This manual is for Mtools (version 4.0.45, September 2024), which is a collection of tools to allow Unix systems to manipulate MS-DOS files.
Copyright © 2007, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright © 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”.
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This is mtools’ documentation.
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.
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Mtools can be found at the following places (and their mirrors):
http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/mtools/mtools-4.0.45.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/
Next: How to configure mtools for your environment, Previous: Where to get mtools, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
Next: Drive letters, Previous: Common features of all mtools commands, Up: Common features of all mtools commands [Contents][Index]
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. See Name clashes, for more details on these.
All commands accept the -i
flag which allows to specify an
image file (See Drive letters).
All commands accept the -V
flag 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. See Command list, for a
description of the options which are specific to each command.
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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 (see How to configure mtools for your environment).
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.
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Certain commands, such as mformat
, allow you to specify a hard
disk size.
The size is a number, followed by an optional unit suffix.
The number is interpreted as a hexadecimal number if it starts with
0x
, as an octal number if it starts with the digit 0
, or
as a decimal number if it starts with any other digit.
The following units are supported:
S
sectors (of 512 bytes)
K
Kilobytes
M
Megabytes
G
Gigabytes
T
Terabytes
If no unit is specified, the default depends on context. Mformat’s
T
option, and mpartition’s l
option assume sectors,
whereas all other places (mshowfat’s o
option, offset
drive config option and data_map
drive config option) assume
bytes.
Next: VFAT-style long file names, Previous: Sizes and offsets, Up: Common features of all mtools commands [Contents][Index]
The mcd
command (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.
Next: Name clashes, Previous: Current working directory, Up: Common features of all mtools commands [Contents][Index]
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:
;+=[]',\"*\\<>/?:|
.
~
n number is generated,
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:
-
n number is generated,
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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.
Next: high capacity formats, Previous: Name clashes, Up: Common features of all mtools commands [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Exit codes, Previous: Case sensitivity of the VFAT file system, Up: Common features of all mtools commands [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Bigger sectors, Previous: high capacity formats, Up: high capacity formats [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: 2m, Previous: More sectors, Up: high capacity formats [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: XDF, Previous: Bigger sectors, Up: high capacity formats [Contents][Index]
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.
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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. See Architecture specific compilation flags, and General Purpose Drive 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.
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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 (see Global variables)
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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, Global variables) to bypass the fat checking.
Next: Command list, Previous: Common features of all mtools commands, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
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:
Next: General configuration file syntax, Previous: How to configure mtools for your environment, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
/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.
Next: Default values, Previous: Location of the configuration files, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
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).
Next: Global variables, Previous: General configuration file syntax, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Per drive flags and variables, Previous: Default values, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Location of configuration files and parsing order, Previous: Global variables, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
Next: Location information, Previous: Per drive flags and variables, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
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
Next: Disk Geometry Configuration, Previous: General information, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Open Flags, Previous: Location information, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
Geometry information describes the physical characteristics about the disk. Its has three purposes:
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. See Mformat, for details.
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. See Supplying multiple descriptions for a drive, 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.
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
Next: General Purpose Drive Variables, Previous: Disk Geometry Configuration, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: General Purpose Drive Flags, Previous: Open Flags, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
The following general purpose drive variables are available. Depending to their type, these variables can be set to a string (precmd, postcmd) 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
data_map
Remaps data from image file. This is useful for image files which
might need additional zero-filled sectors to be inserted. Such is the
case for instance for IBM 3174 floppy images. These images represent
floppy disks with fewer sectors on their first cylinder. These missing
sectors are not stored in the image, but are still counted in the
filesystem layout. The data_map allows to fake these missing sectors
for the upper layers of mtools. A data_map is a comma-separated
sequence of source type and size. Source type may be zero
for
zero-filled sectors created by map, skip
for data in raw image
to be ignored (skipped), and nothing for data to be used as is
(copied) from the raw image. Datamap is automatically complemented by
an implicit last element of data to be used as is from current offset
to end of file. Each size is a number followed by a unit: s
for
a 512 byte sector, K
for Kbytes, M
for megabytes,
G
for gigabytes, and nothing for single bytes.
Example:
data_map=1s,zero31s,28s,skip1s
would be a map for use with IBM
3174 floppy images. First sector (1s
, boot sector) is used as
is. Then follow 31 fake zero-filled sectors (zero31s
), then the
next 28 sectors from image (28s
) are used as is (they contain
FAT and root directory), then one sector from image is skipped
(skip1s
), and finally the rest of image is used as is
(implicit)
precmd
¶Executes the given command before opening the device.
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.
postcmd
¶Executes the given command after closing the device. May be useful if mtools shares the image file with some other application, in order to release the image file to that application.
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.
Next: Supplying multiple descriptions for a drive, Previous: General Purpose Drive Variables, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
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. See 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 (see Floppyd).
Previous: General Purpose Drive Flags, Up: Per drive flags and variables [Contents][Index]
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:
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.
Next: Backwards compatibility with old configuration file syntax, Previous: Per drive flags and variables, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
The configuration files are parsed in the following order:
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.
Previous: Location of configuration files and parsing order, Up: How to configure mtools for your environment [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Architecture specific compilation flags, Previous: How to configure mtools for your environment, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
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, Options and filenames for a description of those.
Next: Floppyd_installtest, Previous: Command list, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
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.
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.
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)
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
Next: Mattrib, Previous: Floppyd, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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]
Next: Mbadblocks, Previous: Floppyd_installtest, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
Mattrib
is used to change MS-DOS file attribute bits. It has the
following syntax:
mattrib
[-a|+a
] [-h|+h
] [-r|+r
]
[-s|+s
] [-/
] [-p
] [-X
] msdosfile [ msdosfiles … ]
Mattrib
adds attribute bits to an MS-DOS file (with the
‘+
’ operator) or remove attribute bits (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.
Next: Mcat, Previous: Mattrib, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
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.
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.
Next: Mcd, Previous: Mbadblocks, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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!
Next: Mcopy, Previous: Mcat, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mdel, Previous: Mcd, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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 targetfilemcopy
[-bspanvmQT
] [-D
clash_option] sourcefile [ sourcefiles… ] targetdirectorymcopy
[-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 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.
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
Next: Mdeltree, Previous: Mcopy, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mdir, Previous: Mdel, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mdu, Previous: Mdeltree, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mformat, Previous: Mdir, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mkmanifest, Previous: Mdu, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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:
160K, single-sided, 8 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 1/4 DD)
160K, single-sided, 9 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 1/4 DD)
320K, double-sided, 8 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 1/4 DD)
360K, double-sided, 9 sectors per track, 40 cylinders (for 5 1/4 DD)
720K, double-sided, 9 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 3 1/2 DD)
1200K, double-sided, 15 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 5 1/4 HD)
1440K, double-sided, 18 sectors per track, 80 cylinders (for 3 1/2 HD)
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. See 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.
b
Use a non-standard bios disk number for this disk. By default, bios disk number is inferred from media descriptor: 0x80 for media descriptor 0xf8, or 0x00 otherwise.
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.
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.
Next: Minfo, Previous: Mformat, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
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.
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.
Next: Mlabel, Previous: Mkmanifest, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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
Next: Mmd, Previous: Minfo, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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
Next: Mmount, Previous: Mlabel, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mmove, Previous: Mmd, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mpartition, Previous: Mmount, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
The mmove
command is used to move or rename an existing MS-DOS
file or subdirectory.
mmove
[-v
] [-D
clash_option] sourcefile targetfilemmove
[-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.
Next: Mrd, Previous: Mmove, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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
drivempartition
-r
drivempartition
-I
[-B
bootSector] drivempartition
-a
drivempartition
-d
drivempartition
-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.
Mpartition proceeds as follows to pick a type for the partition:
Win95 FAT32, LBA
”)
DOS FAT12, CHS
”) for FAT12
partition and 0x04 (“DOS FAT16, CHS
”) for FAT16 partitions
DOS BIG FAT16 CHS
”) if partition fits entirely within the first 1024 cylinders (CHS mode)
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:
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.
Next: Mren, Previous: Mpartition, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mshortname, Previous: Mrd, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mshowfat, Previous: Mren, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mtoolstest, Previous: Mshortname, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mtype, Previous: Mshowfat, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Next: Mzip, Previous: Mtoolstest, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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.
Previous: Mtype, Up: Command list [Contents][Index]
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 disk2. 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.
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).
Next: Porting mtools to architectures which are not supported yet, Previous: Command list, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
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. See 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.
Next: Command Index, Previous: Architecture specific compilation flags, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
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.
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:
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.
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.
Next: Variable index, Previous: Porting mtools to architectures which are not supported yet, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
Next: Concept index, Previous: Command Index, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
Jump to: | C D E F H M N S T U |
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Jump to: | C D E F H M N S T U |
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Previous: Variable index, Up: Mtools doc [Contents][Index]
Jump to: | 2
A B C D E F G H I J L M N O P R S T V W X Z |
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Jump to: | 2
A B C D E F G H I J L M N O P R S T V W X Z |
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To see the articles, search for
APlaceForYourStuff
using Google Groups
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