Super Virtual Disk (SVDisk) v. 1.18 (18/1/1996) |
Readme/What's new |
Making Hard Copy of the Document
================================
The documentation (SVDISK.DOC) in the package has been typeset with a 57-
line page so it will print nicely on most printers.
In order to print the documentation, you can type the following on the
command line:
copy svdisk.doc prn
OR
type svdisk.doc > prn
Transfer of registration information for Licensed versions of SVDisk
====================================================================
Starting with version 1.10, SVDisk includes REREGSVD.EXE for re-
registering SVDisk shareware downloads. Once the registration
information is transferred, the shareware release will be converted
into the full licensed release. For users upgrading from version
1.01, you will need to enter your name when REREGSVD establishs the
registration information. You can do this automatically by running
INSTALL.CMD and select item 1 from the main menu.
To manually re-register SVDisk, run INSTALL.CMD and select item 4 from
the main menu or follow the steps below:
1. Make a directory called \TMP.
2. Unpack all the files from the shareware download of SVDisk.
3. Run REREGSVD from an OS/2 command prompt.
4. Enter the path to your registered copy of SVDisk.
5. If you're version 1.01 user, you'll need to enter your name at this
point.
6. REREGSVD will proceed to transfer your registration information.
Super Virtual Disk
Swappable/Lockable/Removable Virtual Disk
for OS/2
SVDISK
Version 1.18
01/18/96
TABLE OF CONTENTS
_________________________________________________________________
1.0. INTRODUCTION TO Super Virtual Disk ..................3
1.1. What is Super Virtual Disk? ....................3
1.2. Features of SVDisk .............................3
2.0. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS .................................4
3.0. COPYRIGHT NOTICE ....................................4
4.0. WARRANTY ............................................4
5.0. COST OF Super Virtual Disk ..........................4
6.0. CONTENTS OF THIS PACKAGE ............................5
7.0. INSTALLATION ........................................6
7.1. Quick start ....................................6
7.1.1 Manual installation ......................6
7.1.2 Drive letter arrangement with CD-ROM
drive ..........................................7
7.2. SVDisk.sys parameters ..........................7
8.0. CONTROLLING Super Virtual Disk ......................9
8.1. Super Virtual Disk Control help screen .........9
8.2. Options for SVDC ...............................10
8.3. PM Super Virtual Disk Control ..................12
8.4. Using XDF VFloppy for XDF image files ..........12
8.5. Formatting SVDisk as HPFS ......................13
8.4.1 HPFS Diskettes ...........................15
8.4.2 HPFS386 on IBM LAN Server Advanced
Edition ........................................17
8.6. Diskette boot bypass using VFloppy .............17
9.0. PROGRAMMING INFORMATION .............................18
10.0. EXAMPLES ...........................................19
10.1. Example 1: Locking non-swappable memory and
querying status .....................................19
10.2. Example 2: Ejecting virtual media .............19
10.3. Example 3: Reconfiguring VFloppy device .......20
10.4. Example 4: Inserting virtual media ............20
10.5. Example 5: Multiple operations ................20
11.0. ERROR MESSAGES .....................................21
11.1. List of error messages ........................21
12.0. BACKGROUND INFORMATION .............................21
13.0. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ....................................21
2
1.0. INTRODUCTION TO Super Virtual Disk
_________________________________________________________________
1.1. What is Super Virtual Disk?
Super Virtual Disk (SVDisk) is a 32-bit OS/2 device driver that
emulates either a removable Virtual Disk (VDisk) or a removable
Virtual Floppy (VFloppy) drive. By using OS/2's virtual memory
management facility, SVDisk allows the entire contents of the
disk to be swapped out via the paging mechanism. If the SVDisk
is frequently accessed, OS/2 will keep the most recently used
memory pages in RAM, and SVDisk will essentially behave like a
RAM Disk.
1.2. Features of SVDisk
- Emulates multiple VDisk devices up to 16MB each even on a 4MB
system. Cluster size is maintained at 512 bytes by varying
the size of the File Allocation Table (FAT) to reduce file
slack.
- Emulates multiple VFloppy devices, ranging from 360KB to
2.88MB. Virtual media support ranges from 160KB to 1.2MB for
5.25" VFloppy device, and from 720K to 2.88MB for 3.5" VFloppy
device. If the VFloppy is a 3.5" device, automatic media
sensing is supported.
- eXtended Density Format (XDF) support for OS/2 Warp V3 XDF
diskette image files. This includes 1.52MB, 1.84MB and 3.68MB
XDF diskettes. Utility is included to transfer XDF image file
to and from XDF VFloppy.
- Removable media support. This allows SVDisk to release all
memory used by the device back to the system.
- Dynamic device reconfiguration is supported for the VFloppy
device. A VFloppy device can be reconfigured (without
rebooting) to any other VFloppy drive or XDF drive.
- HPFS formatting program for SVDisk. Mounting and unmounting
of HPFS onto SVDisks are supported. HPFS diskette support
(diskette imaging program such as Disk eXPress is required.)
- Special boot sector on VFloppy device to allow bypassing of
floppy boot if the image of the VFloppy is transferred to a
real diskette using DISKCOPY.
- Formatting and sector/track read/write are supported.
- SVDisk allows locking of swappable memory into non-swappable
memory. Once memory is locked, SVDisk will behave like a RAM
drive without paging delay. The size of the lock can be
specified by the user, since locking the entire disk as non-
swappable can have serious performance impact to OS/2's
virtual memory operation.
- A 32-bit command line utility and a 32-bit PM application are
included to provide complete control of all the capabilities
of SVDisk.
3
2.0. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
_________________________________________________________________
Machines equipped with an Intel 386SX compatible or higher
processor. OS/2 2.1 or higher, with minimum 4MB of memory.
3.0. COPYRIGHT NOTICE
_________________________________________________________________
SVDisk (Super Virtual Disk) Version 1.18 01/18/95
(C) Copyright 1994-96 by Albert J. Shan. All Rights Reserved.
No part of this program may be disassembled, modified or altered
by any means.
4.0. WARRANTY
_________________________________________________________________
I, Albert J. Shan, make no warranties, expressed or implied,
including, but not limited to, merchantability or fitness for any
particular purpose. In no event shall Albert J. Shan be liable
for indirect or consequential damages arising from the use of the
software program.
You are free to redistribute this shareware package in its
entirety. No part of this package may be included as part of a
commercial package. If you have any questions about commercial
distribution of Super Virtual Disk, I can be contacted via:
CompuServe, ID 70730,401
or Internet, 70730.401@compuserve.com
5.0. COST OF Super Virtual Disk
_________________________________________________________________
The user is granted a 30 days trial period, after which he or she
is required to register or discontinue the use of the product.
The cost of a single machine license is $30 U.S. Please refer to
the file ORDER.FRM for details.
4
6.0. CONTENTS OF THIS PACKAGE
_________________________________________________________________
The following files are included in this package:
INSTALL.CMD - Installation command file
SVDISK.SYS - Super Virtual Disk device driver
SVDC.EXE - Super Virtual Disk Control
PMSVDC.EXE - PM version of SVDC
HFORMAT.EXE - SVDisk HPFS formatting utility
HMOUNT.EXE - HPFS mounting/unmounting utility for SVDisk
REREGSVD.EXE - SVDisk re-registration program
XDFSVD.EXE - XDF Copier for SVDisk
KWIKTOOL.MSG - English error message file, common to all
EXE files.
SVDISK.MSG - English message file for SVDISK.SYS and
SVDC.EXE
PMSVDC.MSG - English message file for PMSVDC.EXE
HFORMAT.MSG - English message file for HFORMAT.EXE
HMOUNT.MSG - English message file for HMOUNT.EXE
XDFSVD.MSG - English message file for XDFSVD.EXE
KWIKTOOL.GER - German error message file, common to all
EXE files.
SVDISK.GER - German message file for SVDISK.SYS and
SVDC.EXE
PMSVDC.GER - German message file for PMSVDC.EXE
HFORMAT.GER - German message file for HFORMAT.EXE
HMOUNT.GER - German message file for HMOUNT.EXE
XDFSVD.GER - German message file for XDFSVD.EXE
SVDISK.DOC - This documentation
SVDISK.HST - History of SVDisk
LICENSE.DOC - License agreement for registered users
WARRANTY.DOC - Warranty information for registered users
ORDER.FRM - Order form
README - Last minute information
5
7.0. INSTALLATION
_________________________________________________________________
7.1. Quick start
For automatic installation, please run INSTALL.CMD from an OS/2
command prompt.
7.1.1 Manual installation
To manually install SVDisk, make a subdirectory called SVDISK,
and copy all the SVDisk files into \SVDISK. Then edit your OS/2
CONFIG.SYS to include a line:
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS
Where D: is the drive where you created the SVDISK subdirectory.
Add SVDISK to the path and dpath by appending D:\SVDISK at the
end of the PATH= and DPATH= statement in CONFIG.SYS.
English language message files are used by default. To use the
German language message files, rename all *.MSG files to *.ENG,
and rename all *.GER files to *.MSG.
When you load SVDisk without any parameter as in the above
example, it will create a 1.44MB VFloppy device after you reboot
the system.
When SVDisk is loaded, it does not put a media in the virtual
drive. You have to manually insert it with SVDC or PMSVDC. To
insert a virtual media after the system is booted, you type:
SVDC X: /i:720
Where X: is the drive letter of the SVDisk after boot.
This will insert a 720KB virtual media into the drive. If you
specify /i without any parameter, SVDC will insert a media with
the maximum capacity as defined by the SVDisk.sys device in
CONFIG.SYS. To make media insertion automatic, simply edit
STARTUP.CMD on your OS/2 boot drive and add the SVDC line to it.
Alternatively, you can insert the virtual media by using the
CALL= statement in CONFIG.SYS:
CALL=D:\SVDISK\SVDC.EXE X: /i:720
If you want to install a 8MB VDisk type device, edit your
CONFIG.SYS by adding a line:
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK 8192 512
6
This will create a 8MB VDisk device with 512 root directory
entries after you reboot the system.
7.1.2 Drive letter arrangement with CD-ROM drive
Starting with OS/2 2.1, a DASD (Direct Access Storage Device)
Manager Driver (DMD) can be loaded as a device driver. This is
the case for the CD-ROM device driver (OS2CDROM.DMD.) This
arrangement allows another disk device driver to be positioned
before or after the CD-ROM drive. To load a SVDisk with drive
letter preceeding the CD-ROM drive, locate the DEVICE= statement
containing OS2CDROM.DMD, and insert the SVDISK.SYS DEVICE=
statement before it. To load a SVDisk after the CD-ROM, add the
SVDISK.SYS DEVICE= statement after OS2CDROM.DMD.
7.2. SVDisk.sys parameters
SVDisk.sys can be loaded with no parameter to up to two
parameters. To load SVDisk as a VFloppy device, you must specify
the size of the VFloppy device in KB. For example:
REM *** Load a 1.44MB VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 1440
REM *** Load a 2.88MB VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 2880
REM *** Load a 360KB VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 360
REM *** Load a 1.84MB XDF VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 1840
The possible values for VFloppy device are: 360, 720, 1200, 1440,
and 2880. Use 1520, 1840 and 3680 for XDF VFloppy. Since SVDisk
defaults to a 1.44MB VFloppy device, the 1440 parameter can be
omitted.
To load SVDisk as a VDisk device, you can specify up to two
parameters:
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS ssss eeee
Where ssss is the size of the VDisk device, and eeee is the root
directory entries for the device. eeee is optional, and if you
do not specify it, SVDisk will default to 64 root directory
entries.
The possible values for ssss are from 16 to 16384 (16KB to 16MB.)
The VDisk device will always round up the size into 16KB
7
boundary. If you specify a 250KB VDisk device, it will be loaded
as 256KB.
The possible values for eeee are from 16 to 1024. This value is
also rounded up in multiple of 16.
If you load a VDisk device near the size of 4MB, it will attempt
to resolve the File Allocation Table (FAT) size as either 12-bit
or 16-bit. In the case of conflict due to a large root directory
entries specification, SVDisk will slightly reduce the VDisk size
in favor of a 12-bit FAT for lower disk sector overhead in the
system area on the virtual media.
SVDisk distinguishes a VDisk device from a VFloppy device solely
by the ssss (size) parameter. If ssss is one of the possible
values for a VFloppy device, it will load itself as a VFloppy
device, and the second parameter is ignored.
8
8.0. CONTROLLING Super Virtual Disk
_________________________________________________________________
Two programs are provided to control the SVDisks: SVDC.EXE and
PMSVDC.EXE. PMSVDC.EXE is the Presentation Manager version of
SVDC.EXE.
8.1. Super Virtual Disk Control help screen
Type SVDC at the OS/2 command prompt to receive this help screen:
Super Virtual Disk Control (32-bit) Version 1.18 SHAREWARE VERSION
(C) Copyright 1994-96 Albert J. Shan. All Rights Reserved.
For use with Super Virtual Disk driver (SVDISK.SYS)
Usage: SVDC [options] Drive:
[options] /c Fake a disk change.
/e[f] Eject media [f = forced eject].
/i[:size] Insert media (if size is not specified, default
to max. drive capacity.) Size can only be
specified for the VFloppy device. Valid sizes
are: 160, 180, 320, 360, 1.2, 720, 1.44, 2.88,
1.52, 1.84, 3.68.
/l:size Lock SVDisk in non-swappable memory. Size
is anywhere from 0 (KB) to the max. media size.
/q Query SVDisk status
/r[:size] Reconfigure VFloppy device capacity (if size is
not specified, default to max. drive capacity.)
Valid sizes are: 360, 1.2, 720, 1.44, 2.88,
1.52, 1.84, 3.68.
/u Unlock non-swappable memory used by the SVDisk.
Drive: Drive letter of the Super Virtual Disk.
NOTE: The drive must not contain any media before reconfiguring with /r.
*** Note: parameters within [] are optional.
If you specify the drive letter of a SVDisk and without
specifying any other options, SVDC will report the current status
of the SVDisk drive as if the Query Status switch (/q) is
specified. For example:
[C:\SVDISK]svdc j:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.18
Default device size: 2.88MB
Current device size: 2.88MB
Current media size: 1.44MB
Non-swappable memory locked: 128KB
9
8.2. Options for SVDC
/c Fake a disk change. This command will cause the SVDisk
specified to appear as if it has been changed (ejected
then reinserted.) This is accomplished by changing the
Volume Serial on the SVDisk. If the program in
question is looking for a change in Volume Label or a
DOS program is looking for a change line bit in
hardware, /c will not work.
/e[f] Eject media. This will eject the media in the SVDisk,
thereby releasing all memory, including locked memory
(see /l and /u below) back to the system. If a program
is currently running off the SVDisk, you must specify
/ef to force the disk to eject. Further access to the
SVDisk drive will cause a drive not ready error.
/i[:size] Insert media. If size is not specified, it will insert
a media with exactly the same size as the SVDisk
device. For example, if the VFloppy is 2.88MB,
specifying /i alone will insert a 2.88MB media into the
SVDisk drive. The optional size parameter is only
applicable for a VFloppy device. This allows different
size media to be inserted into the VFloppy drive. If
the VFloppy is a 5.25" 360KB device, the possible
values are: 160, 180, 320, and 360. If the VFloppy is
a 3.5" 1.44MB device, the possible values are: 720 and
1.44. Depending on the type of VFloppy device, the
possible values are: 160, 180, 320, 360, 1.2, 720, 1.44
and 2.88. For XDF media, the possible values are:
1.52, 1.84, and 3.68. When the VFloppy device is an
XDF device, only XDF media are supported.
/l:size Lock virtual disk in non-swappable memory. This will
cause the virtual memory allocated by SVDisk to be
locked in real memory pages, and they will be precluded
from swapping out by the system. The starting location
of the lock is fixed at the beginning of the disk, at
logical sector 0. The size parameter is anywhere from
0 to the maximum size of the media in the SVDisk. It
will be rounded up in 4KB in size as OS/2 can only lock
memory in 4KB page boundary. A size of 0 is equivalent
to unlocking all the memory (see /u switch below.) If
a lock already exists on the SVDisk, it will be
released, and the new lock size will be installed. If
there is not enough real memory for the lock, /l will
fail, and at the same time, releasing any memory
previously locked.
The OS/2 kernel will swap out other processes in order
to make room for the lock. This may take a while as
pages are being swapped out. The system will not be
10
responsive when the kernel is into heavy paging
activities.
WARNING: Locking memory as non-swappable has the same
effect as removing system memory on the hardware level.
If you have an 8MB system, locking a few mega bytes of
memory will make your system appear as if it has 4MB
total system memory or less. If the lock succeeds in
locking large amount of memory, and the remaining non-
swappable memory is extremely low, the OS/2 virtual
memory paging mechanism will thrash. Although the
system is not crashed, it will be paging in and out so
frequently that the system can no longer respond to the
user's input. You will need to press Ctrl-Alt-Del to
recover in this case. In general, it is recommended
not to lock more that one quarter of total system
memory as non-swappable for all SVDisk devices
combined. PMSVDC.EXE will limit the maximum of the
lock to half of total system memory or the maximum disk
size, whichever is less. On the other hand, SVDC.EXE
is designed to be flexible, so any lock size is
possible.
/q Query SVDisk Status. The following is a typical SVDisk
report:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.18
Default device size: 2.88MB
Current device size: 2.88MB
Current media size: 1.44MB
Non-swappable memory locked: 128KB
/r[:size] Reconfigure VFloppy device capacity. This switch is
only applicable to the VFloppy device. It allows
dynamic device reconfiguration while the system is
running. Before you can reconfigure the VFloppy
device, the media must be ejected first via the /e
switch. Specifying /r alone will reconfigure the
VFloppy device to the initial capacity as loaded by the
device driver. The VFloppy device can be reconfigured
to any other valid type of VFloppy device. For XDF
device, the possible values are: 1.52, 1.84, and 3.68.
/u Unlock non-swappable memory used by the SVDisk. This
is the same as specifying /l:0. Locked memory is
released as being swappable.
11
8.3. PM Super Virtual Disk Control
The Presentation Manager version of Super Virtual Disk Control
(PMSVDC.EXE) provides identical functions as SVDC.EXE with one
exception. The lock function will limit the maximum available
memory for the lock as half of total system memory or maximum
media size, whichever is less. This means if you have 16MB of
memory, and your VDisk device is 16MB, the largest memory size
you can lock is 8MB. Many system boards reserve up to 384K of
memory for shadow ROM and other purposes. This effectively
reduces your total system memory. Instead of 16MB (16384KB), you
get 16000KB total system memory under OS/2 and the maximum size
for the lock in this case is 8000KB. The lock function also
warns you if you are locking more than one quarter of the total
system memory. If you have multiple SVDisk devices, PMSVDC will
add up all memory locked by all SVDisk devices, subtract the
existing lock size on the current device, then add the new
requested size to see if it exceeds one quarter total system
memory limit. In general, the total memory locked by all SVDisk
devices should be less than one quarter of the total system
memory to prevent OS/2 pager from thrashing.
8.4. Using XDF VFloppy for XDF image files
In order to use an XDF (eXtended Density Format) image file on a
VFloppy device, the VFloppy device must be reconfigured to one of
the XDF type VFloppies. The available capacities for XDF
diskettes are as follows:
5.25" 1.2MB media: 1520KB XDF (1.52MB)
3.5" 1.44MB media: 1840KB XDF (1.84MB)
3.5" 2.88MB media: 3680KB XDF (3.68MB)
For example, if your VFloppy has drive letter J:, you can
reconfigure it to 1.84MB XDF VFloppy as follows:
SVDC J: /e
SVDC J: /r:1.84 /i
The included program, XDFSVD.EXE (XDF Copier for SVDisk) is
designed for transferring XDF diskette images to and from an XDF
VFloppy. XDFCOPY.EXE included in OS/2 Warp Version 3 is designed
to transfer XDF images to and from a real diskette drive (A: or
B:.) XDFCOPY.EXE cannot be used on an XDF VFloppy. And
likewise, XDFSVD.EXE cannot be used on a real diskette drive.
To transfer an XDF Image file to an XDF VFloppy:
XDFSVD DISK5.DSK J:
12
To transfer an XDF VFloppy to an XDF Image file:
XDFSVD J: DISK5.DSK
Here is a typical screen when you run XDFSVD:
XDF Image file -> XDF SVDisk
Press Enter to continue, Ctrl-C to stop...
75% written to SVDisk J:
The "Press Enter to contiune..." prompt can be bypassed by
specifying the /s switch (type XDFSVD by itself to see the help
screen.)
NOTE: When a VFloppy is used in XDF mode, it does not try to
emulate the actual mechanism used by a real XDF diskette.
It does not have the special boot sector and file system
information of a real XDF diskette. The following
scenario is not a valid way to create a real XDF diskette:
- Reconfigure a VFloppy to an XDF VFloppy
- Create files on the XDF VFloppy
- Use XDFSVD to create an XDF image file
- Use XDFCOPY to transfer the XDF image file to a real
diskette
The proper way for editing the contents of an XDF diskette
via XDF VFloppy is as follows:
- Reconfigure a VFloppy to an XDF VFloppy
- Use XDFCOPY to create an XDF image file from a real
XDF diskette
- Use XDFSVD to transfer the XDF image file to the XDF
VFloppy
- Edit the contents of the XDF VFloppy
- Use XDFSVD to create the new XDF image file
- Use XDFCOPY to create the new XDF diskette
8.5. Formatting SVDisk as HPFS
NOTE: Using the High-Performance File System (HPFS) on SVDisk
requires special considerations and understanding of OS/2
and the HPFS file system. THE ONLY SUPPORTED HPFS.IFS
DRIVERS ARE THE ONES IN OS/2 2.1 AND OS/2 WARP VERSION 3.
HPFS.IFS in OS/2 2.11 (ServicePak XR06200) is not
supported due to a severe bug in the HPFS driver. If you
are using OS/2 2.11, you must copy the HPFS.IFS driver
from the original OS/2 2.1 installation diskettes
(diskette 1). FAILURE TO USE THE CORRECT HPFS DRIVER WILL
CAUSE SYSTEM CRASH WHEN DATA IS COPIED TO A HPFS SVDISK.
13
Two utilities are included for handling HPFS on SVDisk:
HFORMAT.EXE and HMOUNT.EXE. HFORMAT formats any SVDisk into HPFS
file system format. It does it by temporary reconfiguring SVDisk
to appear as a non-removable disk, and then calls the OS/2
FORMAT.COM program to perform the HPFS formatting. HFORMAT will
verify the drive to make sure it is a SVDisk before proceeding
with FORMAT.COM. Once a SVDisk is formatted as HPFS, HFORMAT
will reconfigure SVDisk back to a removable disk device. HFORMAT
requires the SVDisk media to be at least 1MB in size. Since HPFS
requires approximately 200KB for the file system structures, it
is not pratical to have HPFS on a low capacity media.
Before you can format a SVDisk as HPFS, the HPFS.IFS driver must
be installed. If you are not using HPFS, you can install the
HPFS driver using Selective Install in the System Setup folder.
HPFS is usually installed as the first line in CONFIG.SYS. A
typical HPFS.IFS line in CONFIG.SYS looks like the following:
IFS=C:\OS2\HPFS.IFS /CACHE:128 /CRECL:4 /AUTOCHECK:C
This specifies the HPFS Installable File System (IFS) with 128KB
cache; a caching threshold of 4KB, and automatic CHKDSK of C:
drive upon boot. For performance reason, HPFS is not recommended
for system with 4MB of system memory.
Once HPFS is installed, you can format a SVDisk into HPFS. To do
so, type:
HFORMAT D:
where D: is the drive letter of the SVDisk drive.
You can specify a volume label with HFORMAT:
HFORMAT D: /v:SUPERDISK
This will format the SVDisk D: as HPFS and assign SUPERDISK as
the volume label.
If you want to format a HPFS SVDisk back to FAT, the easiest way
is to eject the media (/e), and insert (/i) a new one. If you
wish to use FORMAT.COM to do the formatting, you must first
unmount HPFS from the SVDisk.
Since HPFS is not designed for removable media, special media
handling is necessary to prevent HPFS from crashing. HPFS is
mounted to the OS/2 File System whenever OS/2 detects a HPFS
drive during boot or after a successful HPFS disk format with
FORMAT.COM. However, OS/2 does not provide a way for unmounting
a HPFS drive. If you eject a HPFS media from a removable drive,
the HPFS driver will crash when it attempts to flush the disk
cache later, or when you shutdown the operating system. Since
14
the majority of the diskette drives have a mechanical eject
button; the media can be ejected without the control of the file
system driver. This is the primary reason why HPFS is not
supported for the diskette drive.
SVDC.EXE and PMSVDC.EXE have built-in HPFS unmounting capability.
When you eject a HPFS SVDisk, it will unmount the HPFS file
system before the disk is ejected, thereby preventing HPFS from
crashing. If your HPFS SVDisk drive is in use by another process
(such as open files, or a process running off the HPFS SVDisk),
SVDC and PMSVDC eject function will disallow the removal of the
media. This is done to prevent HPFS from crashing since there is
no way to flush or unmount HPFS if a process is running off of
that disk.
If you wish to manually unmount HPFS off a SVDisk, you can do so
with HMOUNT.EXE. HMOUNT has two modes of operation: mounting and
unmounting HPFS. To unmount a HPFS SVDisk, do the following:
HMOUNT D: /u
Where D: is the drive letter of the HPFS SVDisk drive.
Once HPFS is unmounted from the SVDisk, you can no longer access
the drive's contents. At this point, OS/2 believes the current
file system on the SVDisk drive is FAT, and will not display the
contents of the drive correctly. You can mount the drive back
with HMOUNT by typing:
HMOUNT D:
You can force HPFS to flush the cache by unmounting and then
remounting the disk.
NOTE: It is the user's responsibility to make sure nothing is
written to an unmounted HPFS media before it is mounted as
HPFS again. HPFS may crash if the file system structures
are severely damaged.
Since HPFS provides superlative caching performace, the
use of non-swappable memory locking (/l in SVDC) is
unnecessary and should be avoided to conserve system
memory.
8.4.1 HPFS Diskettes
Since a VFloppy can be formatted as HPFS, you can transfer, for
example, a 1.44MB HPFS VFloppy onto a real diskette. The
supported HPFS diskette sizes are: 1.2MB, 1.44MB, and 2.88MB.
HFORMAT cannot format a real diskette as HPFS because the
IBM1FLPY.ADD/IBM2FLPY.ADD driver prevents the change of one
15
critical diskette parameter which is needed by HFORMAT.EXE and
OS/2's FORMAT.COM.
DISKCOPY cannot be used to transfer HPFS VFloppy to a real
diskette because it expects both the source and target file
systems to be FAT. You will need to use a Diskette Imaging
program such as Disk eXPress (DXP.) Disk eXPress Version 2.33 or
later is required. Shareware version of Disk eXPress can be
found on most major OS/2 BBSes. To image a HPFS VFloppy, you
will need to save the entire contents of the disk. With Disk
eXPress, you can do this by:
DXP32 D: HPFS1440 /a
Where D: is the 1.44MB HPFS SVDisk drive (VFloppy device), and
HPFS1440 is the self-extracting diskette image file. The /a
switch (read the entire diskette) is not really required, as Disk
eXPress detects the HPFS VFloppy as a non-DOS media, and will
automatically read the entire diskette.
Once the diskette image is created, you can restore it onto a
real diskette. You can do this by typing:
HPFS1440 A: (if the diskette is formatted)
OR
DXP32 HPFS1440.EXE A: /f (if the diskette is unformatted)
In order to use a HPFS diskette, you must first mount the media
for use. This is accomplished with HMOUNT.
HMOUNT A:
Normally, OS/2 will mount a HPFS disk if it detects it to be HPFS
when you first access it. This means if a HPFS diskette is
inserted into the drive and accessed without HMOUNT, OS/2 will
recognize it, and access the contents correctly. However, this
is only true when you are dealing with 1.2MB and 1.44MB drives.
With the 2.88MB drives, it is imperative that you use HMOUNT to
mount a 1.44MB HPFS diskette. HMOUNT will temporary reconfigure
your floppy hardware to appear as a 1.44MB diskette drive. This
is necessary to allow HPFS to function correctly for the 1.44MB
media in the 2.88MB diskette drive. When you unmount a 1.44MB
HPFS diskette from a 2.88MB drive, the drive parameter is not
restored, and OS/2 believes you still have a 1.44MB diskette
drive. In order to restore diskette hardware parameters to
2.88MB, a 2.88MB HPFS diskette must be prepared in advance using
a 2.88MB HPFS SVDisk. To restore the 2.88MB hardware status, you
must mount then unmount a 2.88MB HPFS diskette. To do so, insert
the 2.88MB HPFS diskette, perform a HMOUNT to mount the diskette
and then perform a HMOUNT /u to unmount HPFS from the drive.
16
CAUTION: Make sure a HPFS diskette is unmounted with HMOUNT /u
before ejecting it from the diskette drive. Failure to
do so will cause HPFS to crash when it attempts to
flush the cache or during a system shutdown. If you
accidentially ejected a HPFS diskette, you must
reinsert it into the drive immediately, and execute
HMOUNT /u to unmount HPFS. Failure to do so before
HPFS has a chance to update the media will lead to
system crash.
8.4.2 HPFS386 on IBM LAN Server Advanced Edition
SVDisk does not support HPFS386 on IBM LAN Server Advanced
Edition. This particular version of HPFS requires Scatter/Gather
support in the device driver level. SVDisk currently does not
support Scatter/Gather. Formatting SVDisk as HPFS under HPFS386
will lead to system crash.
8.6. Diskette boot bypass using VFloppy
SVDisk contains a special boot sector under FAT which can be used
to bypass a real floppy boot. You can do this by transferring
the image of a VFloppy device with DISKCOPY to a real diskette.
If you leave the diskette in drive A:, upon system reboot, you
will get the following message on the screen:
Transferring system boot from diskette to hard drive...
And the boot sequence will be transferred to the hard drive. If
you have OS/2 Boot Manager installed, you will see the Boot
Manager at this point.
17
9.0. PROGRAMMING INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________
When SVDisk is used as a VFloppy device, it tries to emulate a
real floppy drive as much as possible. However, this emulation
is not 100%. If you write a program against the behavior of a
real floppy drive, it will almost certainly work with SVDisk.
The converse is not always true. This is because SVDisk makes
certain assumptions to simplify many of the internal operations
which are true for a virtual device. The common pitfall is to
assume reading and writing to a floppy device are always slower
than other computational threads. If a multithreaded OS/2
application is designed with the above assumption, it will almost
certainly fail because the disk read/write operations are much
faster than the program has expected.
SVDisk supports the following IOCtl Category 8 logical disk
commands (in hex):
00 Lock drive
01 Unlock drive
02 Redetermine media
04 Begin format
20 Block removable
21 Query logical map
43 Set device parameters (the changing the BPB of the device is
not supported)
44 Read track
64 Write track
65 Verify track
45 Format and verify track
60 Query media sense
63 Query device parameters
Please refer to OS/2 2.x SDK (Software Development Kit) on
programming the IOCtl interface.
18
10.0. EXAMPLES
_________________________________________________________________
The following examples assume you have the following lines
installed in CONFIG.SYS:
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 8192 512
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 2880
CALL=D:\SVDISK\SVDC.EXE H: /i
CALL=D:\SVDISK\SVDC.EXE I: /i:1.44
The first SVDisk is an 8MB VDisk device with 512 root directory
entries, with drive letter 'H' assigned to it by OS/2. The
second SVDisk is a 2.88MB VFloppy device, initially loaded with a
1.44MB virtual media, and is assigned as drive 'I'.
10.1. Example 1: Locking non-swappable memory and querying status
You would like to lock the first 600K of SVDisk H: in non-
swappable memory, and query the status at the same time:
SVDC H: /l:600 /q
And you get the following report:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.18
Default device size: 8192KB
Current device size: 8192KB
Current media size: 8192KB
Non-swappable memory locked: 600KB
10.2. Example 2: Ejecting virtual media
You can eject the virtual media in SVDisk so that all memory used
(including locked memory) is returned to the operating system:
SVDC I: /e
If the SVDisk is in used by a process (ie: a running program,
open files, etc.), you'll receive an error message:
KWT0131: Drive I: is not ready or in use by another process.
You can force eject the virtual media by specifying /ef:
SVDC I: /ef
19
10.3. Example 3: Reconfiguring VFloppy device
You want to change the VFloppy drive I: into a 1.2MB 5.25"
device:
SVDC I: /r:1.2
10.4. Example 4: Inserting virtual media
You want to insert a 360KB virtual media into drive I:, which has
just been reconfigured to a 1.2MB VFloppy drive:
SVDC I: /i:360
10.5. Example 5: Multiple operations
You can combine example 3 and 4 plus locking and querying all in
one step:
SVDC I: /r:1.2 /i:360 /l:180 /q
And you'll receive this status report:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.18
Default device size: 2.88MB
Current device size: 1.2MB
Current media size: 360KB
Non-swappable memory locked: 180KB
20
11.0. ERROR MESSAGES
_________________________________________________________________
11.1. List of error messages
The following is a list of major error messages returned by
SVDC.EXE. The error return code is also displayed as part of the
prefix in the error message:
SVDnnnn: Error message text
Where nnnn is the error return code.
SVD0016: Drive X: is not a Super Virtual Disk.
SVD0017: SVDISK.SYS has a higher revision level.
SVD0018: Invalid media size.
SVD0019: Cannot eject because the file system on drive is HPFS and
is currently in use by another process.
SVD0020: Unable to eject Super Virtual Disk due to memory deallocation
error.
SVD0021: Unable to insert Super Virtual Disk due to memory allocation
error.
SVD0022: No media in drive.
SVD0023: You cannot insert two media in the drive.
SVD0024: Incorrect size specified.
SVD0025: System failed to lock memory as non-swappable.
SVD0026: System failed to unlock non-swappable memory.
SVD0027: No non-swappable memory locked by the Super Virtual Disk.
SVD0028: Cannot reconfigure Super Virtual Disk with a media in the Drive.
SVD0029: Only VFloppy type device can be reconfigured.
12.0. BACKGROUND INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________
The Super Virtual Disk device driver is written in 386 assembly
language. The source files consist of over 2500 lines of
assembly code, and over 3600 lines of C code. 32-bit
instructions are used extensively in the device driver, with
critical memory transfer loop in double word (32-bit) alignment.
All the utilities programs are 32-bit executables. The device
driver interface is 16-bit, as limited by the OS/2 kernel. Media
is made removable to allow unrestricted virtual memory
allocation. It is not possible to allocate 16MB virtual memory
during device driver initialization.
13.0. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
_________________________________________________________________
German message files translation was performed by Peter Freitag.
21 |
Super Virtual Disk (SVDisk) v. 1.17 (28/5/1995) |
Readme/What's new |
Making Hard Copy of the Document
================================
The documentation (SVDISK.DOC) in the package has been typeset with a 57-
line page so it will print nicely on most printers.
In order to print the documentation, you can type the following on the
command line:
copy svdisk.doc prn
OR
type svdisk.doc > prn
Transfer of registration information for Licensed versions of SVDisk
====================================================================
Starting with version 1.10, SVDisk includes REREGSVD.EXE for re-
registering SVDisk shareware downloads. Once the registration
information is transferred, the shareware release will be converted
into the full licensed release. For users upgrading from version
1.01, you will need to enter your name when REREGSVD establishs the
registration information. You can do this automatically by running
INSTALL.CMD and select item 1 from the main menu.
To manually re-register SVDisk, run INSTALL.CMD and select item 4 from
the main menu or follow the steps below:
1. Make a directory called \TMP.
2. Unpack all the files from the shareware download of SVDisk.
3. Run REREGSVD from an OS/2 command prompt.
4. Enter the path to your registered copy of SVDisk.
5. If you're version 1.01 user, you'll need to enter your name at this
point.
6. REREGSVD will proceed to transfer your registration information.
Super Virtual Disk
Swappable/Lockable/Removable Virtual Disk
for OS/2
SVDISK
Version 1.17
05/28/95
TABLE OF CONTENTS
_________________________________________________________________
1.0. INTRODUCTION TO Super Virtual Disk ..................3
1.1. What is Super Virtual Disk? ....................3
1.2. Features of SVDisk .............................3
2.0. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS .................................4
3.0. COPYRIGHT NOTICE ....................................4
4.0. WARRANTY ............................................4
5.0. COST OF Super Virtual Disk ..........................4
6.0. CONTENTS OF THIS PACKAGE ............................5
7.0. INSTALLATION ........................................6
7.1. Quick start ....................................6
7.1.1 Manual installation ......................6
7.1.2 Drive letter arrangement with CD-ROM
drive ..........................................7
7.2. SVDisk.sys parameters ..........................7
8.0. CONTROLLING Super Virtual Disk ......................9
8.1. Super Virtual Disk Control help screen .........9
8.2. Options for SVDC ...............................10
8.3. PM Super Virtual Disk Control ..................12
8.4. Using XDF VFloppy for XDF image files ..........12
8.5. Formatting SVDisk as HPFS ......................13
8.4.1 HPFS Diskettes ...........................15
8.4.2 HPFS386 on IBM LAN Server Advanced
Edition ........................................17
8.6. Diskette boot bypass using VFloppy .............17
9.0. PROGRAMMING INFORMATION .............................18
10.0. EXAMPLES ...........................................19
10.1. Example 1: Locking non-swappable memory and
querying status .....................................19
10.2. Example 2: Ejecting virtual media .............19
10.3. Example 3: Reconfiguring VFloppy device .......20
10.4. Example 4: Inserting virtual media ............20
10.5. Example 5: Multiple operations ................20
11.0. ERROR MESSAGES .....................................21
11.1. List of error messages ........................21
12.0. BACKGROUND INFORMATION .............................21
13.0. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ....................................21
2
1.0. INTRODUCTION TO Super Virtual Disk
_________________________________________________________________
1.1. What is Super Virtual Disk?
Super Virtual Disk (SVDisk) is a 32-bit OS/2 device driver that
emulates either a removable Virtual Disk (VDisk) or a removable
Virtual Floppy (VFloppy) drive. By using OS/2's virtual memory
management facility, SVDisk allows the entire contents of the
disk to be swapped out via the paging mechanism. If the SVDisk
is frequently accessed, OS/2 will keep the most recently used
memory pages in RAM, and SVDisk will essentially behave like a
RAM Disk.
1.2. Features of SVDisk
- Emulates multiple VDisk devices up to 16MB each even on a 4MB
system. Cluster size is maintained at 512 bytes by varying
the size of the File Allocation Table (FAT) to reduce file
slack.
- Emulates multiple VFloppy devices, ranging from 360KB to
2.88MB. Virtual media support ranges from 160KB to 1.2MB for
5.25" VFloppy device, and from 720K to 2.88MB for 3.5" VFloppy
device. If the VFloppy is a 3.5" device, automatic media
sensing is supported.
- eXtended Density Format (XDF) support for OS/2 Warp V3 XDF
diskette image files. This includes 1.52MB, 1.84MB and 3.68MB
XDF diskettes. Utility is included to transfer XDF image file
to and from XDF VFloppy.
- Removable media support. This allows SVDisk to release all
memory used by the device back to the system.
- Dynamic device reconfiguration is supported for the VFloppy
device. A VFloppy device can be reconfigured (without
rebooting) to any other VFloppy drive or XDF drive.
- HPFS formatting program for SVDisk. Mounting and unmounting
of HPFS onto SVDisks are supported. HPFS diskette support
(diskette imaging program such as Disk eXPress is required.)
- Special boot sector on VFloppy device to allow bypassing of
floppy boot if the image of the VFloppy is transferred to a
real diskette using DISKCOPY.
- Formatting and sector/track read/write are supported.
- SVDisk allows locking of swappable memory into non-swappable
memory. Once memory is locked, SVDisk will behave like a RAM
drive without paging delay. The size of the lock can be
specified by the user, since locking the entire disk as non-
swappable can have serious performance impact to OS/2's
virtual memory operation.
- A 32-bit command line utility and a 32-bit PM application are
included to provide complete control of all the capabilities
of SVDisk.
3
2.0. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
_________________________________________________________________
Machines equipped with an Intel 386SX compatible or higher
processor. OS/2 2.1 or higher, with minimum 4MB of memory.
3.0. COPYRIGHT NOTICE
_________________________________________________________________
SVDisk (Super Virtual Disk) Version 1.17 05/28/95
(C) Copyright 1994-95 by Albert J. Shan. All Rights Reserved.
No part of this program may be disassembled, modified or altered
by any means.
4.0. WARRANTY
_________________________________________________________________
I, Albert J. Shan, make no warranties, expressed or implied,
including, but not limited to, merchantability or fitness for any
particular purpose. In no event shall Albert J. Shan be liable
for indirect or consequential damages arising from the use of the
software program.
You are free to redistribute this shareware package in its
entirety. No part of this package may be included as part of a
commercial package. If you have any questions about commercial
distribution of Super Virtual Disk, I can be contacted at:
Albert J. Shan
4620 Granville Avenue
Richmond, B.C.
CANADA V7C 1E4
or via CompuServe, ID 70730,401
or via Internet, 70730.401@compuserve.com
5.0. COST OF Super Virtual Disk
_________________________________________________________________
The user is granted a 30 days trial period, after which he or she
is required to register or discontinue the use of the product.
The cost of a single machine license is $30 U.S. Please refer to
the file ORDER.FRM for details.
4
6.0. CONTENTS OF THIS PACKAGE
_________________________________________________________________
The following files are included in this package:
INSTALL.CMD - Installation command file
SVDISK.SYS - Super Virtual Disk device driver
SVDC.EXE - Super Virtual Disk Control
PMSVDC.EXE - PM version of SVDC
HFORMAT.EXE - SVDisk HPFS formatting utility
HMOUNT.EXE - HPFS mounting/unmounting utility for SVDisk
REREGSVD.EXE - SVDisk re-registration program
XDFSVD.EXE - XDF Copier for SVDisk
KWIKTOOL.MSG - English error message file, common to all
EXE files.
SVDISK.MSG - English message file for SVDISK.SYS and
SVDC.EXE
PMSVDC.MSG - English message file for PMSVDC.EXE
HFORMAT.MSG - English message file for HFORMAT.EXE
HMOUNT.MSG - English message file for HMOUNT.EXE
XDFSVD.MSG - English message file for XDFSVD.EXE
KWIKTOOL.GER - German error message file, common to all
EXE files.
SVDISK.GER - German message file for SVDISK.SYS and
SVDC.EXE
PMSVDC.GER - German message file for PMSVDC.EXE
HFORMAT.GER - German message file for HFORMAT.EXE
HMOUNT.GER - German message file for HMOUNT.EXE
XDFSVD.GER - German message file for XDFSVD.EXE
SVDISK.DOC - This documentation
SVDISK.HST - History of SVDisk
LICENSE.DOC - License agreement for registered users
WARRANTY.DOC - Warranty information for registered users
ORDER.FRM - Order form
README - Last minute information
5
7.0. INSTALLATION
_________________________________________________________________
7.1. Quick start
For automatic installation, please run INSTALL.CMD from an OS/2
command prompt.
7.1.1 Manual installation
To manually install SVDisk, make a subdirectory called SVDISK,
and copy all the SVDisk files into \SVDISK. Then edit your OS/2
CONFIG.SYS to include a line:
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS
Where D: is the drive where you created the SVDISK subdirectory.
Add SVDISK to the path and dpath by appending D:\SVDISK at the
end of the PATH= and DPATH= statement in CONFIG.SYS.
English language message files are used by default. To use the
German language message files, rename all *.MSG files to *.ENG,
and rename all *.GER files to *.MSG.
When you load SVDisk without any parameter as in the above
example, it will create a 1.44MB VFloppy device after you reboot
the system.
When SVDisk is loaded, it does not put a media in the virtual
drive. You have to manually insert it with SVDC or PMSVDC. To
insert a virtual media after the system is booted, you type:
SVDC X: /i:720
Where X: is the drive letter of the SVDisk after boot.
This will insert a 720KB virtual media into the drive. If you
specify /i without any parameter, SVDC will insert a media with
the maximum capacity as defined by the SVDisk.sys device in
CONFIG.SYS. To make media insertion automatic, simply edit
STARTUP.CMD on your OS/2 boot drive and add the SVDC line to it.
Alternatively, you can insert the virtual media by using the
CALL= statement in CONFIG.SYS:
CALL=D:\SVDISK\SVDC.EXE X: /i:720
If you want to install a 8MB VDisk type device, edit your
CONFIG.SYS by adding a line:
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK 8192 512
6
This will create a 8MB VDisk device with 512 root directory
entries after you reboot the system.
7.1.2 Drive letter arrangement with CD-ROM drive
Starting with OS/2 2.1, a DASD (Direct Access Storage Device)
Manager Driver (DMD) can be loaded as a device driver. This is
the case for the CD-ROM device driver (OS2CDROM.DMD.) This
arrangement allows another disk device driver to be positioned
before or after the CD-ROM drive. To load a SVDisk with drive
letter preceeding the CD-ROM drive, locate the DEVICE= statement
containing OS2CDROM.DMD, and insert the SVDISK.SYS DEVICE=
statement before it. To load a SVDisk after the CD-ROM, add the
SVDISK.SYS DEVICE= statement after OS2CDROM.DMD.
7.2. SVDisk.sys parameters
SVDisk.sys can be loaded with no parameter to up to two
parameters. To load SVDisk as a VFloppy device, you must specify
the size of the VFloppy device in KB. For example:
REM *** Load a 1.44MB VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 1440
REM *** Load a 2.88MB VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 2880
REM *** Load a 360KB VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 360
REM *** Load a 1.84MB XDF VFloppy device ***
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 1840
The possible values for VFloppy device are: 360, 720, 1200, 1440,
and 2880. Use 1520, 1840 and 3680 for XDF VFloppy. Since SVDisk
defaults to a 1.44MB VFloppy device, the 1440 parameter can be
omitted.
To load SVDisk as a VDisk device, you can specify up to two
parameters:
DEVICE=\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS ssss eeee
Where ssss is the size of the VDisk device, and eeee is the root
directory entries for the device. eeee is optional, and if you
do not specify it, SVDisk will default to 64 root directory
entries.
The possible values for ssss are from 16 to 16384 (16KB to 16MB.)
The VDisk device will always round up the size into 16KB
7
boundary. If you specify a 250KB VDisk device, it will be loaded
as 256KB.
The possible values for eeee are from 16 to 1024. This value is
also rounded up in multiple of 16.
If you load a VDisk device near the size of 4MB, it will attempt
to resolve the File Allocation Table (FAT) size as either 12-bit
or 16-bit. In the case of conflict due to a large root directory
entries specification, SVDisk will slightly reduce the VDisk size
in favor of a 12-bit FAT for lower disk sector overhead in the
system area on the virtual media.
SVDisk distinguishes a VDisk device from a VFloppy device solely
by the ssss (size) parameter. If ssss is one of the possible
values for a VFloppy device, it will load itself as a VFloppy
device, and the second parameter is ignored.
8
8.0. CONTROLLING Super Virtual Disk
_________________________________________________________________
Two programs are provided to control the SVDisks: SVDC.EXE and
PMSVDC.EXE. PMSVDC.EXE is the Presentation Manager version of
SVDC.EXE.
8.1. Super Virtual Disk Control help screen
Type SVDC at the OS/2 command prompt to receive this help screen:
Super Virtual Disk Control (32-bit) Version 1.17 SHAREWARE VERSION
(C) Copyright 1994-95 Albert J. Shan. All Rights Reserved.
For use with Super Virtual Disk driver (SVDISK.SYS)
Usage: SVDC [options] Drive:
[options] /c Fake a disk change.
/e[f] Eject media [f = forced eject].
/i[:size] Insert media (if size is not specified, default
to max. drive capacity.) Size can only be
specified for the VFloppy device. Valid sizes
are: 160, 180, 320, 360, 1.2, 720, 1.44, 2.88,
1.52, 1.84, 3.68.
/l:size Lock SVDisk in non-swappable memory. Size
is anywhere from 0 (KB) to the max. media size.
/q Query SVDisk status
/r[:size] Reconfigure VFloppy device capacity (if size is
not specified, default to max. drive capacity.)
Valid sizes are: 360, 1.2, 720, 1.44, 2.88,
1.52, 1.84, 3.68.
/u Unlock non-swappable memory used by the SVDisk.
Drive: Drive letter of the Super Virtual Disk.
NOTE: The drive must not contain any media before reconfiguring with /r.
*** Note: parameters within [] are optional.
If you specify the drive letter of a SVDisk and without
specifying any other options, SVDC will report the current status
of the SVDisk drive as if the Query Status switch (/q) is
specified. For example:
[C:\SVDISK]svdc j:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.17
Default device size: 2.88MB
Current device size: 2.88MB
Current media size: 1.44MB
Non-swappable memory locked: 128KB
9
8.2. Options for SVDC
/c Fake a disk change. This command will cause the SVDisk
specified to appear as if it has been changed (ejected
then reinserted.) This is accomplished by changing the
Volume Serial on the SVDisk. If the program in
question is looking for a change in Volume Label or a
DOS program is looking for a change line bit in
hardware, /c will not work.
/e[f] Eject media. This will eject the media in the SVDisk,
thereby releasing all memory, including locked memory
(see /l and /u below) back to the system. If a program
is currently running off the SVDisk, you must specify
/ef to force the disk to eject. Further access to the
SVDisk drive will cause a drive not ready error.
/i[:size] Insert media. If size is not specified, it will insert
a media with exactly the same size as the SVDisk
device. For example, if the VFloppy is 2.88MB,
specifying /i alone will insert a 2.88MB media into the
SVDisk drive. The optional size parameter is only
applicable for a VFloppy device. This allows different
size media to be inserted into the VFloppy drive. If
the VFloppy is a 5.25" 360KB device, the possible
values are: 160, 180, 320, and 360. If the VFloppy is
a 3.5" 1.44MB device, the possible values are: 720 and
1.44. Depending on the type of VFloppy device, the
possible values are: 160, 180, 320, 360, 1.2, 720, 1.44
and 2.88. For XDF media, the possible values are:
1.52, 1.84, and 3.68. When the VFloppy device is an
XDF device, only XDF media are supported.
/l:size Lock virtual disk in non-swappable memory. This will
cause the virtual memory allocated by SVDisk to be
locked in real memory pages, and they will be precluded
from swapping out by the system. The starting location
of the lock is fixed at the beginning of the disk, at
logical sector 0. The size parameter is anywhere from
0 to the maximum size of the media in the SVDisk. It
will be rounded up in 4KB in size as OS/2 can only lock
memory in 4KB page boundary. A size of 0 is equivalent
to unlocking all the memory (see /u switch below.) If
a lock already exists on the SVDisk, it will be
released, and the new lock size will be installed. If
there is not enough real memory for the lock, /l will
fail, and at the same time, releasing any memory
previously locked.
The OS/2 kernel will swap out other processes in order
to make room for the lock. This may take a while as
pages are being swapped out. The system will not be
10
responsive when the kernel is into heavy paging
activities.
WARNING: Locking memory as non-swappable has the same
effect as removing system memory on the hardware level.
If you have an 8MB system, locking a few mega bytes of
memory will make your system appear as if it has 4MB
total system memory or less. If the lock succeeds in
locking large amount of memory, and the remaining non-
swappable memory is extremely low, the OS/2 virtual
memory paging mechanism will thrash. Although the
system is not crashed, it will be paging in and out so
frequently that the system can no longer respond to the
user's input. You will need to press Ctrl-Alt-Del to
recover in this case. In general, it is recommended
not to lock more that one quarter of total system
memory as non-swappable for all SVDisk devices
combined. PMSVDC.EXE will limit the maximum of the
lock to half of total system memory or the maximum disk
size, whichever is less. On the other hand, SVDC.EXE
is designed to be flexible, so any lock size is
possible.
/q Query SVDisk Status. The following is a typical SVDisk
report:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.17
Default device size: 2.88MB
Current device size: 2.88MB
Current media size: 1.44MB
Non-swappable memory locked: 128KB
/r[:size] Reconfigure VFloppy device capacity. This switch is
only applicable to the VFloppy device. It allows
dynamic device reconfiguration while the system is
running. Before you can reconfigure the VFloppy
device, the media must be ejected first via the /e
switch. Specifying /r alone will reconfigure the
VFloppy device to the initial capacity as loaded by the
device driver. The VFloppy device can be reconfigured
to any other valid type of VFloppy device. For XDF
device, the possible values are: 1.52, 1.84, and 3.68.
/u Unlock non-swappable memory used by the SVDisk. This
is the same as specifying /l:0. Locked memory is
released as being swappable.
11
8.3. PM Super Virtual Disk Control
The Presentation Manager version of Super Virtual Disk Control
(PMSVDC.EXE) provides identical functions as SVDC.EXE with one
exception. The lock function will limit the maximum available
memory for the lock as half of total system memory or maximum
media size, whichever is less. This means if you have 16MB of
memory, and your VDisk device is 16MB, the largest memory size
you can lock is 8MB. Many system boards reserve up to 384K of
memory for shadow ROM and other purposes. This effectively
reduces your total system memory. Instead of 16MB (16384KB), you
get 16000KB total system memory under OS/2 and the maximum size
for the lock in this case is 8000KB. The lock function also
warns you if you are locking more than one quarter of the total
system memory. If you have multiple SVDisk devices, PMSVDC will
add up all memory locked by all SVDisk devices, subtract the
existing lock size on the current device, then add the new
requested size to see if it exceeds one quarter total system
memory limit. In general, the total memory locked by all SVDisk
devices should be less than one quarter of the total system
memory to prevent OS/2 pager from thrashing.
8.4. Using XDF VFloppy for XDF image files
In order to use an XDF (eXtended Density Format) image file on a
VFloppy device, the VFloppy device must be reconfigured to one of
the XDF type VFloppies. The available capacities for XDF
diskettes are as follows:
5.25" 1.2MB media: 1520KB XDF (1.52MB)
3.5" 1.44MB media: 1840KB XDF (1.84MB)
3.5" 2.88MB media: 3680KB XDF (3.68MB)
For example, if your VFloppy has drive letter J:, you can
reconfigure it to 1.84MB XDF VFloppy as follows:
SVDC J: /e
SVDC J: /r:1.84 /i
The included program, XDFSVD.EXE (XDF Copier for SVDisk) is
designed for transferring XDF diskette images to and from an XDF
VFloppy. XDFCOPY.EXE included in OS/2 Warp Version 3 is designed
to transfer XDF images to and from a real diskette drive (A: or
B:.) XDFCOPY.EXE cannot be used on an XDF VFloppy. And
likewise, XDFSVD.EXE cannot be used on a real diskette drive.
To transfer an XDF Image file to an XDF VFloppy:
XDFSVD DISK5.DSK J:
12
To transfer an XDF VFloppy to an XDF Image file:
XDFSVD J: DISK5.DSK
Here is a typical screen when you run XDFSVD:
XDF Image file -> XDF SVDisk
Press Enter to continue, Ctrl-C to stop...
75% written to SVDisk J:
The "Press Enter to contiune..." prompt can be bypassed by
specifying the /s switch (type XDFSVD by itself to see the help
screen.)
NOTE: When a VFloppy is used in XDF mode, it does not try to
emulate the actual mechanism used by a real XDF diskette.
It does not have the special boot sector and file system
information of a real XDF diskette. The following
scenario is not a valid way to create a real XDF diskette:
- Reconfigure a VFloppy to an XDF VFloppy
- Create files on the XDF VFloppy
- Use XDFSVD to create an XDF image file
- Use XDFCOPY to transfer the XDF image file to a real
diskette
The proper way for editing the contents of an XDF diskette
via XDF VFloppy is as follows:
- Reconfigure a VFloppy to an XDF VFloppy
- Use XDFCOPY to create an XDF image file from a real
XDF diskette
- Use XDFSVD to transfer the XDF image file to the XDF
VFloppy
- Edit the contents of the XDF VFloppy
- Use XDFSVD to create the new XDF image file
- Use XDFCOPY to create the new XDF diskette
8.5. Formatting SVDisk as HPFS
NOTE: Using the High-Performance File System (HPFS) on SVDisk
requires special considerations and understanding of OS/2
and the HPFS file system. THE ONLY SUPPORTED HPFS.IFS
DRIVERS ARE THE ONES IN OS/2 2.1 AND OS/2 WARP VERSION 3.
HPFS.IFS in OS/2 2.11 (ServicePak XR06200) is not
supported due to a severe bug in the HPFS driver. If you
are using OS/2 2.11, you must copy the HPFS.IFS driver
from the original OS/2 2.1 installation diskettes
(diskette 1). FAILURE TO USE THE CORRECT HPFS DRIVER WILL
CAUSE SYSTEM CRASH WHEN DATA IS COPIED TO A HPFS SVDISK.
13
Two utilities are included for handling HPFS on SVDisk:
HFORMAT.EXE and HMOUNT.EXE. HFORMAT formats any SVDisk into HPFS
file system format. It does it by temporary reconfiguring SVDisk
to appear as a non-removable disk, and then calls the OS/2
FORMAT.COM program to perform the HPFS formatting. HFORMAT will
verify the drive to make sure it is a SVDisk before proceeding
with FORMAT.COM. Once a SVDisk is formatted as HPFS, HFORMAT
will reconfigure SVDisk back to a removable disk device. HFORMAT
requires the SVDisk media to be at least 1MB in size. Since HPFS
requires approximately 200KB for the file system structures, it
is not pratical to have HPFS on a low capacity media.
Before you can format a SVDisk as HPFS, the HPFS.IFS driver must
be installed. If you are not using HPFS, you can install the
HPFS driver using Selective Install in the System Setup folder.
HPFS is usually installed as the first line in CONFIG.SYS. A
typical HPFS.IFS line in CONFIG.SYS looks like the following:
IFS=C:\OS2\HPFS.IFS /CACHE:128 /CRECL:4 /AUTOCHECK:C
This specifies the HPFS Installable File System (IFS) with 128KB
cache; a caching threshold of 4KB, and automatic CHKDSK of C:
drive upon boot. For performance reason, HPFS is not recommended
for system with 4MB of system memory.
Once HPFS is installed, you can format a SVDisk into HPFS. To do
so, type:
HFORMAT D:
where D: is the drive letter of the SVDisk drive.
You can specify a volume label with HFORMAT:
HFORMAT D: /v:SUPERDISK
This will format the SVDisk D: as HPFS and assign SUPERDISK as
the volume label.
If you want to format a HPFS SVDisk back to FAT, the easiest way
is to eject the media (/e), and insert (/i) a new one. If you
wish to use FORMAT.COM to do the formatting, you must first
unmount HPFS from the SVDisk.
Since HPFS is not designed for removable media, special media
handling is necessary to prevent HPFS from crashing. HPFS is
mounted to the OS/2 File System whenever OS/2 detects a HPFS
drive during boot or after a successful HPFS disk format with
FORMAT.COM. However, OS/2 does not provide a way for unmounting
a HPFS drive. If you eject a HPFS media from a removable drive,
the HPFS driver will crash when it attempts to flush the disk
cache later, or when you shutdown the operating system. Since
14
the majority of the diskette drives have a mechanical eject
button; the media can be ejected without the control of the file
system driver. This is the primary reason why HPFS is not
supported for the diskette drive.
SVDC.EXE and PMSVDC.EXE have built-in HPFS unmounting capability.
When you eject a HPFS SVDisk, it will unmount the HPFS file
system before the disk is ejected, thereby preventing HPFS from
crashing. If your HPFS SVDisk drive is in use by another process
(such as open files, or a process running off the HPFS SVDisk),
SVDC and PMSVDC eject function will disallow the removal of the
media. This is done to prevent HPFS from crashing since there is
no way to flush or unmount HPFS if a process is running off of
that disk.
If you wish to manually unmount HPFS off a SVDisk, you can do so
with HMOUNT.EXE. HMOUNT has two modes of operation: mounting and
unmounting HPFS. To unmount a HPFS SVDisk, do the following:
HMOUNT D: /u
Where D: is the drive letter of the HPFS SVDisk drive.
Once HPFS is unmounted from the SVDisk, you can no longer access
the drive's contents. At this point, OS/2 believes the current
file system on the SVDisk drive is FAT, and will not display the
contents of the drive correctly. You can mount the drive back
with HMOUNT by typing:
HMOUNT D:
You can force HPFS to flush the cache by unmounting and then
remounting the disk.
NOTE: It is the user's responsibility to make sure nothing is
written to an unmounted HPFS media before it is mounted as
HPFS again. HPFS may crash if the file system structures
are severely damaged.
Since HPFS provides superlative caching performace, the
use of non-swappable memory locking (/l in SVDC) is
unnecessary and should be avoided to conserve system
memory.
8.4.1 HPFS Diskettes
Since a VFloppy can be formatted as HPFS, you can transfer, for
example, a 1.44MB HPFS VFloppy onto a real diskette. The
supported HPFS diskette sizes are: 1.2MB, 1.44MB, and 2.88MB.
HFORMAT cannot format a real diskette as HPFS because the
IBM1FLPY.ADD/IBM2FLPY.ADD driver prevents the change of one
15
critical diskette parameter which is needed by HFORMAT.EXE and
OS/2's FORMAT.COM.
DISKCOPY cannot be used to transfer HPFS VFloppy to a real
diskette because it expects both the source and target file
systems to be FAT. You will need to use a Diskette Imaging
program such as Disk eXPress (DXP.) Disk eXPress Version 2.33 or
later is required. Shareware version of Disk eXPress can be
found on most major OS/2 BBSes. To image a HPFS VFloppy, you
will need to save the entire contents of the disk. With Disk
eXPress, you can do this by:
DXP32 D: HPFS1440 /a
Where D: is the 1.44MB HPFS SVDisk drive (VFloppy device), and
HPFS1440 is the self-extracting diskette image file. The /a
switch (read the entire diskette) is not really required, as Disk
eXPress detects the HPFS VFloppy as a non-DOS media, and will
automatically read the entire diskette.
Once the diskette image is created, you can restore it onto a
real diskette. You can do this by typing:
HPFS1440 A: (if the diskette is formatted)
OR
DXP32 HPFS1440.EXE A: /f (if the diskette is unformatted)
In order to use a HPFS diskette, you must first mount the media
for use. This is accomplished with HMOUNT.
HMOUNT A:
Normally, OS/2 will mount a HPFS disk if it detects it to be HPFS
when you first access it. This means if a HPFS diskette is
inserted into the drive and accessed without HMOUNT, OS/2 will
recognize it, and access the contents correctly. However, this
is only true when you are dealing with 1.2MB and 1.44MB drives.
With the 2.88MB drives, it is imperative that you use HMOUNT to
mount a 1.44MB HPFS diskette. HMOUNT will temporary reconfigure
your floppy hardware to appear as a 1.44MB diskette drive. This
is necessary to allow HPFS to function correctly for the 1.44MB
media in the 2.88MB diskette drive. When you unmount a 1.44MB
HPFS diskette from a 2.88MB drive, the drive parameter is not
restored, and OS/2 believes you still have a 1.44MB diskette
drive. In order to restore diskette hardware parameters to
2.88MB, a 2.88MB HPFS diskette must be prepared in advance using
a 2.88MB HPFS SVDisk. To restore the 2.88MB hardware status, you
must mount then unmount a 2.88MB HPFS diskette. To do so, insert
the 2.88MB HPFS diskette, perform a HMOUNT to mount the diskette
and then perform a HMOUNT /u to unmount HPFS from the drive.
16
CAUTION: Make sure a HPFS diskette is unmounted with HMOUNT /u
before ejecting it from the diskette drive. Failure to
do so will cause HPFS to crash when it attempts to
flush the cache or during a system shutdown. If you
accidentially ejected a HPFS diskette, you must
reinsert it into the drive immediately, and execute
HMOUNT /u to unmount HPFS. Failure to do so before
HPFS has a chance to update the media will lead to
system crash.
8.4.2 HPFS386 on IBM LAN Server Advanced Edition
SVDisk does not support HPFS386 on IBM LAN Server Advanced
Edition. This particular version of HPFS requires Scatter/Gather
support in the device driver level. SVDisk currently does not
support Scatter/Gather. Formatting SVDisk as HPFS under HPFS386
will lead to system crash.
8.6. Diskette boot bypass using VFloppy
SVDisk contains a special boot sector under FAT which can be used
to bypass a real floppy boot. You can do this by transferring
the image of a VFloppy device with DISKCOPY to a real diskette.
If you leave the diskette in drive A:, upon system reboot, you
will get the following message on the screen:
Transferring system boot from diskette to hard drive...
And the boot sequence will be transferred to the hard drive. If
you have OS/2 Boot Manager installed, you will see the Boot
Manager at this point.
17
9.0. PROGRAMMING INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________
When SVDisk is used as a VFloppy device, it tries to emulate a
real floppy drive as much as possible. However, this emulation
is not 100%. If you write a program against the behavior of a
real floppy drive, it will almost certainly work with SVDisk.
The converse is not always true. This is because SVDisk makes
certain assumptions to simplify many of the internal operations
which are true for a virtual device. The common pitfall is to
assume reading and writing to a floppy device are always slower
than other computational threads. If a multithreaded OS/2
application is designed with the above assumption, it will almost
certainly fail because the disk read/write operations are much
faster than the program has expected.
SVDisk supports the following IOCtl Category 8 logical disk
commands (in hex):
00 Lock drive
01 Unlock drive
02 Redetermine media
04 Begin format
20 Block removable
21 Query logical map
43 Set device parameters (the changing the BPB of the device is
not supported)
44 Read track
64 Write track
65 Verify track
45 Format and verify track
60 Query media sense
63 Query device parameters
Please refer to OS/2 2.x SDK (Software Development Kit) on
programming the IOCtl interface.
18
10.0. EXAMPLES
_________________________________________________________________
The following examples assume you have the following lines
installed in CONFIG.SYS:
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 8192 512
DEVICE=D:\SVDISK\SVDISK.SYS 2880
CALL=D:\SVDISK\SVDC.EXE H: /i
CALL=D:\SVDISK\SVDC.EXE I: /i:1.44
The first SVDisk is an 8MB VDisk device with 512 root directory
entries, with drive letter 'H' assigned to it by OS/2. The
second SVDisk is a 2.88MB VFloppy device, initially loaded with a
1.44MB virtual media, and is assigned as drive 'I'.
10.1. Example 1: Locking non-swappable memory and querying status
You would like to lock the first 600K of SVDisk H: in non-
swappable memory, and query the status at the same time:
SVDC H: /l:600 /q
And you get the following report:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.17
Default device size: 8192KB
Current device size: 8192KB
Current media size: 8192KB
Non-swappable memory locked: 600KB
10.2. Example 2: Ejecting virtual media
You can eject the virtual media in SVDisk so that all memory used
(including locked memory) is returned to the operating system:
SVDC I: /e
If the SVDisk is in used by a process (ie: a running program,
open files, etc.), you'll receive an error message:
KWT0131: Drive I: is not ready or in use by another process.
You can force eject the virtual media by specifying /ef:
SVDC I: /ef
19
10.3. Example 3: Reconfiguring VFloppy device
You want to change the VFloppy drive I: into a 1.2MB 5.25"
device:
SVDC I: /r:1.2
10.4. Example 4: Inserting virtual media
You want to insert a 360KB virtual media into drive I:, which has
just been reconfigured to a 1.2MB VFloppy drive:
SVDC I: /i:360
10.5. Example 5: Multiple operations
You can combine example 3 and 4 plus locking and querying all in
one step:
SVDC I: /r:1.2 /i:360 /l:180 /q
And you'll receive this status report:
SVDISK.SYS Version: 1.17
Default device size: 2.88MB
Current device size: 1.2MB
Current media size: 360KB
Non-swappable memory locked: 180KB
20
11.0. ERROR MESSAGES
_________________________________________________________________
11.1. List of error messages
The following is a list of major error messages returned by
SVDC.EXE. The error return code is also displayed as part of the
prefix in the error message:
SVDnnnn: Error message text
Where nnnn is the error return code.
SVD0016: Drive X: is not a Super Virtual Disk.
SVD0017: SVDISK.SYS has a higher revision level.
SVD0018: Invalid media size.
SVD0019: Cannot eject because the file system on drive is HPFS and
is currently in use by another process.
SVD0020: Unable to eject Super Virtual Disk due to memory deallocation
error.
SVD0021: Unable to insert Super Virtual Disk due to memory allocation
error.
SVD0022: No media in drive.
SVD0023: You cannot insert two media in the drive.
SVD0024: Incorrect size specified.
SVD0025: System failed to lock memory as non-swappable.
SVD0026: System failed to unlock non-swappable memory.
SVD0027: No non-swappable memory locked by the Super Virtual Disk.
SVD0028: Cannot reconfigure Super Virtual Disk with a media in the Drive.
SVD0029: Only VFloppy type device can be reconfigured.
12.0. BACKGROUND INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________
The Super Virtual Disk device driver is written in 386 assembly
language. The source files consist of over 2500 lines of
assembly code, and over 3600 lines of C code. 32-bit
instructions are used extensively in the device driver, with
critical memory transfer loop in double word (32-bit) alignment.
All the utilities programs are 32-bit executables. The device
driver interface is 16-bit, as limited by the OS/2 kernel. Media
is made removable to allow unrestricted virtual memory
allocation. It is not possible to allocate 16MB virtual memory
during device driver initialization.
13.0. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
_________________________________________________________________
German message files translation was performed by Peter Freitag.
21 |
Aggiungi un commento