Diskcopy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In computing, Diskcopy is a command used on MS-DOS and PC DOS, OS/2, and Microsoft Windows for copying the complete contents of a diskette to another diskette.[1]
Example
- Copy the complete contents of the diskette in Drive A drive to the diskette in B drive.
diskcopy a: b:
- If you only have one diskette drive, you can diskcopy by typing the source drive only. The disk copy program will prompt you to insert the second(target) diskette once it finishes reading the complete contents of the first(source) diskette track by track into memory.
diskcopy a:
- If you want to copy only the first side of the diskette, even if the target diskette is double sided, you can do so by using the /1 switch.
diskcopy a: /1
- If you want to make sure the contents are written reliably, you can use the /V switch, but it will cost more time to copy.
diskcopy a: /V
- Force diskcopy to use only the conventional memory for temporary storage:
diskcopy a: /M
Limitation
Diskcopy does not work with hard drives, CDs, network drives, ZIP drives, or USB drives, etc. It also does not allow diskcopy from 3.5 inch drive to 5.25 inch drives, and vice versa. The source and target drive must be the same size.[2]
References
External links
|
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.