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On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 01:20:38 -0400, "Leland C. Scott"
wrote: I didn't use any OS calls at all. The only BIOS functions I used were direct calls to read/write absolute disk sectors. Everything else I had to write from scratch. As simple as the DOS file system was there was still a lot to handle. What made thing more interesting was all I had to work with was a Windows 98 machine. That made thing more complicated because Windows always wanted to create long file names which messed things up a bit when you format a disk. I had to put extra routines in to the code to filter that crap out so when the disk was defragmented I had wiped all the Windows file system extensions out, thus generating a valid DOS disk. Windows 98 runs on a DOS kernel, so all windows 98 systems run on a "valid" DOS disk. Edit your msdos.sys and turn your GUI off. Or just make yourself a boot disk and format the drive. |
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