte in each FAT copy. Using this option may confuse DOS or |
| older mtools version, and may make the disk unreadable. Only use |
| if you know what you are doing. |
| |
| To format a diskette at a density other than the default, you must |
| supply (at least) those command line parameters that are different from |
| the default. |
| |
| 'Mformat' returns 0 on success or 1 on failure. |
| |
| It doesn't record bad block information to the Fat, use 'mbadblocks' |
| for that. |
| |
| 4.13.1 Number of sectors per cluster |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| If the user indicates no cluster size, mformat figures out a default |
| value for it. |
| |
| For FAT32 it uses the following table to determine the number of |
| sectors per cluster, depending on the total number of sectors on the |
| filesystem. |
| |
| more than 32*1024*1024*2: 64 sectors |
| between 16*1024*1024*2 and 32*1024*1024*2: 32 sectors |
| between 8*1024*1024*2 and 16*1024*1024*2: 16 sectors |
| between 260*1024*2 and 81024*1024*2: 1 sectors |
| |
| This is derived from information on page 20 of Microsoft's |
| 'fatgen103' document, which currently can be found at the following |
| address: |
| |
| 'https://staff.washington.edu/dittrich/misc/fatgen103.pdf' |
| |
| For FAT12 and FAT16, mformat uses an iterative approach, where it |
| starts with a set value, which it doubles until it is able to fill up |
| the disk using that cluster size and a number of cluster less than the |
| maximum allowed. |
| |
| The starting value is 1 for disks with one head or less than 2000 |
| sectors, and 2 for disks with more than one head, and more than 2000 |
| sectors. |
| |
| The number of sectors per cluster cannot go beyond 128. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mkmanifest, Next: minfo, Prev: mformat, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.14 Mkmanifest |
| =============== |
| |
| The 'mkmanifest' command is used to create a shell script (packing list) |
| to restore Unix filenames. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mkmanifest' [ FILES ] |
| |
| 'Mkmanifest' creates a shell script that aids in the restoration of |
| Unix filenames that got clobbered by the MS-DOS filename restrictions. |
| MS-DOS filenames are restricted to 8 character names, 3 character |
| extensions, upper case only, no device names, and no illegal characters. |
| |
| The mkmanifest program is compatible with the methods used in 'pcomm, |
| arc,' and 'mtools' to change perfectly good Unix filenames to fit the |
| MS-DOS restrictions. This command is only useful if the target system |
| which will read the diskette cannot handle VFAT long names. |
| |
| 4.14.1 Example |
| -------------- |
| |
| You want to copy the following Unix files to a MS-DOS diskette (using |
| the 'mcopy' command). |
| |
| very_long_name |
| 2.many.dots |
| illegal: |
| good.c |
| prn.dev |
| Capital |
| |
| 'ASCII' converts the names to: |
| |
| very_lon |
| 2xmany.dot |
| illegalx |
| good.c |
| xprn.dev |
| capital |
| |
| The command: |
| mkmanifest very_long_name 2.many.dots illegal: good.c prn.dev Capital >manifest |
| would produce the following: |
| mv very_lon very_long_name |
| mv 2xmany.dot 2.many.dots |
| mv illegalx illegal: |
| mv xprn.dev prn.dev |
| mv capital Capital |
| |
| Notice that "good.c" did not require any conversion, so it did not |
| appear in the output. |
| |
| Suppose I've copied these files from the diskette to another Unix |
| system, and I now want the files back to their original names. If the |
| file "manifest" (the output captured above) was sent along with those |
| files, it could be used to convert the filenames. |
| |
| 4.14.2 Bugs |
| ----------- |
| |
| The short names generated by 'mkmanifest' follow the old convention |
| (from mtools-2.0.7) and not the one from Windows 95 and mtools-3.0. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: minfo, Next: mlabel, Prev: mkmanifest, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.15 Minfo |
| ========== |
| |
| The 'minfo' command prints the parameters of a MS-DOS file system, such |
| as number of sectors, heads and cylinders. It also prints an mformat |
| command line which can be used to create a similar MS-DOS file system on |
| another media. However, this doesn't work with 2m or XDF media, and |
| with MS-DOS 1.0 file systems |
| 'minfo' DRIVE: |
| |
| Minfo supports the following option: |
| 'v' |
| Prints a hexdump of the boot sector, in addition to the other |
| information |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mlabel, Next: mmd, Prev: minfo, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.16 Mlabel |
| =========== |
| |
| The 'mlabel' command adds a volume label to a disk. Its syntax is: |
| 'mlabel' ['-vcsn'] ['-N' SERIAL] DRIVE:[NEW_LABEL] |
| |
| 'Mlabel' displays the current volume label, if present. If NEW_LABEL |
| is not given, and if neither the 'c' nor the 's' options are set, it |
| prompts the user for a new volume label. To delete an existing volume |
| label, press return at the prompt. |
| |
| The label is limited to 11 single-byte characters, e.g. |
| 'Name1234567'. |
| |
| Reasonable care is taken to create a valid MS-DOS volume label. If |
| an invalid label is specified, 'mlabel' changes the label (and displays |
| the new label if the verbose mode is set). 'Mlabel' returns 0 on |
| success or 1 on failure. |
| |
| Mlabel supports the following options: |
| 'c' |
| Clears an existing label, without prompting the user |
| 's' |
| Shows the existing label, without prompting the user. |
| 'n' |
| Assigns a new (random) serial number to the disk |
| 'N SERIAL' |
| Sets the supplied serial number. The serial number should be |
| supplied as an 8 digit hexadecimal number, without spaces |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mmd, Next: mmount, Prev: mlabel, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.17 Mmd |
| ======== |
| |
| The 'mmd' command is used to make an MS-DOS subdirectory. Its syntax |
| is: |
| |
| 'mmd' ['-D' CLASH_OPTION] MSDOSDIRECTORY [ MSDOSDIRECTORIES... ] |
| |
| 'Mmd' makes a new directory on an MS-DOS file system. An error |
| occurs if the directory already exists. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mmount, Next: mmove, Prev: mmd, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.18 Mmount |
| =========== |
| |
| The 'mmount' command is used to mount an MS-DOS disk. It is only |
| available on Linux, as it is only useful if the OS kernel allows |
| configuration of the disk geometry. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mmount' MSDOSDRIVE [MOUNTARGS] |
| |
| 'Mmount' reads the boot sector of an MS-DOS disk, configures the |
| drive geometry, and finally mounts it passing 'mountargs' to 'mount. ' |
| If no mount arguments are specified, the name of the device is used. If |
| the disk is write protected, it is automatically mounted read only. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mmove, Next: mpartition, Prev: mmount, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.19 Mmove |
| ========== |
| |
| The 'mmove' command is used to move or rename an existing MS-DOS file or |
| subdirectory. |
| 'mmove' ['-v'] ['-D' CLASH_OPTION] SOURCEFILE TARGETFILE |
| 'mmove' ['-v'] ['-D' CLASH_OPTION] SOURCEFILE [ SOURCEFILES... ] TARGETDIRECTORY |
| 'Mmove' moves or renames an existing MS-DOS file or subdirectory. |
| Unlike the MS-DOS version of 'MOVE', 'mmove' is able to move |
| subdirectories. Files or directories can only be moved within one file |
| system. Data cannot be moved from MS-DOS to Unix or vice-versa. If you |
| omit the drive letter from the target file or directory, the same letter |
| as for the source is assumed. If you omit the drive letter from all |
| parameters, drive a: is assumed by default. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mpartition, Next: mrd, Prev: mmove, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.20 Mpartition |
| =============== |
| |
| The 'mpartition' command is used to create MS-DOS file systems as |
| partitions. This is intended to be used on non-Linux systems, i.e. |
| systems where fdisk and easy access to SCSI devices are not available. |
| This command only works on drives whose partition variable is set. |
| |
| 'mpartition' '-p' DRIVE |
| 'mpartition' '-r' DRIVE |
| 'mpartition' '-I' ['-B' BOOTSECTOR] DRIVE |
| 'mpartition' '-a' DRIVE |
| 'mpartition' '-d' DRIVE |
| 'mpartition' '-c' ['-s' SECTORS] ['-h' HEADS] |
| ['-t' CYLINDERS] ['-v' ['-T' TYPE] ['-b' |
| BEGIN] ['-l' length] ['-f'] |
| |
| |
| Mpartition supports the following operations: |
| |
| 'p' |
| Prints a command line to recreate the partition for the drive. |
| Nothing is printed if the partition for the drive is not defined, |
| or an inconsistency has been detected. If verbose ('-v') is also |
| set, prints the current partition table. |
| 'r' |
| Removes the partition described by DRIVE. |
| 'I' |
| Initializes the partition table, and removes all partitions. |
| 'c' |
| Creates the partition described by DRIVE. |
| 'a' |
| "Activates" the partition, i.e. makes it bootable. Only one |
| partition can be bootable at a time. |
| 'd' |
| "Deactivates" the partition, i.e. makes it unbootable. |
| |
| If no operation is given, the current settings are printed. |
| |
| For partition creations, the following options are available: |
| 's SECTORS' |
| The number of sectors per track of the partition (which is also the |
| number of sectors per track for the whole drive). |
| 'h HEADS' |
| The number of heads of the partition (which is also the number of |
| heads for the whole drive). By default, the geometry information |
| (number of sectors and heads) is figured out from neighboring |
| partition table entries, or guessed from the size. |
| 't CYLINDERS' |
| The number of cylinders of the partition (not the number of |
| cylinders of the whole drive. |
| 'b BEGIN' |
| The starting offset of the partition, expressed in sectors. If |
| begin is not given, 'mpartition' lets the partition begin at the |
| start of the disk (partition number 1), or immediately after the |
| end of the previous partition. |
| 'l LENGTH' |
| The size (length) of the partition, expressed in sectors. If end |
| is not given, 'mpartition' figures out the size from the number of |
| sectors, heads and cylinders. If these are not given either, it |
| gives the partition the biggest possible size, considering disk |
| size and start of the next partition. |
| |
| The following option is available for all operation which modify the |
| partition table: |
| 'f' |
| Usually, before writing back any changes to the partition, |
| mpartition performs certain consistency checks, such as checking |
| for overlaps and proper alignment of the partitions. If any of |
| these checks fails, the partition table is not changed. The '-f' |
| allows you to override these safeguards. |
| |
| The following options are available for all operations: |
| 'v' |
| Together with '-p' prints the partition table as it is now (no |
| change operation), or as it is after it is modified. |
| 'vv' |
| If the verbosity flag is given twice, 'mpartition' will print out a |
| hexdump of the partition table when reading it from and writing it |
| to the device. |
| |
| The following option is available for partition table initialization: |
| 'B BOOTSECTOR' |
| Reads the template master boot record from file BOOTSECTOR. |
| |
| 4.20.1 Choice of partition type |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Mpartition proceeds as follows to pick a type for the partition: |
| |
| - FAT32 partitions are assigned type 0x0C ("'Win95 FAT32, LBA'") |
| |
| - For all others, if the partition fits entirely within the first |
| 65536 sectors of the disk, assign 0x01 ("'DOS FAT12, CHS'") for |
| FAT12 partition and 0x04 ("'DOS FAT16, CHS'") for FAT16 partitions |
| |
| - If not covered by the above, assign 0x06 ("'DOS BIG FAT16 CHS'") if |
| partition fits entirely within the first 1024 cylinders (CHS mode) |
| |
| - All remaining cases get 0x0E ("'Win95 BIG FAT16, LBA'") |
| |
| If number of fat bits is not known (not specified in drive's |
| definition), then FAT12 is assumed for all drives with less than 4096 |
| sectors, and FAT16 for those with more than 4096 sectors. |
| |
| This corresponds more or less to the definitions outlined at |
| 'https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_type#List_of_partition_IDs' and |
| 'https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/windows/it-pro/windows-2000-server/cc977219(v=technet.10)', |
| with two notable differences: |
| |
| - If fat bits are unknown, the reference documents consider drives |
| with less than 32680 sectors to be FAT12. Mtools uses 4096 sectors |
| as the cutoff point, as older versions of DOS only support FAT12 on |
| disks with less than 4096 sectors (and these older versions are the |
| ones which would be most likely to use FAT12 in the first place). |
| |
| - The reference documents use a 8GB (wikipedia) or a 4GB (Microsoft) |
| cutoff between 0x06 ('DOS BIG FAT16 CHS') and 0x0E. Mtools uses |
| 1024 cylinders. This is because any partition beyond 1024 |
| cylinders must be LBA and cannot be CHS. 8GB works out to be the |
| biggest capacity which can be represented as CHS (63 sectors, 255 |
| heads and 1024 cylinders). 4GB is the capacity limit for windows |
| 2000, so it makes sense that a documentation for windows 2000 would |
| specify this as the upper limit for any partition type. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mrd, Next: mren, Prev: mpartition, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.21 Mrd |
| ======== |
| |
| The 'mrd' command is used to remove an MS-DOS subdirectory. Its syntax |
| is: |
| |
| 'mrd' ['-v'] MSDOSDIRECTORY [ MSDOSDIRECTORIES... ] |
| |
| 'Mrd' removes a directory from an MS-DOS file system. An error |
| occurs if the directory does not exist or is not empty. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mren, Next: mshortname, Prev: mrd, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.22 Mren |
| ========= |
| |
| The 'mren' command is used to rename or move an existing MS-DOS file or |
| subdirectory. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mren' ['-voOsSrRA'] SOURCEFILE TARGETFILE |
| |
| 'Mren' renames an existing file on an MS-DOS file system. |
| |
| In verbose mode, 'Mren' displays the new filename if the name |
| supplied is invalid. |
| |
| If the first syntax is used (only one source file), and if the target |
| name doesn't contain any slashes or colons, the file (or subdirectory) |
| is renamed in the same directory, instead of being moved to the current |
| 'mcd' directory as would be the case with 'mmove'. Unlike the MS-DOS |
| version of 'REN', 'mren' can be used to rename directories. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mshortname, Next: mshowfat, Prev: mren, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.23 Mshortname |
| =============== |
| |
| The 'mshortname' command is used to display the short name of a file. |
| Syntax: |
| |
| 'mshortname' FILES |
| |
| The shortname is displayed as it is stored in raw format on disk, |
| without any character set conversion. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mshowfat, Next: mtoolstest, Prev: mshortname, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.24 Mshowfat |
| ============= |
| |
| The 'mshowfat' command is used to display the FAT entries for a file. |
| Syntax: |
| |
| 'mshowfat' ['-o' OFFSET] FILES |
| |
| If no offset is given, a list of all clusters occupied by the file is |
| printed. If an offset is given, only the number of the cluster |
| containing that offset is printed. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mtoolstest, Next: mtype, Prev: mshowfat, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.25 Mtoolstest |
| =============== |
| |
| The 'mtoolstest' command is used to tests the mtools configuration |
| files. To invoke it, just type 'mtoolstest' without any arguments. |
| 'Mtoolstest' reads the mtools configuration files, and prints the |
| cumulative configuration to 'stdout'. The output can be used as a |
| configuration file itself (although you might want to remove redundant |
| clauses). You may use this program to convert old-style configuration |
| files into new style configuration files. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mtype, Next: mzip, Prev: mtoolstest, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.26 Mtype |
| ========== |
| |
| The 'mtype' command is used to display contents of an MS-DOS file. Its |
| syntax is: |
| |
| 'mtype' ['-ts'] MSDOSFILE [ MSDOSFILES... ] |
| |
| 'Mtype' displays the specified MS-DOS file on the screen. |
| |
| In addition to the standard options, 'Mtype' allows the following |
| command line options: |
| |
| 't' |
| Text file viewing. 'Mtype' translates incoming carriage |
| return/line feeds to line feeds. |
| 's' |
| 'Mtype' strips the high bit from the data. |
| |
| The 'mcd' command may be used to establish the device and the current |
| working directory (relative to MS-DOS), otherwise the default is 'A:/'. |
| |
| 'Mtype' returns 0 on success, 1 on utter failure, or 2 on partial |
| failure. |
| |
| Unlike the MS-DOS version of 'TYPE', 'mtype' allows multiple |
| arguments. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: mzip, Prev: mtype, Up: Commands |
| |
| 4.27 Mzip |
| ========= |
| |
| The 'mzip' command is used to issue ZIP disk specific commands on Linux, |
| Solaris or HP-UX. Its syntax is: |
| |
| 'mzip' ['-epqrwx'] |
| |
| 'Mzip' allows the following command line options: |
| |
| 'e' |
| Ejects the disk. |
| 'f' |
| Force eject even if the disk is mounted (must be given in addition |
| to '-e'). |
| 'r' |
| Write protect the disk. |
| 'w' |
| Remove write protection. |
| 'p' |
| Password write protect. |
| 'x' |
| Password protect |
| 'u' |
| Temporarily unprotect the disk until it is ejected. The disk |
| becomes writable, and reverts back to its old state when ejected. |
| 'q' |
| Queries the status |
| |
| To remove the password, set it to one of the password-less modes '-r' |
| or '-w': mzip will then ask you for the password, and unlock the disk. |
| If you have forgotten the password, you can get rid of it by low-level |
| formatting the disk (using your SCSI adapter's BIOS setup). |
| |
| The ZipTools disk shipped with the drive is also password protected. |
| On MS-DOS or on a Mac, this password is automatically removed once the |
| ZipTools have been installed. From various articles posted to Usenet, I |
| learned that the password for the tools disk is 'APlaceForYourStuff'(1). |
| Mzip knows about this password, and tries it first, before prompting you |
| for a password. Thus 'mzip -w z:' unlocks the tools disk(2). The tools |
| disk is formatted in a special way so as to be usable both in a PC and |
| in a Mac. On a PC, the Mac file system appears as a hidden file named |
| 'partishn.mac'. You may erase it to reclaim the 50 Megs of space taken |
| up by the Mac file system. |
| |
| 4.27.1 Bugs |
| ----------- |
| |
| This command is a big kludge. A proper implementation would take a |
| rework of significant parts of mtools, but unfortunately I don't have |
| the time for this right now. The main downside of this implementation |
| is that it is inefficient on some architectures (several successive |
| calls to mtools, which defeats mtools' caching). |
| |
| ---------- Footnotes ---------- |
| |
| (1) To see the articles, search for 'APlaceForYourStuff' using Google |
| Groups |
| |
| (2) I didn't know about this yet when I bought my own Zip drive. |
| Thus I ended up reformatting my tools disk, and hence I haven't had the |
| opportunity to test the password yet. If anybody still has their tools |
| disk with the original password, could you try it out? Thanks in |
| advance |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Compiling mtools, Next: Porting mtools, Prev: Commands, Up: Top |
| |
| 5 Architecture specific compilation flags |
| ***************************************** |
| |
| To compile mtools, first invoke './configure' before 'make'. In |
| addition to the standard 'autoconfigure' flags, there are two |
| architecture specific flags available. |
| |
| './configure --enable-xdf' |
| './configure --disable-xdf' |
| Enables support for XDF disks. This is on by default. *Note |
| XDF::, for details. |
| './configure --enable-vold' |
| './configure --disable-vold' |
| Enables support for vold on Solaris. When used in conjunction with |
| vold, mtools should use different device nodes than for direct |
| access. |
| |
| './configure --enable-new-vold' |
| './configure --disable-new-vold' |
| Enables new support for vold on Solaris. This is supposed to work |
| more smoothly than the old support. |
| |
| './configure --enable-floppyd' |
| './configure --disable-floppyd' |
| Enables support for floppyd. By default, floppyd support is |
| enabled as long as the necessary X includes and libraries are |
| available. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Porting mtools, Next: Command Index, Prev: Compiling mtools, Up: Top |
| |
| 6 Porting mtools to architectures which are not supported yet |
| ************************************************************* |
| |
| This chapter is only interesting for those who want to port mtools to an |
| architecture which is not yet supported. For most common systems, |
| default drives are already defined. If you want to add default drives |
| for a still unsupported system, run configuration.guess, to see which |
| identification autoconf uses for that system. This identification is of |
| the form cpu-vendor-os (for example sparc-sun-sunos). The cpu and the |
| OS parts are passed to the compiler as preprocessor flags. The OS part |
| is passed to the compiler in three forms. |
| 1. The complete OS name, with dots replaced by underscores. SCO3.2v2 |
| would yield sco3_2v2 |
| 2. The base OS name. SCO3.2v2 would yield Sco |
| 3. The base OS name plus its major version. SCO3.2v2 would yield Sco3 |
| |
| All three versions are passed, if they are different. |
| |
| To define the devices, use the entries for the systems that are |
| already present as templates. In general, they have the following form: |
| |
| #if (defined (my_cpu) && defined(my_os)) |
| #define predefined_devices |
| struct device devices[] = { |
| { "/dev/first_drive", 'drive_letter', drive_description}, |
| ... |
| { "/dev/last_drive", 'drive_letter', drive_description} |
| } |
| #define INIT_NOOP |
| #endif |
| |
| "/dev/first_drive" is the name of the device or image file |
| representing the drive. Drive_letter is a letter ranging from a to z |
| giving access to the drive. Drive_description describes the type of the |
| drive: |
| 'ED312' |
| extra density (2.88M) 3 1/2 disk |
| 'HD312' |
| high density 3 1/2 disk |
| 'DD312' |
| double density 3 1/2 disk |
| 'HD514' |
| high density 5 1/4 disk |
| 'DD514' |
| double density 5 1/4 disk |
| 'DDsmall' |
| 8 sector double density 5 1/4 disk |
| 'SS514' |
| single sided double density 5 1/4 disk |
| 'SSsmall' |
| single sided 8 sector double density 5 1/4 disk |
| 'GENFD' |
| generic floppy drive (12 bit FAT) |
| 'GENHD' |
| generic hard disk (16 bit FAT) |
| 'GEN' |
| generic device (all parameters match) |
| 'ZIPJAZ(flags)' |
| generic ZIP drive using normal access. This uses partition 4. |
| 'Flags' are any special flags to be passed to open. |
| 'RZIPJAZ(flags)' |
| generic ZIP drive using raw SCSI access. This uses partition 4. |
| 'Flags' are any special flags to be passed to open. |
| 'REMOTE' |
| the remote drive used for floppyd. Unlike the other items, this |
| macro also includes the file name ($DISPLAY) and the drive letter |
| (X) |
| |
| Entries may be described in more detail: |
| fat_bits,open_flags,cylinders,heads,sectors,DEF_ARG |
| or, if you need to describe an offset (file system doesn't start at |
| beginning of file system) |
| fat_bits, open_flags, cylinders, heads, sectors, offset, DEF_ARG0 |
| |
| 'fat_bits' |
| is either 12, 16 or 0. 0 means that the device accepts both types |
| of FAT. |
| 'open_flags' |
| may include flags such as O_NDELAY, or O_RDONLY, which might be |
| necessary to open the device. 0 means no special flags are needed. |
| 'cylinders,heads,sectors' |
| describe the geometry of the disk. If cylinders is 0, the heads |
| and sectors parameters are ignored, and the drive accepts any |
| geometry. |
| 'offset' |
| is used if the DOS file system doesn't begin at the start of the |
| device or image file. This is mostly useful for Atari Ram disks |
| (which contain their device driver at the beginning of the file) or |
| for DOS emulator images (which may represent a partitioned device. |
| |
| Definition of defaults in the devices file should only be done if |
| these same devices are found on a large number of hosts of this type. |
| In that case, could you also let me know about your new definitions, so |
| that I can include them into the next release. For purely local file, I |
| recommend that you use the '/etc/mtools.conf' and '~/.mtoolsrc' |
| configuration files. |
| |
| However, the devices files also allows you to supply geometry setting |
| routines. These are necessary if you want to access high capacity |
| disks. |
| |
| Two routines should be supplied: |
| |
| 1. Reading the current parameters |
| static inline int get_parameters(int fd, struct generic_floppy_struct *floppy) |
| |
| This probes the current configured geometry, and return it in the |
| structure generic_floppy_struct (which must also be declared). Fd |
| is an open file descriptor for the device, and buf is an already |
| filled in stat structure, which may be useful. This routine should |
| return 1 if the probing fails, and 0 otherwise. |
| |
| 2. Setting new parameters |
| static inline int set_parameters(int fd, struct generic_floppy_struct *floppy) |
| struct stat *buf) |
| This configures the geometry contained in floppy on the file |
| descriptor fd. Buf is the result of a stat call (already filled |
| in). This should return 1 if the new geometry cannot be |
| configured, and 0 otherwise. |
| |
| A certain number of preprocessor macros should also be supplied: |
| |
| 'TRACKS(floppy)' |
| refers to the track field in the floppy structure |
| 'HEADS(floppy)' |
| refers to the heads field in the floppy structure |
| 'SECTORS(floppy)' |
| refers to the sectors per track field in the floppy structure |
| 'SECTORS_PER_DISK(floppy)' |
| refers to the sectors per disk field in the floppy structure (if |
| applicable, otherwise leave undefined) |
| |
| 'BLOCK_MAJOR' |
| major number of the floppy device, when viewed as a block device |
| |
| 'CHAR_MAJOR' |
| major number of the floppy device, when viewed as a character |
| device (a.k.a. "raw" device, used for fsck) (leave this undefined, |
| if your OS doesn't have raw devices) |
| |
| For the truly high capacity formats (XDF, 2m, etc), there is no clean |
| and documented interface yet. |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Command Index, Next: Variable Index, Prev: Porting mtools, Up: Top |
| |
| Command Index |
| ************* |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Variable Index, Next: Concept Index, Prev: Command Index, Up: Top |
| |
| Variable index |
| ************** |
| |
| [index] |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * cylinders: geometry description. (line 60) |
| * drive: general information. (line 6) |
| * exclusive: open flags. (line 6) |
| * fat_bits: miscellaneous variables. |
| (line 11) |
| * file: location information. (line 10) |
| * filter: miscellaneous flags. (line 78) |
| * heads: geometry description. (line 63) |
| * mformat_only: miscellaneous flags. (line 74) |
| * MTOOLSRC: Configuration. (line 18) |
| * MTOOLS_DOTTED_DIR: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_FAT_COMPATIBILITY: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_LOCK_TIMEOUT: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_LOWER_CASE: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_NAME_NUMERIC_TAIL: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_NO_VFAT: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK: global variables. (line 6) |
| * MTOOLS_TWENTY_FOUR_HOUR_CLOCK: global variables. (line 6) |
| * nodelay: open flags. (line 6) |
| * sectors: geometry description. (line 65) |
| * sync: open flags. (line 6) |
| * tracks: geometry description. (line 60) |
| * use_xdf: miscellaneous flags. (line 70) |
| |
| |
| File: mtools.info, Node: Concept Index, Prev: Variable Index, Up: Top |
| |
| Concept index |
| ************* |
| |
| [index] |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * 2m: 2m. (line 6) |
| * ALPHA patches: Location. (line 6) |
| * APlaceForYourStuff: mzip. (line 6) |
| * Archive bit: mattrib. (line 6) |
| * Atari: miscellaneous flags. (line 66) |
| * Atari Ram disk: location information. (line 28) |
| * Backwards compatibility: old style configuration. |
| (line 6) |
| * Bad blocks: mbadblocks. (line 6) |
| * bigger sectors: bigger sectors. (line 6) |
| * blocksize: miscellaneous variables. |
| (line 32) |
| * bugs: Location. (line 6) |
| * Case sensitivity: case sensitivity. (line 6) |
| * Changing file attributes: mattrib. (line 6) |
| * character devices: miscellaneous variables. |
| (line 32) |
| * Checking configuration file: mtoolstest. (line 6) |
| * Clusters of a file: mshowfat. (line 6) |
| * Command list: Commands. (line 6) |
| * Compile time configuration: Compiling mtools. (line 6) |
| * Compiled-in defaults: Porting mtools. (line 6) |
| * Concatenating MS-DOS files: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * Configuration file: default values. (line 6) |
| * Configuration file name: configuration file location. |
| (line 6) |
| * Configuration file name (parsing order): parsing order. (line 6) |
| * Configuration file parsing order: parsing order. (line 6) |
| * Configuration file syntax: general syntax. (line 6) |
| * Configuration file, old syntax: old style configuration. |
| (line 6) |
| * Configuration files: Configuration. (line 18) |
| * Configuration of disk geometry: geometry description. (line 6) |
| * Copying an entire disk image: mcat. (line 9) |
| * Copying MS-DOS files: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * CR/LF conversions: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * Creating a directory: mmd. (line 6) |
| * Current working directory: directory. (line 6) |
| * Current working directory (changing the): mcd. (line 6) |
| * Default configuration: default values. (line 6) |
| * Default directory: directory. (line 6) |
| * Default directory (changing the): mcd. (line 6) |
| * Default values: default values. (line 6) |
| * Deleting a directory: mrd. (line 6) |
| * deleting an MS-DOS directory recursively: mdeltree. (line 6) |
| * deleting MS-DOS files: mdel. (line 6) |
| * Description of disk geometry: geometry description. (line 6) |
| * diffs: Location. (line 6) |
| * Directory: directory. (line 6) |
| * Directory (changing): mcd. (line 6) |
| * Directory creation: mmd. (line 6) |
| * Directory listing: mdir. (line 6) |
| * Directory removing: mrd. (line 6) |
| * disable locking: miscellaneous flags. (line 11) |
| * Disk Geometry: geometry description. (line 6) |
| * Disk image: mcat. (line 9) |
| * Disk label: mlabel. (line 6) |
| * DMF disks: more sectors. (line 6) |
| * DOSEMU hard disk image: location information. (line 14) |
| * Drive configuration: per drive variables. (line 6) |
| * Drive configuration, example: general information. (line 6) |
| * Drive description: per drive variables. (line 6) |
| * Drive description, example: general information. (line 6) |
| * Drive independent configuration variables: global variables. (line 6) |
| * du: mdu. (line 6) |
| * Duplicate file names: name clashes. (line 6) |
| * Ejecting a Zip/Jaz disk: mzip. (line 6) |
| * Environmental variables: global variables. (line 6) |
| * Erasing a directory: mrd. (line 6) |
| * erasing an MS-DOS directory recursively: mdeltree. (line 6) |
| * erasing MS-DOS files: mdel. (line 6) |
| * exclusive access to a drive: open flags. (line 6) |
| * Executing commands before opening the device: miscellaneous variables. |
| (line 26) |
| * Fat: mshowfat. (line 6) |
| * fdformat: more sectors. (line 6) |
| * File name of device node: location information. (line 10) |
| * File system creation: mformat. (line 6) |
| * Filenames: arguments. (line 6) |
| * floppyd: floppyd. (line 6) |
| * Floppyd cat: mcat. (line 9) |
| * floppyd_installtest: floppyd_installtest. (line 6) |
| * Format of disk: geometry description. (line 6) |
| * Formats, high capacity: high capacity formats. |
| (line 6) |
| * Formatting disks: mformat. (line 6) |
| * FreeDOS: global variables. (line 6) |
| * getting parameters of a MS-DOS file system: minfo. (line 6) |
| * Global configuration variables: global variables. (line 6) |
| * Hdimage: location information. (line 6) |
| * Hidden files: mattrib. (line 6) |
| * High capacity formats: high capacity formats. |
| (line 6) |
| * High capacity formats, mounting: mmount. (line 6) |
| * High density disk: geometry description. (line 6) |
| * Image file: location information. (line 10) |
| * Initializing disks: mformat. (line 6) |
| * Jaz disk (utilities): mzip. (line 6) |
| * Jaz disks (partitioning them): mpartition. (line 6) |
| * Jaz disks (partitions): location information. (line 14) |
| * Jaz disks (raw SCSI access): miscellaneous flags. (line 17) |
| * Labeling a disk: mlabel. (line 6) |
| * Linux enhancements (High Capacity Formats): high capacity formats. |
| (line 6) |
| * Linux enhancements (mmount): mmount. (line 6) |
| * List of available commands: Commands. (line 6) |
| * Listing a directory: mdir. (line 6) |
| * Listing space occupied by directories and files: mdu. (line 6) |
| * Location of configuration files: configuration file location. |
| (line 6) |
| * Location of configuration files (parsing order): parsing order. |
| (line 6) |
| * locking (disabling it): miscellaneous flags. (line 11) |
| * Long file name: long names. (line 6) |
| * Low density disk: geometry description. (line 6) |
| * Magneto-optical disks: location information. (line 14) |
| * mailing list: Location. (line 6) |
| * Making a directory: mmd. (line 6) |
| * Marking blocks as bad: mbadblocks. (line 6) |
| * mattrib: mattrib. (line 6) |
| * mbadblocks: mbadblocks. (line 6) |
| * mcat: mcat. (line 9) |
| * mcd: mcd. (line 6) |
| * mcd (introduction): directory. (line 6) |
| * mclasserase: mclasserase. (line 6) |
| * mcopy: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * Mcwd file: mcd. (line 6) |
| * mdel: mdel. (line 6) |
| * mdeltree: mdeltree. (line 6) |
| * mdir: mdir. (line 6) |
| * mdu: mdu. (line 6) |
| * Memory Card: mclasserase. (line 6) |
| * mformat: mformat. (line 6) |
| * mformat (geometry used for): geometry description. (line 6) |
| * mformat parameters: minfo. (line 6) |
| * minfo: minfo. (line 6) |
| * mkmanifest: mkmanifest. (line 6) |
| * mlabel: mlabel. (line 6) |
| * mmd: mmd. (line 6) |
| * mmount: mmount. (line 6) |
| * mmove: mmove. (line 6) |
| * Mounting a disk: mmount. (line 6) |
| * Moving files (mmove): mmove. (line 6) |
| * Moving files (mren): mren. (line 6) |
| * mpartition: mpartition. (line 6) |
| * mrd: mrd. (line 6) |
| * mren: mren. (line 6) |
| * mshortname: mshortname. (line 6) |
| * mshowfat: mshowfat. (line 6) |
| * mtoolstest: mtoolstest. (line 6) |
| * mzip: mzip. (line 6) |
| * Name clashes: name clashes. (line 6) |
| * Name of configuration files: configuration file location. |
| (line 6) |
| * Name of configuration files (parsing order): parsing order. (line 6) |
| * Name of device node: location information. (line 10) |
| * Occupation of space by directories and files: mdu. (line 6) |
| * Odd formats: high capacity formats. |
| (line 6) |
| * Old configuration file syntax: old style configuration. |
| (line 6) |
| * open flags: open flags. (line 6) |
| * Options: arguments. (line 6) |
| * OS/2 (layout of removable media): location information. (line 14) |
| * OS/2 (XDF disks): XDF. (line 6) |
| * Overwriting files: name clashes. (line 6) |
| * packing list: mkmanifest. (line 6) |
| * Parsing order: parsing order. (line 6) |
| * Partitioned image file: location information. (line 14) |
| * partitions (creating): mpartition. (line 6) |
| * password protected Zip disks: mzip. (line 6) |
| * patches: Location. (line 6) |
| * Physically erase: mclasserase. (line 6) |
| * plain floppy: device xxx busy: miscellaneous flags. (line 11) |
| * Porting: Porting mtools. (line 6) |
| * Primary file name (long names): long names. (line 6) |
| * Primary file name (name clashes): name clashes. (line 6) |
| * Ram disk: location information. (line 28) |
| * raw device: miscellaneous variables. |
| (line 32) |
| * Read errors: mbadblocks. (line 6) |
| * Read-only files (changing the attribute): mattrib. (line 6) |
| * Read-only files (listing them): mdir. (line 6) |
| * Reading MS-DOS files: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * recursively removing an MS-DOS directory: mdeltree. (line 6) |
| * remote floppy access: floppyd. (line 6) |
| * remote floppy access <1>: floppyd_installtest. (line 6) |
| * Removable media: location information. (line 14) |
| * Removing a directory: mrd. (line 6) |
| * removing an MS-DOS directory recursively: mdeltree. (line 6) |
| * removing MS-DOS files: mdel. (line 6) |
| * Renaming files (mmove): mmove. (line 6) |
| * Renaming files (mren): mren. (line 6) |
| * SCSI devices: miscellaneous flags. (line 17) |
| * Secondary file name (long names): long names. (line 6) |
| * Secondary file name (name clashes): name clashes. (line 6) |
| * setgid installation: miscellaneous flags. (line 40) |
| * setuid installation: miscellaneous flags. (line 40) |
| * setuid installation (needed for raw SCSI I/O): miscellaneous flags. |
| (line 17) |
| * Solaris (compile time configuration of vold): Compiling mtools. |
| (line 6) |
| * Solaris (Raw access to SCSI devices such as Zip & Jaz): miscellaneous flags. |
| (line 17) |
| * Solaris (volcheck): miscellaneous variables. |
| (line 26) |
| * Solaris (vold): miscellaneous flags. (line 57) |
| * Space occupied by directories and files: mdu. (line 6) |
| * Special formats: high capacity formats. |
| (line 6) |
| * Subdirectory creation: mmd. (line 6) |
| * Subdirectory removing: mrd. (line 6) |
| * SunOS (Raw access to SCSI devices such as Zip & Jaz): miscellaneous flags. |
| (line 17) |
| * synchronous writing: open flags. (line 6) |
| * Syntax of the configuration file: general syntax. (line 6) |
| * Syquest disks: location information. (line 14) |
| * Syquest disks (raw SCSI access): miscellaneous flags. (line 17) |
| * System files: mattrib. (line 6) |
| * Testing configuration file for correctness: mtoolstest. (line 6) |
| * Text files: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * Tools disk (Zip and Jaz drives): mzip. (line 6) |
| * Verifying configuration file: mtoolstest. (line 6) |
| * VFAT-style file names: long names. (line 6) |
| * vgacopy: more sectors. (line 6) |
| * Vold (compile time configuration): Compiling mtools. (line 6) |
| * Vold (mediamgr): miscellaneous flags. (line 57) |
| * Weird formats: high capacity formats. |
| (line 6) |
| * Windows 95 (DMF disks): more sectors. (line 6) |
| * Windows 95-style file names: long names. (line 6) |
| * Windows NT (layout of removable media): location information. |
| (line 14) |
| * Wordswapped: miscellaneous flags. (line 66) |
| * Working directory: directory. (line 6) |
| * Working directory <1>: mcd. (line 6) |
| * Write protecting a Zip/Jaz disk: mzip. (line 6) |
| * Writing MS-DOS files: mcopy. (line 6) |
| * X terminal: floppyd. (line 6) |
| * X terminal <1>: floppyd_installtest. (line 6) |
| * XDF disks: XDF. (line 6) |
| * XDF disks (compile time configuration): Compiling mtools. (line 6) |
| * XDF disks (how to configure): miscellaneous flags. (line 70) |
| * Zip disk (utilities): mzip. (line 6) |
| * Zip disks (partitioning them): mpartition. (line 6) |
| * Zip disks (partitions): location information. (line 14) |
| * Zip disks (raw SCSI access): miscellaneous flags. (line 17) |
| * ZipTools disk: mzip. (line 6) |
| |
| |
| |
| Tag Table: |
| Node: Top872 |
| Node: Location3129 |
| Node: Common features4067 |
| Node: arguments4831 |
| Node: drive letters6492 |
| Node: directory7846 |
| Node: long names8292 |
| Node: name clashes10838 |
| Node: case sensitivity13122 |
| Node: high capacity formats14359 |
| Node: more sectors15404 |
| Node: bigger sectors16459 |
| Node: 2m17188 |
| Node: XDF18374 |
| Node: exit codes19717 |
| Node: bugs20355 |
| Node: Configuration20888 |
| Node: configuration file location22177 |
| Node: general syntax22630 |
| Node: default values23461 |
| Node: global variables23989 |
| Node: per drive variables26182 |
| Node: general information27017 |
| Node: location information27459 |
| Node: geometry description28988 |
| Node: open flags32849 |
| Node: miscellaneous variables33449 |
| Node: miscellaneous flags35525 |
| Node: multiple descriptions39155 |
| Node: parsing order40829 |
| Node: old style configuration41860 |
| Node: Commands42559 |
| Node: floppyd44481 |
| Node: floppyd_installtest49274 |
| Node: mattrib49905 |
| Node: mbadblocks51700 |
| Node: mcat52994 |
| Node: mcd53808 |
| Node: mclasserase54669 |
| Node: mcopy55345 |
| Node: mdel58363 |
| Node: mdeltree58702 |
| Node: mdir59121 |
| Node: mdu60397 |
| Node: mformat60903 |
| Node: mkmanifest69414 |
| Node: minfo71388 |
| Node: mlabel71958 |
| Node: mmd73111 |
| Node: mmount73460 |
| Node: mmove74063 |
| Node: mpartition74868 |
| Node: mrd80394 |
| Node: mren80752 |
| Node: mshortname81501 |
| Node: mshowfat81831 |
| Node: mtoolstest82240 |
| Node: mtype82812 |
| Node: mzip83663 |
| Ref: mzip-Footnote-185688 |
| Ref: mzip-Footnote-285769 |
| Node: Compiling mtools86056 |
| Node: Porting mtools87155 |
| Node: Command Index93063 |
| Node: Variable Index93191 |
| Node: Concept Index95014 |
| |
| End Tag Table |