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- Filename: BUFFERS.TXT
- Date: 1-Mar-87
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- A brief discussion of the DOS buffers command,
- of particular interest to BBS SysOps
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- Author: Mike Davidson
- Organization: Intermountain Softworks
- P. O. Box 2043
- Walla Walla, WA 99362
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- This document is placed in the PUBLIC DOMAIN. In that spirit,
- readers are encouraged to add substantive comments on the same
- subject. The suggested form is...
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- Name: Subject:
- Organization: Date:
- Comment:
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- BBS developers and "door" applications programmers are, of course,
- welcome to use any portion of this file within distributed
- documentation.
-
- Readers are further cordially invited to visit our own PCBoard system
- at 509/529-7229. Our maximum bit rate is 2400. We operate 24 hours
- on weekends, and between 1600h and 0600h weekdays, Pacific.
- Weekdays, the system is subject to availability after midnight.
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- BUFFERS.TXT - A brief discussion of disk buffers
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- Most operators of computer bulletin board systems are oriented
- toward the technical. This is fortunate, although we have not been
- able to determine if the trait is inherited or a learned necessity.
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- In the case of a CONFIG.SYS file which tells DOS to trust one's
- judgment in a few matters, rather than reverting to defaults, most of
- us have safely specified FILES to equal some number, asked that DOS
- install a RAMdisk, and have loaded the ANSI driver.
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- The BUFFERS command, however, may be an entirely different
- matter. To be sure, the DOS Reference Manual provides a couple of
- strong hints that a BUFFERS default of two may not be adequate, but
- hints are often not enough.
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- In our case, an even stronger hint came in a message from a
- Chicago SysOp. "What did you do to Tradewars? It sure is slow!" At
- the time, we were still running CPC14.1D of RBBS-PC, and the
- "doorware" application TRADEWARS was in the RBBS default directory,
- per the author's instructions. Indeed, that was the only place it
- could be. And that, in retrospect, was a worst-case scenario.
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- This particular subdirectory may have had some 300 files.
- TRADEWARS was near the bottom of the directory, and was disk-
- intensive, almost continuously reading from or writing to our hard
- disk. This is not to suggest that TW doesn't frequently access the
- disk even under optimum circumstances, but performance may be
- substantially improved, as we shall see.
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- Moreover, doorware author Bob Westcott reminds callers, in a
- message sent out over the modem, that return to RBBS may take "20 -
- 30 seconds." And it did. But Seagate proclaims that our drive's
- data transfer rate is on the order of five megabits per second!
- Conclusion: BUFFERS!
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- Common sense may suggest that the operating system simply reads
- information from a disk and passes it directly to an application.
- This is not the case. An interim holding area, called a disk buffer,
- gets it first. A disk buffer is a 512-byte block of memory that DOS
- uses to temporarily hold information it is reading from, or writing
- to, a disk.
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- BUFFERS.TXT - A brief discussion of disk buffers
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- If the buffered data will be used repeatedly, access time will
- be improved significantly if DOS does not have to reread the same
- data each time it is needed. Users are given the responsibility of
- telling DOS how many 512-byte disk buffers to allocate. This is done
- within CONFIG.SYS, and uses the syntax...
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- BUFFERS = nn
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- where nn is an integer between 1 and 99. Each buffer requested will
- increase the resident size of DOS by 528 bytes.
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- Some simple algorithm could doubtless be written to suggest the
- optimum number of buffers for a particular configuration. For a 20-
- megabyte hard disk, with the number of subdirectories that PCBoard
- requires, the magic number, we believe, is between 15 and 25. The
- ultimate authority may be a stopwatch. 15 will astound you if you've
- accepted the DOS default of 2; indeed, PCBoard subdirectory searches
- will appear almost instantaneous.
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- As to TRADEWARS, we had occasion to code a short program in
- assembler (CONDORxx.ARC, available on many PCBoard systems or from
- us) for use with PCBoard 11.7D/E. CONDOR thoroughly convinces
- doorware applications they are running under RBBS-PC. From the
- moment CONDOR writes the RBBS-PC messages file, load and
- initialization of TRADEWARS now requires less than five seconds. A
- miracle? Hardly. DOS can do almost anything if given half a chance.
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