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- Purpose:
-
- CACHE establishes disk caches. The default cache is for
- all PC, XT, and AT real (not virtual) drives other than the AT hard
- disk.
-
- Format: [d:][path]CACHE [[size] disk]
-
- Remarks: Specify the parameters:
-
- [d:][path] before CACHE to specify the drive and the path that
- contains the CACHE command file.
-
- [size] Size of the cache in 512 byte sectors. This number must be
- between 24 and 124, or it will be adjusted. The default is 64.
- The storage occupied by the cache is less than 256 bytes plus
- 518 bytes per sector.
-
- [disk] Disk to be cached, if a single disk cache is being allocated.
- The default is to cache all real disks, but there may be occasions
- where it is desirable to avoid cacheing a specific disk, or a
- cache larger than 62K bytes is desired.
-
- CACHE can be called more than once to create a larger cache or
- set individual disk caches for each disk. The caches are searched in
- reverse order of allocation. If you are allocating more than one cache
- allocate the most heavily used cache LAST. If you are allocating
- a general cache, it makes sense to allocate it FIRST in most cases,
- so it becoems a "cache of last resort". The overhead for skipping
- individual caches is small, but the overhead for a search failure is
- large.
-
- Only single sector reads and writes are cached. Therefore, loading
- large programs will not be affected. What will be affected are
- databases with records smaller than 512 bytes, batch files, and
- source files for language processors that scan the input file
- more than once. The disk file directory and file allocation tables
- are cached, and always resident once read from disk. Other files
- have their sectors purged if they are not frequenly accessed.
-
- When the cache is allocated, its segment location is listed out.
- The DOS DEBUG command can be used to read out data areas of interest,
- while the cache is running. The data areas start at offset 114h.
- They are each one word (two bytes) long:
-
- offset data
-
- 114 Cache size in sectors
- 116 Total Number of disk I/O's
- 118 Number of cache hits
- 11A Number of free slots in cache
-
- Remember that these numbers are hexadecimal and stored low order byte
- first, so the default size of 64 is stored as:
-
- 40 00
-
- To access this data, first write down the sector address typed
- out when CACHE initializes. Let's say it is 909. Type the following
- commands:
-
-
- DEBUG
- d 909:114
- (analyze the displayed data)
- q
-
- Typically, the about half of all disk I/O's will result in cache hits.
- All data in cache is backed up on disk immediately, so only disk reads
- are assisted by cache. The cache should be sized so that you will not
- reduce the number of free slots to zero, the first time you perform
- your most frequent operation. Size your cache by booting your
- computer, issuing the CACHE command for a 124 sector buffer,
- performing your "typical" batch file, compile or data base access,
- running DEBUG, determining how much CACHE remains free, and downsizing
- as required. If you can't allocate a single large cache that does the
- job, then create caches for heavily used disks.
-
- Place the CACHE commands first in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file because CACHE
- will make it run faster. Also notice that DIR commands will run
- without pausing, and the disk will stop running about halfway through
- the second time it is issued.
-
- From: Quick and Dirty Software, Inc.
- Origional logic by Steven Holzer of PC magazine (8/85)
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