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mtools.1(3)							  mtools.1(3)



Name
       mtools - utilities to access DOS disks in Unix.




Introduction
       Mtools is a public domain collection of tools to allow Unix systems to
       manipulate MS-DOS files: read, write, and move around files on an  MS-
       DOS filesystem (typically a floppy disk).  Where reasonable, each pro-
       gram attempts to	 emulate  the  MS-DOS  equivalent  command.  However,
       unnecessary  restrictions  and  oddities	 of DOS are not emulated. For
       instance, it is possible to move subdirectories from one	 subdirectory
       to another.

       Mtools  is  sufficient  to  give	 access	 to  MS-DOS filesystems.  For
       instance, commands such as mdir a: work on the a: floppy	 without  any
       preliminary   mounting	or   initialization   (assuming	 the  default
       '/etc/mtools.conf' works on  your  machine).   With  mtools,  one  can
       change floppies too without unmounting and mounting.


Where to get mtools
       Mtools can be found at the following places (and their mirrors):

	  http://mtools.linux.lu/mtools-3.9.9.tar.gz
	  ftp://www.tux.org/pub/knaff/mtools/mtools-3.9.9.tar.gz
	  ftp://ibiblio.unc.edu/pub/Linux/utils/disk-management/mtools-3.9.9.tar.gz



       Before  reporting  a  bug, make sure that it has not yet been fixed in
       the Alpha patches which can be found at:

	  http://mtools.linux.lu/
	  ftp://www.tux.org/pub/knaff/mtools



       These patches are named mtools-version-ddmm.taz, where version  stands
       for  the	 base  version, dd for the day and mm for the month. Due to a
       lack of space, I usually leave only the most recent patch.

       There is an mtools mailing list at mtools @ tux.org .  Please send all
       bug  reports to this list.  You may subscribe to the list by sending a
       message with 'subscribe mtools @ tux.org' in its body to	 majordomo  @
       tux.org	. (N.B. Please remove the spaces around the "@" both times. I
       left them there in order to  fool  spambots.)   Announcements  of  new
       mtools  versions	 will  also  be	 sent to the list, in addition to the
       linux  announce	newsgroups.   The  mailing  list   is	archived   at
       http://www.tux.org/hypermail/mtools/latest


Common features of all mtools commands
   Options and filenames
       MS-DOS filenames are composed of a drive letter followed by a colon, a
       subdirectory, and a filename. Only the filename part is mandatory, the
       drive  letter  and  the subdirectory are optional. Filenames without a
       drive letter refer to Unix files. Subdirectory names  can  use  either
       the  '/'	 or '\' separator.  The use of the '\' separator or wildcards
       requires the names to be enclosed in quotes to protect them  from  the
       shell.  However, wildcards in Unix filenames should not be enclosed in
       quotes, because here we want the shell to expand them.

       The regular expression "pattern matching" routines  follow  the	Unix-
       style  rules.   For  example,  '*' matches all MS-DOS files in lieu of
       '*.*'.  The archive, hidden, read-only and system attribute  bits  are
       ignored during pattern matching.

       All options use the - (minus) as their first character, not / as you'd
       expect in MS-DOS.

       Most mtools commands allow multiple filename parameters, which doesn't
       follow MS-DOS conventions, but which is more user-friendly.

       Most  mtools  commands  allow options that instruct them how to handle
       file name clashes. See section  name  clashes,  for  more  details  on
       these.  All commands accept the -V flags which prints the version, and
       most accept the -v flag, which switches on verbose  mode.  In  verbose
       mode, these commands print out the name of the MS-DOS files upon which
       they act,  unless  stated  otherwise.  See  section  Commands,  for  a
       description of the options which are specific to each command.


   Drive letters
       The  meaning of the drive letters depends on the target architectures.
       However, on most target architectures, drive A  is  the	first  floppy
       drive, drive B is the second floppy drive (if available), drive J is a
       Jaz drive (if available), and drive Z is a Zip drive  (if  available).
       On  those  systems  where the device name is derived from the SCSI id,
       the Jaz drive is assumed to be at Scsi target 4, and the Zip  at	 Scsi
       target  5  (factory  default  settings).	  On  Linux,  both drives are
       assumed to be the second drive on the Scsi bus (/dev/sdb). The default
       settings	 can be changes using a configuration file (see section	 Con-
       figuration).

       The drive letter : (colon) has a special meaning. It is used to access
       image files which are directly specified on the command line using the
       -i options.

       Example:

	   mcopy -i my-image-file.bin ::file1 ::file2 .



       This copies file1 and file2 from the image file (my-image-file.bin) to
       the /tmp directory.


   Current working directory
       The  mcd	 command ('mcd') is used to establish the device and the cur-
       rent working directory (relative to the MS-DOS filesystem),  otherwise
       the  default  is	 assumed  to be A:/. However, unlike MS-DOS, there is
       only one working directory for all drives, and not one per drive.


   VFAT-style long file names
       This version of mtools supports VFAT style long filenames. If  a	 Unix
       filename	 is  too  long	to fit in a short DOS name, it is stored as a
       VFAT long name, and a companion short name is  generated.  This	short
       name  is what you see when you examine the disk with a pre-7.0 version
       of DOS.
	The following table shows some examples of short names:


	  Long name	  MS-DOS name	  Reason for the change
	  ---------	  ----------	  ---------------------
	  thisisatest	  THISIS~1	  filename too long
	  alain.knaff	  ALAIN~1.KNA	  extension too long
	  prn.txt	  PRN~1.TXT	  PRN is a device name
	  .abc		  ABC~1		  null filename
	  hot+cold	  HOT_CO~1	  illegal character



	As you see, the following transformations happen to  derive  a	short
       name:

       *      Illegal  characters  are	replaced  by underscores. The illegal
	      characters are ;+=[]',\"*\\<>/?:|.

       *      Extra dots, which cannot be interpreted as a  main  name/exten-
	      sion separator are removed

       *      A ~n number is generated,

       *      The name is shortened so as to fit in the 8+3 limitation

	The  initial  Unix-style  file	name  (whether long or short) is also
       called the primary name, and the derived short name is also called the
       secondary name.

	Example:

	   mcopy /etc/motd a:Reallylongname

	 Mtools creates a VFAT entry for Reallylongname, and uses REALLYLO as
       a short name. Reallylongname is the primary name, and REALLYLO is  the
       secondary name.

	   mcopy /etc/motd a:motd

	 Motd  fits  into  the	DOS  filename  limits. Mtools doesn't need to
       derivate another name. Motd is the primary name, and there is no	 sec-
       ondary name.

	In  a  nutshell: The primary name is the long name, if one exists, or
       the short name if there is no long name.

	Although VFAT is much more flexible than FAT, there are	 still	names
       that  are  not  acceptable, even in VFAT. There are still some illegal
       characters left (\"*\\<>/?:|), and device names are still reserved.


	  Unix name	  Long name	  Reason for the change
	  ---------	  ----------	  ---------------------
	  prn		  prn-1		  PRN is a device name
	  ab:c		  ab_c-1	  illegal character



	As you see, the following transformations happen if a  long  name  is
       illegal:

       *      Illegal characters are replaces by underscores,

       *      A -n number is generated,


   Name clashes
       When  writing  a file to disk, its long name or short name may collide
       with an already existing file or directory. This may  happen  for  all
       commands which create new directory entries, such as mcopy, mmd, mren,
       mmove. When a name clash happens, mtools asks you what it  should  do.
       It offers several choices:

       overwrite
	      Overwrites the existing file. It is not possible to overwrite a
	      directory with a file.

       rename
	      Renames the newly created file.  Mtools  prompts	for  the  new
	      filename

       autorename
	      Renames  the  newly  created  file.  Mtools  chooses  a name by
	      itself, without prompting

       skip   Gives up on this file, and moves on to the next (if any)

       To chose one of these actions, type its first letter at the prompt. If
       you  use	 a  lower  case letter, the action only applies for this file
       only, if you use an upper case  letter,	the  action  applies  to  all
       files, and you won't be prompted again.

       You  may	 also chose actions (for all files) on the command line, when
       invoking mtools:

       -D o   Overwrites primary names by default.

       -D O   Overwrites secondary names by default.

       -D r   Renames primary name by default.

       -D R   Renames secondary name by default.

       -D a   Autorenames primary name by default.

       -D A   Autorenames secondary name by default.

       -D s   Skip primary name by default.

       -D S   Skip secondary name by default.

       -D m   Ask user what to do with primary name.

       -D M   Ask user what to do with secondary name.

       Note that for command line switches lower/upper differentiates between
       primary/secondary  name	whereas	 for interactive choices, lower/upper
       differentiates between just-this-time/always.

       The primary name is the name as displayed in Windows 95 or Windows NT:
       i.e.  the  long	name if it exists, and the short name otherwise.  The
       secondary name is the "hidden" name, i.e. the short  name  if  a	 long
       name exists.

       By  default, the user is prompted if the primary name clashes, and the
       secondary name is autorenamed.

       If a name clash occurs in a Unix directory, mtools only	asks  whether
       to overwrite the file, or to skip it.


   Case sensitivity of the VFAT filesystem
       The  VFAT  filesystem  is  able to remember the case of the filenames.
       However, filenames which differ only in case are not allowed to	coex-
       ist  in	the  same  directory.  For example if you store a file called
       LongFileName  on	 a  VFAT  filesystem,  mdir  shows   this   file   as
       LongFileName, and not as Longfilename. However, if you then try to add
       LongFilename to the same directory, it is  refused,  because  case  is
       ignored for clash checks.

       The  VFAT  filesystem  allows  to  store the case of a filename in the
       attribute byte, if all letters of the filename are the same case,  and
       if  all	letters	 of  the extension are the same case too. Mtools uses
       this information when displaying the files, and also to	generate  the
       Unix  filename  when mcopying to a Unix directory. This may have unex-
       pected results when applied to files written using an pre-7.0  version
       of DOS: Indeed, the old style filenames map to all upper case. This is
       different from the behavior of the old version of mtools which used to
       generate lower case Unix filenames.


   high capacity formats
       Mtools  supports a number of formats which allow to store more data on
       disk as usual. Due to different operating system abilities, these for-
       mats  are  not supported on all OS'es. Mtools recognizes these formats
       transparently where supported.

       In order to format these disks, you need to use	an  operating  system
       specific	 tool.	For  Linux, suitable floppy tools can be found in the
       fdutils package at the following locations~:

	  ftp://www.tux.org/pub/knaff/fdutils/.
	  ftp://ibiblio.unc.edu/pub/Linux/utils/disk-management/fdutils-*



       See the manpages included in that  package  for	further	 detail:  Use
       superformat  to format all formats except XDF, and use xdfcopy to for-
       mat XDF.


     More sectors
       The oldest method of fitting more data on a disk is to use  more	 sec-
       tors  and  more cylinders. Although the standard format uses 80 cylin-
       ders and 18 sectors (on a 3 1/2 high density disk), it is possible  to
       use  up	to  83	cylinders (on most drives) and up to 21 sectors. This
       method allows to store up to 1743K on a 3 1/2  HD  disk.	 However,  21
       sector disks are twice as slow as the standard 18 sector disks because
       the sectors are packed so close together that we	 need  to  interleave
       them. This problem doesn't exist for 20 sector formats.

       These  formats  are supported by numerous DOS shareware utilities such
       as fdformat and vgacopy. In his infinite hybris, Bill  Gate$  believed
       that  he invented this, and called it 'DMF disks', or 'Windows format-
       ted disks'. But in reality,  it	has  already  existed  years  before!
       Mtools  supports these formats on Linux, on SunOs and on the DELL Unix
       PC.


     Bigger sectors
       By using bigger sectors it is possible to go beyond the capacity which
       can  be	obtained by the standard 512-byte sectors. This is because of
       the sector header. The sector header has the same size, regardless  of
       how  many  data	bytes  are in the sector. Thus, we save some space by
       using fewer, but bigger sectors. For example,  1	 sector	 of  4K	 only
       takes up header space once, whereas 8 sectors of 512 bytes have also 8
       headers, for the same amount of useful data.

       This method allows to store up to 1992K on a 3 1/2 HD disk.

       Mtools supports these formats only on Linux.


     2m
       The 2m format was originally invented by Ciriaco Garcia de  Celis.  It
       also  uses  bigger sectors than usual in order to fit more data on the
       disk.  However, it uses the standard format (18 sectors of  512	bytes
       each)  on  the  first cylinder, in order to make these disks easyer to
       handle by DOS. Indeed this method allows	 to  have  a  standard	sized
       bootsector,  which  contains a description of how the rest of the disk
       should be read.

       However, the drawback of this is that the first cylinder can hold less
       data  than  the others. Unfortunately, DOS can only handle disks where
       each track contains the same amount of data. Thus 2m  hides  the	 fact
       that  the  first track contains less data by using a shadow FAT. (Usu-
       ally, DOS stores the FAT	 in  two  identical  copies,  for  additional
       safety.	 XDF  stores  only  one copy, and it tells DOS that it stores
       two. Thus the same that would be taken up by the second	FAT  copy  is
       saved.)	This also means that your should never use a 2m disk to store
       anything else than a DOS fs.

       Mtools supports these format only on Linux.


     XDF
       XDF is a high capacity format used by OS/2. It can  hold	 1840  K  per
       disk. That's lower than the best 2m formats, but its main advantage is
       that it is fast: 600 milliseconds per track. That's faster than the 21
       sector format, and almost as fast as the standard 18 sector format. In
       order to access these disks, make sure mtools has been  compiled	 with
       XDF support, and set the use_xdf variable for the drive in the config-
       uration file. See section Compiling mtools, and 'misc variables',  for
       details on how to do this. Fast XDF access is only available for Linux
       kernels which are more recent than 1.1.34.

       Mtools supports this format only on Linux.

       Caution / Attention distributors: If mtools is  compiled	 on  a	Linux
       kernel  more recent than 1.3.34, it won't run on an older kernel. How-
       ever, if it has been compiled on an older kernel, it still runs	on  a
       newer kernel, except that XDF access is slower. It is recommended that
       distribution authors only include mtools binaries compiled on  kernels
       older  than  1.3.34  until 2.0 comes out. When 2.0 will be out, mtools
       binaries compiled on newer kernels may (and  should)  be	 distributed.
       Mtools binaries compiled on kernels older than 1.3.34 won't run on any
       2.1 kernel or later.


   Exit codes
       All the Mtools commands return 0 on success, 1 on utter failure, or  2
       on  partial  failure.   All  the	 Mtools commands perform a few sanity
       checks before going ahead, to make sure that the disk is indeed an MS-
       DOS  disk (as opposed to, say an ext2 or minix disk). These checks may
       reject partially corrupted disks, which might otherwise still be read-
       able.  To  avoid these checks, set the MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK environmental
       variable or the corresponding configuration file variable (see section
       global variables)

   Bugs
       An  unfortunate	side  effect  of not guessing the proper device (when
       multiple disk capacities are supported) is an occasional error message
       from the device driver.	These can be safely ignored.

       The  fat	 checking  code	 chokes	 on  1.72  Mb  disks  mformatted with
       pre-2.0.7 mtools. Set the environmental	variable  MTOOLS_FAT_COMPATI-
       BILITY  (or  the	 corresponding	configuration  file variable, 'global
       variables') to bypass the fat checking.


See also
       floppyd_installtest mattrib mbadblocks mcd mcopy	 mdel  mdeltree	 mdir
       mdu  mformat  minfo mkmanifest mlabel mmd mmount mmove mrd mren mtool-
       stest mtype



mtools-3.9.9			   03Mar03			  mtools.1(3)


UNIX/Linux commands referenced on this page:
  1. write
  2. floppy
  3. as
  4. mdir
  5. at
  6. make
  7. which
  8. dd
  9. refer
  10. expand
  11. more
  12. file
  13. accept
  14. mcopy
  15. mmd
  16. fdformat
  17. size
  18. less
  19. reject
  20. mattrib
  21. mbadblocks
  22. mcd
  23. mdel
  24. mdu
  25. mformat
  26. minfo
  27. mkmanifest
  28. mlabel
  29. mmount
  30. mmove
  31. mrd
  32. mren