Hi there, posted last week about a DOS I found on one of my old disks - VDOS, by Vincent Tan. I have found no references to it on the 'net, in the FAQs, etc. The version of VDOS I have is v1.6, written in 1984. I did some snooping with Byte Zap, and found a list of commands: VDOS LOAD SAVE RUN / DELETE LOCK UNLOCK CLOSE READ EXEC WRITE POSITION OPEN APPEND RENAME CATALOG MON NOMON PR# IN# MAXFILES AL UNDELETE FP INT BSAVE BLOAD BRUN VERIFY TDUMP I've discovered that VDOS, which drops to monitor, is just the prefix for two other commands - VDOSI (VDOS' initialisation routines) and VDOSC (VDOS' copy routines). / is a shorthand version of CATALOG. AL just gives binary address and length numbers (last load/save?). TDUMP does a text dump - but with the minimal playing I've done with it so far, have only gotten it to dump 1 character! I haven't tried the UNDELETE function yet - VERIFY I've only tried on files I know to be good, and it's not come up with a message. I know there's a corrupt file on the original disk I got VDOS from, but that file prevented me from making a disk image for me to play with, and I haven't had the //e set up since. The VDOSI initialising routines load VDOS into memory and then dump them onto a new disk with an optional disk format. VDOSC allows you to specify source and target slot/disk, and start and end sectors. I sent Willi Kusche (on request) a disk image with VDOS on it, and his initial observations were: > It seems that the sectors that make up VDOS are stored > in the boot area in a different order than DOS 3.3. I've > managed to get some of the blocks lined up enough to compare > part of VDOS with DOS 3.3 and am able to see that VDOS is > a substantial re-write of DOS 3.3. If anyone else would like a copy to play with, let me know. Regards Sean ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Sean McNamara mailto:sean@macassist.com.au MacAssist Ph: (02) 8920 0866 Authorised Apple Solutions Reseller Fax: (02) 8920 0877 ABN 95 758 412 281 Mobile: 0414 270 132