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- Rainer Gerhards Baesweiler, MONTHNAME DAY, t="%'", 19YEAR, t="%d"
- Petronellastr. 6
- D-5112 Baesweiler
- West Germany
- Phone (49) 2401-1601
-
-
-
-
- The C Users Journal
- Mr. Robert Ward
- 2120 W. 25th St. Ste. B
- Lawrence, KS 66046
- U S A
-
-
-
- Dear Mr. Ward,
-
- CUG Cpio Installation Kit
-
- I'm writing to announce the enhancement of parts of the CUG cpio
- installation kit. I've brought some new features to the cpio
- archive processing program as well as written two new MS-DOS
- driver programs.
-
- First of all, my version of cpio now supports two additional
- options, allowing even more system-independent archives. The
- usage information has also been improved. The new options are "p"
- and "d".
-
- Option p ignores pathnames stored in the archive file. So
- whatever pathname was used during creation of the archive is
- ignored on output. However, the pathname is displayed in brackets
- for convenience. The p option is currently ignored on input.
-
- Option d reflects a change in the internal program philosophy: Up
- to now, cugcpio extracted files under all circumstances. If a
- file with the same name existed, it was overwritten silently.
- Cugcpio now first checks to see if the file exists. If yes, the
- user is queried whether or not to overwrite the old one. To
- select the former behavior, option d has been added. If d is
- specified on the command line, existing files are silently
- overwritten. I'd recommend using this option only for extracting
- a new version of a program over an old one. Not specifying the
- option is much more secure.
-
- There are also two new low-level drivers for MS-DOS included.
- They are companions to my high-level sector read and write
- utilities. These new drivers fix all (at least I hope) problems
- we had with the old int 0x25/0x26 ones. The new drivers don't use
- MS-DOS but the BIOS to do their work. They are strictly
- restricted to the IBM 360KB (2 sides, 40 track, 9 sectors, 512
- bytes) format, because they map an relative sector number to its
- absolute address.
-
- No special tricks (like reading in some information from another
- disk) are necessary to operate the sector read/write utilities
- using the new drivers. I found them working correctly where the
- old ones failed.
-
- Although the new drivers completely replace the old ones, you
- should retain them for people with generic MS-DOS machines (like
- the early Wang PCs). They old drivers work mostly correct on
- them, while the new ones totally fail (those machines don't have
- an IBM compatible BIOS).
-
- And one last word to the driver theme: Mr. Scott Henion's letter
- in the November issue gave me an inspiration. I had to realize
- that our system-independent file transfer system has one serious
- problem. Most operating systems allow to access disks directly.
- But most of them require some control structures on disk to do
- so. So what's our fine system worth? As long as you don't find a
- person able (and willing) to build an actual device driver for
- the target environment... nothing! And I think we've seen that it
- is hard to find these persons. However, I hope there'll be
- someone out there able and willing to produce sector read/write
- routines using native OS calls. But, after all, we aren't able to
- use their potential because we've to build extremely complex
- device drivers.
-
- This way the cpio system wont be a success. Unfortunately the
- last few month confirm that. There are only drivers for systems
- available that could read your disks ever before. I guess not
- even a single percent of your orders is shipped in cpio, while 90
- percent are shipped in MS-DOS format. Most members don't accept
- the new format because they don't see a direct advantage in using
- it. For MS-DOS people the easiest way is to use their native
- format. Most other machines require less effort to read MS-DOS
- disks than cpio ones. Maybe the files are transferred via
- asynchronous communication. All because there's no low-level read
- sector driver for them available.
-
- In order to become a success, most people have to see advantages
- in using the cpio file transfer system. In order to allow this,
- we've to have much more sector load utilities for different
- environments. In order to get them we've to find people able and
- willing to write them. And in order to find them, we've to make
- the task of creating such an driver easier.
-
- As far as I've thought about it, the actual problem is how to
- enable the usage of the OS's native read/write sector calls. I
- imagine this can be achieved by writing some of the OS's basic
- disk information tables to the cpio exchange disk. I don't think
- that's a Herculean work for you. You stated you're able to
- physically write and read every format. Given a master disk of
- each OS, you could read the very first sectors usually containing
- the OS disk bookkeeping information. Written this sectors to the
- beginning of the exchange disk, you can satisfy the OS's need for
- that information. However, there's no need for being correct
- (except for the disk type). The archive still starts as a single
- dump file immediately after the control information. The disk
- will never be read using target OS file system calls.
-
- I think this approach is worth to be discussed, although I know
- there are many problems to arise. I also think this approach
- might introduce a large overhead to your disk distribution.
- Nonetheless, there may be some solutions in between. And I
- definitely think that the task of building an system independent
- file transfer utility is of huge worth for the whole computer
- Industrie, not only the C Users' Group. And as such I think we
- should extend our activities to build that system.
-
- Enough about that. I've one final request: could you please pass
- me one copy of your official cpio installation kit. This enables
- me to base my further work in that area on your official system.
- As far as I've read, you've build some other loader utility. I
- guess I can save you some time if I adapt my low-level drivers to
- your high-level program. And I sure want to extend the number of
- low-level drivers as soon as I've the necessary opportunities.
-
-
-
-
- With that promise, sincerely yours
-
-
-
- R. Gerhards
-