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- MCP.DOC -- documentation for MCP.EXE
-
-
- WHAT IS THIS?
-
- MCP (Master Copy) is kind of like XCOPY, but it normally only overwrites older
- files and it can move files. It was written primarily for use in keeping
- directory structures shared by different people (or by the same person on
- different computers) in synchronization with each other. It is also a quick
- way to implement disk mirroring style backups.
-
-
- HOW DO I RUN MCP?
-
- Syntax:
- MCP.EXE source [destination] [switches]
- /A = copy only files with Archive bit set (leave source archive bit set)
- /D = copy files with date the same or later than Date given /D:mm-dd-yyyy
- /D:dd.mm.yyyy /Dmm/dd/yy or /Ddd.mm.yy
- /F = Force overwrite of system, hidden, and read only files
- /H = Copy system and hidden files as well.
- /L = Verbose output
- /M = copy only files with archive bit set (Modify source archive bit)
- /N = No overwrite
- /O = Overwrite destination files
- /P = Prompt before copy
- /Q = Quiet (report only errors)
- /R = Rename or move files
- /S = /E = recurse through Subdirectories (& create empty ones)
- /W = Wait for keystroke before starting copy
- /? = Show help screen.
-
- On the command line, source is a file name or directory name, which may
- optionally include drive and path. It may also include DOS wild cards ? and
- *. If the source is a directory, the file name *.* is assumed.
-
- The destination is a file name or directory. If no destination is specified,
- the current directory is assumed. If there are wild card characters in the
- destination file name, they will be filled in with the corresponding
- characters in the source file name. If it is not obvious if the destination
- is a file or directory, you may be asked which you meant. To ensure that the
- destination is interpreted as a directory instead of a file, end the directory
- name in "\" or ensure that the destination directory already exists. If the
- destination directory does not exist, it will be created.
-
- Switches all start with "/" (not "-", since - is a valid file name character
- in DOS), and may be before, between, and/or after the source and destination.
- Switches may be combined. In case of a conflict between switches, the one
- that is farthest to the right on the command line takes precedence. For
- brevity, command line switches may be run together after a single "/".
- Switches are not case sensitive.
-
- /A (Archive) and /M (Modify archive) both specify that only files that have
- the DOS directory archive bit set (indicating that they have been changed
- since they were last backed up) should be copied. /A does not alter the
- archive bit on the source file. /M clears the archive bit of the source file
- to indicate that it has been backed up. The archive bit of the destination
- file is always set when using MCP. These options can be used for backing up
- data when the largest file you want to back up will fit on your destination
- media. If the largest file you want to back up is bigger, a regular backup
- program is more appropriate than MCP. However, for some small but important
- files, backing up with a copy command like MCP makes more sense, because the
- file itself is not altered, making restoration possible even without the
- original backup program.
-
- For example,
- MCP /A C:\WORK\DOC\*.* A:
- copies all files in C:\WORK\DOC to the floppy disk in A: that have not been
- marked as backed up.
-
- /D (Date) is always followed by a date, with no space in between the /D and
- the date. The colon following the D is optional. The order of the date is
- month day year if you use "/" or "-" to separate the numbers in the date. If
- you use "." to separate the numbers in the date, the order is day month year.
- The year can be specified with either the last two digits or all four digits.
- If you specify the last two digits, the year is assumed to be in the range
- 1980 through 2079. The month must be expressed as a number between 1 and 12.
- Leading zeros on month and day are optional.
-
- For example, the following commands all copy everything with a file date on or
- after December 25, 1991 from the current directory to D:\SAVE\.
-
- MCP /D12/25/91 *.* D:\SAVE\
- MCP /D:12/25/91 *.* D:\SAVE\
- MCP *.* D:\SAVE\ /D12/25/1991
- MCP /D12-25-91 *.* D:\SAVE\
- MCP *.* /D12-25-1991 D:\SAVE\
- MCP /D25.12.91 *.* D:\SAVE\
- MCP /D:25.12.1991 *.* D:\SAVE\
-
- /F (Force) forces overwriting of Hidden, System, and Read Only files.
- WARNING: use this option with caution. It is very useful for some
- situations, but could have some undesired side effects if you overwrite some
- files of this type.
-
- /H (Hidden & system) allows files with the system and hidden attribute to be
- copied. Note that the XCOPY that comes with DOS 5 will not copy hidden files,
- but earlier versions will. The system and hidden attributes will be applied
- to the destination files when they are present in the source files. Note:
- copying the two hidden system files from a boot drive to another drive will
- not necessarily make the destination bootable. Use the DOS SYS command for
- that purpose.
-
- /L (Loud) causes extra screen output to be generated, including the names of
- all files that are skipped.
-
- /N (No overwrite) prevents any destination files from being overwritten,
- regardless of the file dates and attributes involved. The default is to allow
- overwrites of destination files with an earlier file date. This is the
- opposite of /O (Overwrite always).
-
- /O (Overwrite always) causes destination files to be overwritten regardless of
- its file date. The default is to allow overwrites only of destination files
- with an earlier file date. This is the opposite of /N (No overwrite).
-
- /P (Prompt) asks you if you want to copy each file with a Y/n prompt. "N" or
- "n" will cause the file to be skipped. Most other keys, including "Y" and "y"
- will cause the file to be copied. The "Enter" key need not be pressed after
- the "y" or "n".
-
- For example,
- MCP /P *.* A:
- lets you pick exactly which files you want to copy to drive A:, one by one.
-
- /Q (Quiet) suppresses all screen output except for error messages and the help
- screen in response to a command line error or /?.
-
- For example,
- MCP /Q /M C:\WORK\*.* F:\MASTER\FRED\
- in a network login script would be a subtle way to back up some critical
- directory on a users's hard disk to a network directory, where it could be
- moved to tape or something.
-
- /R (Rename or move) causes files to be renamed if the source and destination
- are on the same disk, or copied then the original deleted (after a successful
- copy) if the source and destination are on different disks. If the copy
- fails, the original is left intact. When used with the /S option, emptied
- subdirectories are not removed.
-
- For example,
- MCP C:\STUFF\*.DOC D:\OLDJUNK\ /R
- moves every .DOC file in C:\STUFF\ to D:\OLDJUNK\.
-
- /S or /E (Subdirectory copy) copies files and subdirectories from the
- destination to the source, making subdirectories as needed. Empty
- subdirectories are created as well. Using /S and/or /E on the command line of
- MCP is the same as using both /S and /E on the command line of XCOPY.
-
- /V does nothing.
-
- /W (Wait) causes the prompt "Press a key when ready to start copy . . ." to be
- displayed, and the program to pause until you hit a key before starting the
- copy process. This is for use with floppy only systems, where the MCP command
- may reside on a disk other than the one you want do do the copy on.
-
- /? (Help) shows the help screen.
-
-
- ZERO LENGTH FILES
-
- Unlike XCOPY, MCP copies zero length files and, if copying subdirectories,
- always copies empty subdirectories. It also duplicates the file attributes
- (system, hidden, read only) of the source file in the destination file, except
- for the archive bit, which is always set in the destination file.
-
-
- PROMPTS
-
- There are several prompts possible in MCP. At each of the prompts, the
- default answer (if applicable) is indicated with a capital letter. Answers to
- the prompts are not case sensitive, and are all only one keystroke. Pressing
- "Enter" after a letter is not required. The "Enter" key is ignored at all
- prompts except for the "Press a key when ready to start copy . . ." prompt
- caused by the /W option. In addition to the listed responses at any prompt,
- "Esc", "Ctrl-C", and "Ctrl-Break" will terminate MCP. "Ctrl-Break" will also
- terminate a copy in progress, even if the program is not looking for an answer
- to a question.
-
-
- filename Y/n?
-
- This is the format used in asking if you want to copy a particular file when
- you put /P on the command line. "N" means that you do not want to copy the
- file, and most other keys (including "Y") mean that you do want to copy the
- file.
-
-
- Only 512 bytes available on A:. filename requires 1234 bytes.
- Retry with new disk, Try new disk later, Skip, or Cancel (r/T/s/c)?
-
- If your destination is on a fixed disk, press "S" to skip just this file or
- "C" to cancel and exit MCP. If your destination is a removable disk, you may
- skip the current file or cancel as with a fixed disk destination. You may
- also wish to change disks and then press "R" to retry copying the current
- file, or press "T" to try copying the next file (which may fit) and add the
- current file to a list to be tried again later (on a different floppy disk).
- Most other keys act the same as "T".
-
-
- No more room on drive A:
- Retry with new disk, Skip or Cancel (R/s/c)?
-
- Your destination disk has no more room on it. Change the disk and press "R"
- to retry, or "C" to exit the MCP program.
-
-
- Error writing to filename.
- Retry, Skip, or Cancel (r/S/c)?
-
- MCP encountered one of many possible errors (insufficient network rights, bad
- disk sectors, hardware failures, disk full even though it had enough room to
- start the copy, etc.). "R" restarts the copy from the beginning of the file.
- "S" skips this file and tries the next. "C" cancels the copy and exits MCP.
-
-
- Does destination specify a File name
- or Directory on the target (f=File, D=Directory)?
-
- The destination directory is not an existing directory and the name does not
- end with "\", and there may be more than one source file (indicated by wild
- cards in the name or a /S or /E switch). Press "F" if you intended that the
- destination is a file name, or "D" if you intended that the destination is a
- directory. If you decide that the command line was in error, press "Esc".
-
-
- Press a key when ready to start copy . . .
-
- You used the /W option. Press "Esc", "Ctrl-C", or "Ctrl-Break" if you decide
- you really didn't want to copy anything after all, or press any other key to
- start the copy process.
-
-
- ERROR MESSAGES
-
- Break!
-
- You pressed Ctrl-Break, Ctrl-C, or Esc to halt the program.
-
-
- Unable to create filename
-
- The destination file name may have been on an invalid drive, have contained
- invalid characters, been in the root directory with all directory entries
- filled, been on a network directory with insufficient rights, been too long
- for DOS or the network operating system to create, or some other similar
- problem.
-
-
- Files may not be copied onto themselves.
-
- The first step in copying a file is to create a new file of zero length with
- name of the destination file. If the source and destination files are the
- same, this action would destroy the source file.
-
-
- Destination path is too long.
-
- The most likely cause of this error message is starting a recursive copy
- command (like MCP /S C:\*.* C:\SUBDIR\). This causes everything in the root
- directory of drive C: to be copied to C:\SUBDIR\ and C:\SUBDIR\SUBDIR\ and
- C:\SUBDIR\SUBDIR\SUBDIR\ and so on. Older versions of XCOPY allow this, the
- latest one does not. MCP allows the recursion to go on until the resulting
- path name exceeds DOS limits. This is a great way to fill up a hard disk in a
- hurry.
-
-
- Not enough memory to run MCP.EXE
-
- Try reducing the number of TSR programs, or if you are shelled out to DOS from
- another program, exit that other program.
-
-
- Access denied.
-
- DOS (or some network software) returned an error code indicating that the
- operation was not allowed. Some things that can do this is trying to create a
- directory when a file with the same name already exists or trying to write to
- a network directory where you have insufficient rights.
-
-
- Bad file number.
-
- Something strange is going on that confused DOS and/or MCP -- probably some
- error associated with a multitasking environment.
-
-
- Attempt to copy more than one file to file.
-
- MCP does not concatenate files (use DOS COPY to do that), so copying more than
- one file to a single file means that all that ends up in the destination file
- is the last file copied. If this were done with the /R option, all but the
- last file would be destroyed. Therefore, only one file is allowed to be
- copied to a file. The trap that catches this is not foolproof (although it is
- reasonably difficult to fool), so you should still take care on the command
- line to avoid specifying such an action.
-
-
- Unable to open filename
-
- The specified file name may not be valid, or may be on a network directory
- where you have insufficient rights.
-
-
- Ran out of memory keeping track of files to retry.
-
- Each file name source and destination that is "remembered" to try later when
- you run out of room copying to a diskette takes up some conventional RAM.
- After several thousand of these (more or less, depending on how much RAM you
- have available), you may run out.
-
-
- ERRORLEVEL
-
- When running MCP in a batch file, you can test for the following values of
- ERRORLEVEL after MCP runs:
-
- 0 = Normal completion.
- 2 = "Ctrl-Break", "Ctrl-C", or "Esc" pressed, or copy canceled with "C".
- 3 = Unable to write to destination file.
- 4 = Attempted to copy file onto itself.
- 5 = Destination path is too long.
- 6 = Not enough memory to run.
- 7 = Access denied.
- 8 = Bad file number error returned by DOS.
- 9 = Attempt to copy more than one file to one destination file.
- 11 = Command line error or help requested.
- 12 = Unable to open input file.
- 13 = Ran out of memory keeping track of files to retry.
-
-
- A COPY PROGRAM BY ANY OTHER NAME
-
- MCP comes from M as in Master or Mike's and CP as in the name for the Unix
- copy command. Call it whatever you like, by renaming it, creating an alias
- with DOSKEY or a similar utility, or by creating a batch file. You might want
- to create a batch bile called MOVE.BAT (or MV.BAT) that contains the line:
-
- MCP /R %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
-
-
- LIMITATIONS
-
- MCP does not do concatenation. It does not get the date format from the DOS
- country table. It does not do Japanese dates in year-month-day format. All
- of its error messages are in English. It does not do a full screen interface.
- It doesn't skip zero length files just because they are zero length. It
- doesn't skip creation of empty subdirectories when /S is used. /V does
- absolutely nothing. It doesn't remove any subdirectories. It doesn't predict
- winning lottery numbers. On the other hand, it does do some things that I
- always thought that XCOPY should have done.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE & DISCLAIMER
-
- Master Copy version 1.00 of 5 September 1992
-
- Copyright (C) 1992 Michael Paul Johnson. All rights reserved. No warranty.
- Shareware: to register, please send $15.00 (or $25.00 if you also want
- original disks) to:
-
- Mike Johnson
- PO BOX 1151
- LONGMONT CO 80502-1151
- USA
-
- Registration entitles you to support on the Rainbow Missions BBS
- (303-938-9654) and by mail, and to notification of major upgrades at discount
- rates.
-
- Although I try to write perfect software, there is a chance that I goofed up
- in some way. If you find this to be the case, please let me know so that I
- can repair it. Because I can't test every possible use of this software on
- every system that it might be run on, and because I have no control over the
- way shareware gets passed around, you use this software entirely at your own
- risk. Prices are subject to change without notice.
-