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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #01




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Command Parameters Reference

Date:    2003-05-01  Revised for ver 2.84.2

====================================================================



Basic Command Parameter Syntax:



  XXCOPY   source   destination    (simplified syntax)



  In its simplest form, XXCOPY takes two parameters,



      from WHERE to WHERE



  This very intuitive command syntax has its root in the COPY command

  introduced in 1981 as a PC-DOS (MS-DOS) built-in command.



  The first parameter is the source specifier and the second one is

  the destination specifier.  These two parameters must be in this

  order.  As common to the COPY and XCOPY command syntax, the

  destination specifier can be omitted.  Then, by default, the

  current directory in the current drive becomes the destination.



  XXCOPY   source  [ destination ]



  By convention, an optional parameter is denoted in the syntax

  definition with a pair of square-brackets surrounding it.



  In addition, you may add command switches (which are also called

  options) to customize XXCOPY's behaviors.  It is the extensive

  set of switches that make XXCOPY so versatile and powerful.





Full Command Parameter Syntax:



  XXCOPY   source  [ destination ]  [ switches... ]



  All switches start with a slash (/) character whereas the source

  and the destination specifiers do not have the slash(/) prefix.

  The source and the destination specifiers must be separated from

  other items in the command line by at least one blank (space or tab)

  character.  On the other hand, you may omit blank characters between

  switches in order to minimize the total length of the command line.



  Example:



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\   D:\yourdir\   /S /H



     Here, "C:\mydir\"  is the source specifier and "D:\yourdir\" is

     the destination specifier.  They do not start with a slash (/).

     It has two (/S and /H) switches.



  Note that the positions of the switches need not be at the end of

  the command line.  Switches may begin even before the source specifier.

  The order of the switches is not generally important except when

  conflicting switches are specified, the rightmost switch will

  prevail.  More rules for special cases are discussed at the end

  of this article.  For a complete syntax and semantics for the

  source specifier, see XXTB #04.



     -------------------------------------------------------------

      Caution to DOS novices:



      The blank characters (space or tab) act as the delimiter of

      the arguments.  Therefore, a name with embedded space must

      be surrounded by a pair of quotes (") to be kept unbroken.

  

         XXCOPY   C:\My Documents\   D:\backup\     // bad

         XXCOPY  "C:\My Documents\"  D:\backup\     // good



      This is true for nearly all command line applications.

     -------------------------------------------------------------



  Once you learn this simple rule, it is quite easy to understand a

  long XXCOPY command line.





XXCOPY switches:



  Here, a first time XXCOPY user may be overwhelmed by the sheer

  number of the switches.  Since the power of XXCOPY comes from

  these switches, you have to learn to live with them.  We try

  our best to keep these (still increasing) switches under control.

  Since the number of switches far exceeds the available alphabet,

  many of the switches use multiple characters.  For better or worse,

  the syntax adheres to the original XCOPY's syntax very closely.

  It is a mixed blessing, for sure.  So, when we feel very strongly,

  we took liberty in making improvements in a few exceptional cases.

  But, overall, if you are very familiar with how XCOPY works, there

  will be very little surprise for you.



  Let us just take a look at the full list of XXCOPY switches with

  a terse comment on each.  For most switches, full explanation will

  be given later.



      for Command Line Syntax                          XXTB #25

      for Command Reference Alphabetic Listing         XXTB #26

      for Command Reference Functional Classification  XXTB #27

      for The Wild-Wild-Source Specifier               XXTB #28





  -----  The following switches use file attributes to select files -----



         /A  Same as /ATA. Copies only files with the archive attribute set.

             Doesn't change the attribute.

         /M  Copies only files with the archive attribute set.

             Turns off the archive attribute.

  /AT<mask>  Selects files by the attribute bits (AHSR).

             You may use two or more /AT<mask> switches to specify multiple

             attributes required.  E.g., /ATA/ATH qualifies files with both

             the A(rchive) bit and the H(idden) bits.

             Or, you may use one /AT<mask> switch with multiple letters to

             select alternative attribute bits to select files.  E.g.,

             /ATAH qualifies a file which has either A-bit, H-bit or both.

  /AX<mask>  Excludes files with the specified attribute bits (AHSR).

             You may use two or more /AX<mask> switches to specify

             attribute bits to exclude files for file operations.  E.g.,

             /AXA/AXH excludes files with A-bit, H-bit, or both.

             Or, you may use one /AX<mask> switch with multiple letters to

             exclude files with only the specified combination of attribute

             bits.  E.g., /AXAH excludes files with both A-bit and H-bit.



      Note:  The /AT<mask> and /AX<mask> switches have opposite conjugation

             rules (the effects of combining attribute bits --- AND and OR).



        /A0  Cancels *ALL* /A, /M, /AT, and /AX switches.



  -----  The following switches modify the file attributes -----



        /AA  Sets   the src file archive bit (without actually copying).

        /AZ  Clears the src file archive bit (without actually copying).

             Note: Both /AA and /AZ implicitly set /H (can be overridden).

        /AC  Copies specified files irrespective of the archive attribute.

             Turns off the archive attribute after XXCOPY is done.

  /AN<mask>  Sets a new value to file attribute bits (replace the value).

             The <mask> value is a combination of letters, ASHR.

  /AR<mask>  Resets file attribute bits (clears specified bits).

  /AS<mask>  Sets file attribute bits (sets specified bits).

      

      Note:  The <mask> value for /AR and /AS specifies attributes (AHSR)

             whose bits are either reset or set respectively to the existing

             file attributes. Unspecified attributes bits are kept unchanged.

      

      Note:  The /AA, /AN, /AR, /AS and /AZ switches modify the file

             attributes without copying the files to the destination,

             whereas the /A, /AT and /AX switches select files by the file

             attributes for various operations (copy, list, remove, etc.).



  -----  The following switches use other file attribute bits -----



         /H  Copies hidden and/or system files also.

        /H0  Excludes hidden and/or system files (default).

        /Ho  Copies hidden and/or system files only.

         /R  Overwrites read-only files.

        /K0  Keeps the source attributes except read-only (default).

         /K  Keeps the source attributes including read-only (same as /KS).

        /KS  Keeps the source attributes including the read-only bit.

        /KD  Keeps the attributes of destination (overwritten) file.

        /KN  Sets the destination attributes to normal (only /A).



            (File attributes are discussed in XXTB #06)



  -----  The following switches are useful for backup and archive -----



        /BI  Backs up incrementally, different (by time/size) files only.

        /BB  Backs up brand new files only (does not overwrite existing ones).

        /BN  Backs up newer files only      (includes brand new files).

        /Bo  Backs up older files only      (includes brand new files).

        /BX  Backs up different-date files  (includes brand new files).

        /BZ  Same as /BZX.

       /BZE  Backs up equal-size  files  (includes brand new files).

       /BZL  Backs up larger-size files  (includes brand new files).

       /BZS  Backs up smaller-size files (includes brand new files).

       /BZX  Backs up different-size files  (includes brand new files).

        /BE  Backs up exactly the same files(includes brand new files).

        /BS  Selects exactly the same files (this is useful with /RS).

        /BU  Standard Backup switch (same as /r/i/bi/q/c/h/e/v/y).

        /B0  Undo any of /BI, /BB, /BN, /Bo, /BX, or /BZ switches.

         /U  Updates the files that already exist in destination.



             Note: A "brand new" file refers to a file which exists in the

                   source directory but not in the destination directory

                   (Micrososoft's Robocopy call it a "lonely file").



        /SP  Spans the copy job over multiple destination (new volume).



             Note: /SP cannot be used with switches which reference the

                   destination for file selection --- that is, the /Bxx

                   (backup) switches, and /U will be disabled by /SP.

                   That is, the spanning of the destination volume by /SP

                   assumes the backup operation is a full backup without

                   referencing the files already on the destination.



  -----  The following switch adds inclusive alternate templates -----



  /IN<tmpl>  Includes an alternate filename template (tmpl).

             

             You may specify as many alternate filename patterns as you want.

             The template must be for the "Lastname" of the source specifier

             (no backslash in the template, but wildcard characters are OK).



  -----  The following switches exclude directories or files -----



  /X<xspec>  Adds an exclusion specifier (xspec) (see below for exclusion).

 /EX<xlist>  Specifies a text file which contains a list of xspecs (see below).

     

    <xspec>  Exclusion item for /X and the file contents specified by /EX.



             . The text file may contain an arbitrary number of xspecs which

               are separated by space, tab, or newline characters.

             . An xspec with embedded spaces must be surrounded by a pair

               of double-quote characters(").

             . An xspec cannot span from one line to another.

             . Two consecutive colons (::) or slashes (//) start a comment

               field which ends at the end of the line.

             . You may specify more than 1 exclusion file.  In such a

               case all of the exclusion files will be processed.



             Exclusion specifier (xspec) syntax (consists of up to 3 parts):



               for file,  [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ] [ ftemplate ]

               for dir,   [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ] [ dtemplate ]



               dir_spec   is always followed by a backslash (\).  It specifies

                          a directory (or directories with wildcard) which

                          are relative to the source directory unless it

                          starts with a \.  A wildcard specifier is allowed

                          only in the last element of dir_spec.



               *\         This second part specifies that the exclusion

                          applies to all subdirectories under dir_spec.



               ftemplate  File_template, must not contain backslash (\).

                          It may contain wildcard characters (* and/or ?).



               dtemplate  Directory_template, the template must be terminated

                          by one of the following four ending (three types)



                            dirname\*\*   full directory

                            dirname\      full directory (same as dirname\*\*)

                            dirname\*     partial directory, files only

                            dirname\?\*   partial directory, subdirs only



                          The dirname part may have wildcards (* and/or ?).



             Any of the three parts can be omitted.



             There are 11 classes in xspecs as follows.



                                D dir_spec\ftmpl       H dir_spec\*\ftmpl

               A dir_spec\*     E dir_spec\dtmpl\*     I dir_spec\*\dtmpl\*

               B dir_spec\?\*   F dir_spec\dtmpl\?\*   J dir_spec\*\dtmpl\?\*

               C dir_spec\*\*   G dir_spec\dtmpl\*\*   K dir_spec\*\dtmpl\*\*



             If dir_spec is omitted, the file_template applies to all subdirs.

             XXCOPY optimizes the exclusion parameter by eliminating

             some redundant specifiers.

             Use "/W/oX" with xspec to test the syntax.



             See XXTB #05  (The Exclusion specifier).



  -----  The following switches limit files by the filetime -----



         /D  Same as /DA.

        /DA  Copies newer files and brand new files.

        /DB  Copies older files and brand new files.

        /DS  Copies only the files whose filetime is exactly the same.

        /DX  Copies only the files whose filetime is different in any way.



      Note:  All filetime comparisons are affected by the fuzzy range (/FF).



  /D:<date>  Same as /DA:<date>.

 /DA:<date>  Copies files that were changed on or after the specified date.

 /DB:<date>  Copies files that were changed on or before the specified date.

 /Do:<date>  Copies files that were changed on the specified date.

    /DA#<n>  Copies files that were changed on or after  <n> days ago.

    /DB#<n>  Copies files that were changed on or before <n> days ago.

    /Do#<n>  Copies files that were changed on the day   <n> days ago.



      Note:  A "brand new" file refers to a file which exists in the

             source directory but not in the destination directory

             (Micrososoft's Robocopy call it a "lonely file").



      Note:  With /DA#<val>, /DB#<val> and /Do#<val>, the parameter <val> will

             be treated as the number of Days unless it is appended with a

             one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S which stand for Days, Hours,

             Minutes, or Seconds, respectively).  When <val> is given in

             the number of days, the exact time is midnight of the day.



             e.g., /DA#0 denotes files made some time today after midnight.

                   /Do#2 means all day the day before yesterday.

                   /DA#30m selects files made within the last 30 minutes.

      

      /DA:.  Copies files that were changed today or later (same as /DA#0).

      /DB:.  Copies files that were changed yesterday or earlier.

      /Do:.  Copies files that were changed today only.



             /DA:<val> and /DB:<val> work as a pair if both are specified.



             e.g., /DA:1997-01-01 /DB:1997-12-31  files made in 1997

                   /DA:1997-04-01 /DB:1997-04-30  files made in April 1997

                   /DB:1997-03-31 /DA:1997-05-01  exclude files made in April

                   /DA:1997-01-01 /DB:1997-01-01  try the shorter /Do:1997-01-01



             Since the US and European conventions are not reconcilable,

             we recommend the ISO 8601 standard (YYYY-MM-DD) with a 4-digit

             year value followed by month and day.  If all values have

             2 digits only, it is interpreted according to the system setting.

             A file date must be between 1970-01-01 and 2069-12-31.



             A partial date specifier is accepted for /DA:, /DB: and /Do:

             where yyyy-mm and yyyy denote the month and year respectively.

             E.g., /Do:2000-2 is equivalent to /DA:2000-2-1 /DB:2000-2-29,

             and /DB:1999 to /DB:1999-12-31, and /DA:2000 to /DA:2000-1-1.



 /DA:<time>  Same as /DA:<date> except an additional time value may be added.

 /DB:<time>  Same as /DB:<date> except an additional time value may be added.



             The <time> parameter starts with the <date> (as shown above)

             followed by 'T' or '@' and hh:mm:ss, hh:mm, or hh.



       e.g., 2002-10-25T15:25:30  (recommended as ISO 8601 std)

             31-10-2002@13:00   10-31-2002@13 (min and sec may be omitted)

             (/D0:<date> cannot be specified with the <time> value).



      Note:  /DA, /DB, /DX, /DS, /Do, /DA:<date> and /DB:<date> are mutually

             exclusive (except /DA:<date> and /DB:<date> work as a pair).



      Note:  /DA and /DB, if date is omitted, are the same as /BN and /Bo,

             respectively, except that /DA and /DB can be combined with another

             /Bxx switch (e.g., /BI) where as /BN and /Bo cannot (in the same group).



      Note:  /DA, /DB, /DX and /DS compare source and destination files using

             both date and time whereas /DA:<date> and /DA#<n> use date only.



        /D0  Cancels all file-date related (/D...) switches.



  -----  The following switches modify filetime semantics -----



        /FW  Uses the Last-Write timestamp for the Filetime comparison (default).

        /FA  Uses the Last-Access timestamp for the Filetime comparison.

        /FC  Uses the Creation timestamp for the Filetime comparison.



             Note: /FW, /FA and /FC are mutually exclusive choices.



        /FL  Filetime in Local time (default).

        /FU  Filetime in UTC(Universal Coordinated Time - same as GMT).



             Note: /FL and /FU are mutually exclusive choices.



      Note:  The word "Filetime" (or sometimes, "Filedate") is used

             in the context of comparing the time value associated

             with a file against another time value (e.g., in /DA, /BN)

             and XXCOPY uses only one of the three timestamps that

             are attached to a file (by the /FW, /FA or /FC switch). 

             

        /FF  Fuzzy Filetime (same as /FF2S --- matches within 2 sec).

       /FF0  Fuzzy Filetime cancelled (adjustment value set to +/- 0).

   /FF<val>  Fuzzy Filetime, adjust ref time +/- <val> seconds.

  /FF+<val>  Fuzzy Filetime, adjust ref time by adding <val> seconds.

  /FF-<val>  Fuzzy Filetime, adjust ref time by subtracting <val> seconds.



      Note:  With /FF<val>, /FF+<val> and /FF-<val>, the parameter <val> will

             be treated as the number of seconds unless it is appended with a

             one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S which stand for Days Hours,

             Minutes, or Seconds, respectively).

             

             e.g., /FF     treats file times within +/- 2 sec as the same.

                   /FF-1H  treats files older by up to 1 hour as the same.

                   /FF+2/FF-4 (you may choose asymmetric slack values).



       Note: The /FF switch affects all filetime comparisons such as /CLONE,

             /BI, /BU, /BS, /BX, /BO, /BN, /DA, /DB, /DS, /DX, /TS, and /TD.



       Note: The FAT (DOS/Win9x) file system has a 2-second granularity in

             file time whereas NTFS, Unix and other file systems use finer

             time stamps.  The /FF switch is useful for incremental backup

             between volumes of different file systems.



        /FT  Legacy switch; replaced by /FF+2.

        /FR  Legacy switch; replaced by /FF-2.



  -----  The following switches cope with time zones -----



    /TS+<n>  Adds an offset (Hr) to the time of source (and the copied ) file.

    /TS-<n>  Subtracts an offset (Hr) from source (and the copied) file.

    /TD+<n>  Adds an offset (Hr) to the time of the destination file.

    /TD-<n>  Subtracts an offset (Hr) from the dst file for comparison.



      Note:  The offset value <n> for /TS and /TD is specified in hours

             unless it is appended with a one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S

             which stand for Days, Hours, Minutes, or Seconds respectively).



  -----  The following switches control timestamps -----



       /TTA  Touches (modifies) timestamp of Last Access of src.

      /TTA0  Preserves timestamp of Last Access of src (default).



       /TCA  Copies the timestamp of Last Access fm src to dst.

      /TCA0  Uses current time for dst Last Access (default).



       /TCC  Copies the timestamp of Create Time fm src to dst.

      /TCC0  Uses current time for dst Create time (default).



       /TCW  Copies the Last Write time fm src to dst (default).

      /TCW0  Uses current time for dst Last Write time.



  -----  The following switches qualify the source by file size -----



/SZ:<n>-<m>  Copies a file whose size is between n bytes and m bytes.

   /SZ:<n>-  Copies a file whose size is equal to or greater than n bytes.

   /SZ:-<m>  Copies a file whose size is equal to or less than m bytes.

   /SZ:<n>   Copies a file whose size is exactly n bytes.

/SZ!<n>-<m>  Copies a file whose size is NOT between n bytes and m bytes.

   /SZ!<n>-  Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to or greater than n bytes.

   /SZ!-<m>  Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to or less than m bytes.

    /SZ!<n>  Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to n bytes.

      /SZ:-  Disables size-based selection (/SZ!- also works).



      Note:  The size values <n> and <m> are entered in bytes unless appended

             with a suffix letter (K, M, or G which stands for metric kilo

             (x1000), mega (x1000000), or giga (x1000000000) respectively).



     /SZ<n>  Legacy switch; replaced by /TR<n>.



  -----  The following switch limits the destination file size -----



     /TR<n>  Truncates the new file to (copies the first) n bytes.



      Note:  The TR<n> switch replaces the legacy SZ<n> switch.



  -----  The following switches deal with subdirectories -----



         /S  Copies directories and subdirectories except empty ones.

         /E  Copies directories and subdirectories, including empty ones.

             Same as /S /E.

         /T  Creates directory structure, but does not copy files.  It copies

             all directories including empty ones (implicitly sets /E).



        /SG  Same as /SGN (see variations in handling duplicates below).

       /SGF  Gathers files into one-level directory (unsorted First file 1st).

       /SGN  Gathers files into one-level directory (sorted, Newest file 1st).

       /SGo  Gathers files into one-level directory (sorted, Oldest file 1st).

      /SGFo  Gathers files into one-level directory (First  only).

      /SGNo  Gathers files into one-level directory (Newest only).

      /SGoo  Gathers files into one-level directory (Oldest only).

       /SG0  Cancels file-gather switches (/SG...).

        /SL  Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Left   (see below).

        /SX  Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Middle (see below).

        /SR  Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Right  (see below).

             /SL, /SX, and /SR are the same as /S except the output files

             will be saved as a flat directory without adding levels of

             subdirectories.  The source subdirectory name will become a

             part of the target filename.  /SL and /SR add the subdir name

             to the left or right of the name respectively.

             /SX inserts the subdirectory name in the middle.

       /SLR  Rebuilds flattened directory (path to the left).

       /SXR  Rebuilds flattened directory (path in the middle).

       /SRR  Rebuilds flattened directory (path to the right).

             /SLR /SXR, and /SRR do opposite of /SL, /SX and /SR respectively.

      /S<d>  Sets the directory delimiter character for /SL, /SX and /SR,

             where <d> is any legal non-alphabetic, non-blank character.

             The default delimiter is back-apostrophe (`).

     /DL<n>  Limits processing of directory nesting to n levels.

             /DL0 removes the limit.  /DL works only when /S or /E is set.



  -----  The following switches check the destination directory -----



         /I  If destination does not exist and copying more than one file,

             assumes that destination must be a directory (no prompting).

             Note: when the destination specifier ends with a backslash,

             it declares as a directory which implicitly sets the /I switch.

        /IA  Continues if destination is absent (terminates if exists).

  /IA<item>  Continues if the specified item (file/directory) is absent.

        /IP  Continues if destination is present (terminates if absent).

  /IP<item>  Continues if the specified item (file/directory) is present.

/ILD<label>  Continues if the destination volume label matches as specified.

/ILS<label>  Continues if the source volume label matches as specified.



         /Z  Deletes extra files or subdirectories in destination.

        /ZY  Same as /Z except there is no confirmation prompt.



  -----  The following switches control the prompting behaviors -----



         /P  Prompts you before creating each destination file.

        /PC  Prompts you before creating new files.

       /PC0  Suppresses warning on file-creation.

        /PD  Prompts you before starting each directory with options for...

             Y (Yes), N (No), A (All), R (Remaining dirs), S (This & subdirs).

        /PN  Prompts when on excessive failures on /NX operations.

       /PN0  Suppresses prompts on excessive failures of /NX operatoins.

        /Po  Prompts you before overwriting existing files (default).

       /Po0  Suppresses warning on file-overwrite (Legacy /Y).

        /PZ  Prompts you for confirmation of the dst (for /CLONE /Z /ZY).



         /W  Same as /WS.

        /WS  Prompts you to press a key at the start of copying.

     /WS<n>  Waits at the start of operation for a specified period (n sec).

        /WE  Prompts you to press a key at the end of copying.

     /WE<n>  Waits at the end of the operation for a specified period (n sec).

       /WD0  Suppresses warning for copying a non-directory source.

        /WD  Prompts with a warning for copying a non-directory src (default).

       /WV0  Suppresses warning for an untested OS environment.

        /WV  Prompts with a warning for an untested OS environment (default).



         /C  Continues copying even if errors occur (default).

        /C0  Disables the /C switch (terminates upon error).

        /CB  Continues batch file if XXCOPY ended OK last time.

       /CBQ  Same as /CB except suppresses console output to end immediately.

       /CB0  Cancels the /CB and /CBQ switches.

        /CE  Same as /CBQ/EC (most useful in batch file with @echo off).

     /CR<n>  Sets the retry period (n seconds, default = 3) on failed copy.



         /Y  Overwrites existing files without prompting (See /BB).

        /-Y  Prompts you before overwriting existing files.

        /Y0  Same as above (/-Y).

        /YY  Suppresses ALL prompts unconditionally (good in a batch script).



  -----  The following switches control Remove (file delete) -----



        /RC  Removes files in src after a successful copy (equivalent to move)

        /RS  Removes files in src which qualify (no copying).

        /RD  Removes files in dst which qualify to be overwritten (no copying)

        /RX  Removes files in dst which are absent in src (no copying).

        /R0  Undo any of /RC, /RS, RD, or /RX switches.

       /RCP  Prompts on source-file-remove after successful copy (default).

       /RCY  Suppresses prompts after a successful source-file-remove.



      Note:  Whereas /Y and /-Y modify prompting for the copy action

             of /RC (Remove after Copy) switch, the suffix 'P' or 'Y' controls

             the prompt for the file remove action after copy.



      Note:  The suffix 'P' or 'Y' can also be added to any of /RS, /RD,

             or /RX switches which will insert or suppress respective prompt.

             For these remove-without-copy switches, the /Y and /-Y switches

             also control the prompt for the remove action.



      Note:  /RX can be thought of a /Z operation without copying files.";

             In general, the /RS/BB combination (by swapping src and dst)";

             provides more file-selection controls than the /RX switch.";



      Note:  /PD and /PD0 control additional prompt on each directory.



     /RMDIR  Removes a directory Same as /RS/S/H/R/PD0/ED0.





  -----  The following switches control empty directories -----



       /ED0  Deletes an empty directory (default)

        /ED  Preserves the directory even if it becomes empty.

     /ED<n>  Preserves n levels of empty directories.



      Note:  These switches are in effect only with file/directory removal

             operations (/Z, /RC, /RS, /RD, /RX, and /CLONE cases).



  -----  The following switches control cyclic directory copy -----



       /CC0  Disallows cyclic copy (src includes the dst directory) (default).

        /CC  Warns a cyclic copy with a Y/N prompt.

       /CCY  Allows a cyclic copy by excluding the destination from the src.



  -----  Filename pattern matching  -----



         /N  Uses the short (8.3) name for name matching, and creation.

        /N0  Disables /N and /NP (default, uses longname when applicable).

        /NP  Uses precise name matching (ignores match in alias).

       /NP0  Uses loose name matching (default, longname or shortname match).

        /NX  Preserves the shortname when the file is copied.

       /NX0  Disables the /NX (shortname preservation) feature.



             Note: /N, /NP, and /N0 are mutually exclusive.



             Note: If src and dst are both local drive, the shortname will be

                   preserved (/NX) by default, but if either src or dst is

                   specified by a UNC (starts with \\), /NX0 is default.



        /NL  Renames longname to match the source (No copy operations).

        /NS  Renames shortname to match the source (No copy operations).

       /NC0  Disables /NCL, /NCU, or /NCX (accepts letters of both cases).

       /NCU  Uses Uppercase-only name when a new file is created.

       /NCL  Uses Lowercase-only name when a new file is created.

       /NCX  Uses Uppercase-only name when a new short-name file is created.

        /NW  Uses the new (Win32) wildcard matching scheme.

        /ND  Uses the old (DOS) wildcard matching scheme.



             Note: /ND and /NW are mutually exclusive choices.



  -----  The following switches terminate when a quota is met ----



        /QF  Quits when the quota for the file count has been reached.

       /QBL  Quits before the byte count exceeds the limit (same as /QB).

       /QBT  Quits when the total byte count reaches the trigger point.

       /QSL  Quits before the space dips below the limit (same as /QS).

       /QST  Quits when the remaining space reaches the trigger point.



  -----  Miscellaneous switches -----



        /NI  Becomes nice to other tasks by idling (1000 msec) between actions.

     /NI<n>  Same as /NI.  Specifies n msec as the idle time (0 to disable it).

 /CF<fname>  Specifies a Command File whose contents are treated as if

             they were entered at the position it appear in the command line.

             The Command File is a text file which may have multple lines.

         //  Starts a comment field.  The rest of the line will be ignored.

         ::  Starts a comment field.  The rest of the line will be ignored.



         /1  DATMAN One-pass copy (when copying from DATMAN tape, default).

         /0  Disables DATMAN One-pass copy (not recommended, but allowed).

         /V  Verifies after copy default (same as /V1).

        /V1  Verifies after copy (quick test --- file size match).

        /V2  Verifies after copy byte-by-byte check (DATMAN 2-pass).

        /V0  Disables verify switch (canceling /V, /V1, or /V2).

        /VE  Displays only error cases of DATMAN 2-pass verify (/V2).

        /ER  Emulates XCOPY's exit code (for ERRORLEVEL check in batch files).



     /CLONE  Duplicates a directory (volume).  This switch is a shortcut of

             the following combination: /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY/ZE/oD0.



        /CK  Checks remaining space before copy (default).

       /CK0  Disables the pre-check of remaining space before copy.



  -----  The following switches control the progress bars -----



        /PB  Shows Progress bar for the job (default file progress >= 1M).

     /PB<n>  Shows Progress bar for the job and another Progress bar for a

             single-file progress with file length greater than <n>, which is

             specified in bytes (or with a suffix, K, M or G) (default: 1M).



  -----  The following switches control List output -----



         /L  Same as /LLZ which performs the list operation (no file copy).

  /L<items>  Customizes the format for List operation (no file copy).

             <items> is a string of one or more of the following letters

                     which selects the combination and the output order.



                D   file date

                T   file time

                Z   file size in bytes

                A   file attributes: A(rchive),H(idden),S(system),R(eadonly)

                S   short name (8.3)

                L   long name with full directory path



             Note: When S and L are both missing, L is used by default.



             Note: The format specified by /FM<items> will be used if /L

                   is not followed by its parameter.



     /LTREE  Lists directory tree (without copy or making directories).



             Note: with /LTREE, the /DA/DB/Do parameters apply on dir time.



         /F  Displays full source and destination file names while copying.

 /Fo<fname>  Displays full source and file names and also saves into a file.

       /FM0  Cancels the /FM<items> parameter previously set.

 /FM<items>  Specifies the output line format for /L and or /Fo output.

             <items> is a string of one or more of the following letters

                     which selects the combination and the output order.



                D   file date

                T   file time

                Z   file size in bytes

                A   file attributes: A(rchive),H(idden),S(system),R(eadonly)

                S   short name (8.3)

                L   long name with full directory path



             Note: When S and L are both missing, L is used by default.



             Note: /L/FM<items> can be combined into a /L<items> switch.



  -----  Miscellaneous switches -----



   /MD<dir>  Makes directory before other actions (even with /L).



             Tip: make a date-encoded directory with a macro reference.

                  e.g.,  /MDc:\Bkup/$DATE$ (even good for log files).



  -----  The following switches control Security Information -----



        /SC  Same as /SC3 (copies security info).

       /SC0  Cancels the /SC or /SF switch (no security info copied).

       /SC1  Copies security info (Permissions only) when a file is copied.

       /SC2  Copies security info (Auditing only)    when a file is copied.

       /SC3  Copies security info (both Perm, Audit) when a file is copied.

        /SF  Same as /SF3 (fixes up security info)

       /SF0  Cancels the /SC or /SF switch (equivalent to /SC0).

       /SF1  Fixes up security info (Permissions only) (no file copy).

       /SF2  Fixes up security info (Auditing only)    (no file copy).

       /SF3  Fixes up security info (both Perm, Audit) (no file copy).



      Note:  /SC and /SF work only when src and dst are both NTFS.



  -----  The following switches control file-write cache -----



        /CA  Enables all cache.  Same as /CA7 (default).

       /CA0  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = OFF

       /CA1  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = ON

       /CA2  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = OFF

       /CA3  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = ON

       /CA4  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = OFF

       /CA5  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = ON

       /CA6  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = OFF

       /CA7  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = ON



        /CL  Legacy switch, replaced by /CA



  -----  The following switches control the console output -----



        /EC  Echoes the entire command line (after macro processing).

        /Q0  Displays all file names.

         /Q  Same as /Q1.  Does not display files which are skipped.

        /Q1  Does not display files which are skipped.

        /Q2  Does not display directories which are excluded.

        /Q3  Does not display file and directory names while copying.

        /ZS  Disables the sign-on message and statistics output.



  -----  The following switches control the log output -----



 /oA<fname>  Appends to a logfile, reporting errors. (does not overwrite log).

 /oN<fname>  Outputs a new logfile, reporting errors (make a new log) file.

        /o0  Cancels the /oN or /oA switch specified earlier.



      The screen and the log file output can be fine tuned by the followng:



     /oP<n>  Parameter (command switch detailed) list.

     /oI<n>  Include item (alternate file template) list. 

     /oX<n>  Exclude item list.

     /oF<n>  File list (files which were successfully operated).

     /oS<n>  Skipped file list (with the reason why skipped).

     /oD<n>  Deleted file list (by a /Z or /ZY switch).

     /oE<n>  Error summary with the system error code



      These items can be controlled by the suffix <n> value, 0-3.



             0: No output

             1: Screen only

             2: Log file only

             3: Screen and Log file both



      Note:  It is advised that the log file created by /oA or /oN to be

             free from the names of successfully copied files that would

             overshadow relatively infrequent lines of error and warning.

             Instead, use the /Fo switch to create a separate file for a

             list of successfully copied files.    



     /DEBUG  Shows the command parameters and prompts you to start.

    /DEBUGX  Shows the command parameters and exits.

      /HELP  Shows the switches in detail (print this output).

   /HELP /X  Shows Partial Help (switches starting with letter X).

     /HELPA  Shows the /HELP listing in alphabetical order.

     /HELPE  Lists the Exit codes (ERRORLEVEL values) returned by XXCOPY.

         /?  Shows a summary of the switches on one page.

     ... /?  Shows related switches when entered with other switches.



      Note:  All XXCOPY command switches are case-insensitive.

             The alphabet, O, is spelled in lower-case (o) in this page to

             help distinguish it from the numeric zero (0).



      Note:  Virtually all of the switches can be disabled by adding 0 (zero)

             at the end (e.g., /A and /A0).  Due to the space limitation and

             their redundant nature, only some of these cases are listed in

             the help text.



  -----  Pre-defined macros to embed current date and time ----



    /$xxxx$  Pre-defined macros for current date and time which may appear

             anywhere in the command argument and other XXCOPY parameters.

             Examples below are for the current time, Dec 25, 2002 13:15:30

    /$DATE$  Expands to month and date (equivalent to /$MMDD$) --> "1225".

    /$TIME$  Expands to hour and minutes (equiv. /$HHNN$) --> "1315".

  /$YYMMDD$  Expands to 2-digit year month day --> "021225".

 /$YYYY-MM$  Expands to 4-digit year month --> "2002-12".

  /$YY-M-D$  Expands to 2-digityear-mo-dy (mo and dy without leading zero).

  /$HHNNSS$  Expands to hour minutes second --> "131530".

  /$MON-DD$  Expands to month day --> "DEC-25".

/$II-IWK-K$  Expands to the ISO 8601 year-week --> "02-W52-3".



       /TM0  Cancels the time offset set by /TM+ or /TM-.

    /TM+<n>  Adds an offset to the current time of macro reference.

    /TM-<n>  Subtracts an offset to the current time of macro reference.



      Note:  The offset value <n> for /TM+ and /TM- is specified in days

             unless it is appended with a one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S

             which stand for Days, Hours, Minutes, or Seconds respectively).



  -----  Environment Variables in XXCOPY command files ----



    /%xxxx%  Environment variable (E-Var) reference in command files

             (/CF and /EX).  Like the macro reference counterpart,

             the string value which correspoinds to an E-Var can be

             brought in the command line text using the /%xxxx% syntax.

             Note that this syntax should be used only inside the

             external file text for XXCOPY (/CF and /EX) which cannot

             be processed by the OS's command processor.  That is, in

             the regular command line, the E-Var reference is already

             supported (without a leading slash as the prefix).



  -----  Installation of XXCOPY ----



   /INSTALL  Installs the XXCOPY software package on your computer.

   /INSTALL:<dir>   Installs XXCOPY at user-specified directory.

 /UNINSTALL  Uninstalls XXCOPY from your computer.

   /LICENSE  Displays the XXCOPY license status on your computer.

     /HOSTS  Displays the names of remote hosts accessed by XXCOPY.



  -----  The following switches are DATMAN specific -----



             DATMAN is a revolutionary tape control software also published

             by Pixelab, Inc.  It makes a tape drive behave almost like a disk.

         /J  Forces DATMAN catalog (journal) flush.

        /J0  Suppresses DATMAN's automatic catalog (journal) flush.

        /J1  Flushes DATMAN catalog when needed (default).

        /J2  Flushes DATMAN catalog unconditionally at the end.

      /G<n>  Sets DATMAN N-Group (redundant) write. (<n> : 0 - 7).

             e.g., /G1 writes the same data twice on DATMAN tape.



  -----  Environment variables that affect XXCOPY-----



    COPYCMD  Specifies file-overwrite prompting.

             /Y  suppresses the prompt (always overwrite)

             /-y prompts you for a Yes/No/All option for a file overwrite

             (This feature is for the COPY/XCOPY compatibility.)

     XXCOPY  Specifies XXCOPY's command argument.  This argument string

             is evaluated first and therefore the user-typed command line

             can override it.  The syntax is the same as regular argument.

    XXCOPYX  Specifies a list of exclusion specifiers (xspec).

             Do not use switch prefix (/X). See the /X switch for details.



        /ZE  Disables the use of all Environment Variables for XXCOPY.

        /ZX  Disables the use of the Environment Variable XXCOPYX.

       /ZX0  Enables the XXCOPYX settings.  Good for /CLONE and /RMDIR.



             The shortcut /CLONE and /RMDIR contain /ZE as a component.

             e.g., /CLONE/ZX0 allows the use of XXCOPYX settings.





Summary   XXCOPY switches that check two directories:      ------- 

                                                          /  src  \

     Files are classified into four groups;               |    ---+---

    ---------------------------------------------         | A / B |   \

     A    files in src which do not exist in dst          |   |   |   |

     B    files in src which also   exist in dst          \   | C / D |

     C    files in dst which also   exist in src           ---+---    |

     D    files in dst which do not exist in src              \  dst  /

                                                               -------

 /BB   all files in A       (none in B)

 /BI   all files in A plus  files in B that are different in filetime or size

 /BX   all files in A plus  files in B that are different in filetime

 /BZX  all files in A plus  files in B that are different in size

 /BZL  all files in A plus  files in B that are larger

 /BZS  all files in A plus  files in B that are smaller

 /BZE  all files in A plus  files in B that are the same size

 /BN   all files in A plus  files in B that have newer filetime

 /Bo   all files in A plus  files in B that have older filetime

 /BE   all files in A plus  files in B that have exactly the same time and size

 /BS       (none in A)      files in B that have exactly the same time and size

 /U        (none in A)  all files in B (subject to other switches)

 /U/BI     (none in A)      files in B that are different in filetime or size



 Note:  all the variations in the backup switches (/Bx) include the files in A

        with the exception of /BS to be consistent with the spirit of BACKUP.

        As shown in the example (/U/BI), adding /U eliminates the files in A.



 /RS    files in A and/or B that satisfy other specified switches (for remove).

 /RC    same as /RS (for remove-after-copy).

 /RD        (none in D)     files in C that would be overwritten (for remove).

 /RX                    all files in D (for remove).



 Note:  /BS for copy usually accomplishes nothing but is useful as /RS/BS.



 = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =





Source Specifier:



  XXCOPY's first argument (without regard to command switches) is

  the source specifier.  The source specifier is usually a path

  specifier for the source.  But, for XXCOPY (as well as for XCOPY),

  the source specifier may contain the "Base" directory and an

  optional file pattern specification whose subtleties are not fully

  appreciated by many XXCOPY users.



  The source specifier has three parts:



     [ volume_spec ] [ base_dir ] [ pattern ]



  Example (the destination specifier is omitted here):



     xxcopy    c:\mydir\*.doc

     xxcopy   "c:\program files\mydir\myfile.doc"

     xxcopy    \\myserver\drivec\config.sys



  Here, the three parts in the source specifiers are quite obvious.  In

  the second example, the double-quotes (") make XXCOPY to treat the

  entire command argument as one source specifier.  Without the double-

  quotes, the embedded space character would make it two parameters



    volume_spec



      In most cases, the volume spec is a drive letter followed by a

      colon (e.g., C: ).  But, it can be a universal naming convention

      (UNC) string for a volume in a network (e.g., \\myserver\drivec ).

      If you omit volume_spec, the current drive is assumed.



    base_dir



      The name of the source directory.  When the XXCOPY command

      contains the subdirectory switch (/S and/or /E), the base_dir

      specifier denotes the starting directory where the source

      files and subdirectories are located.  The base_dir part

      must not contain wild card characters.



    pattern



      The last part within the source specifier denotes the pattern

      matching string which may contain wildcard characters (* or ?).

      It matches only the last components within a full filename.



  You may omit any of the three parts, but you may need something

  as the source specifier as the space holder so that you can specify

  the destination specifier as the second non-switch argument.  In

  this case, you may use "." which denotes the current directory

  as the source.



  When you omit either the base_dir part or the pattern part,

  that is, when a source specifier without a backslash separating the

  two parts, the exact meaning of the command become ambiguous.

  We will discuss the source specifier ambiguity in a later

  article.



Destination Specifier:



  The destination specifier has two parts:



     [ volume_spec ] [ dest_dir ]



    volume_spec



      As for the source specifier case, the destination may contain

      a volume specifier (e.g.,  C: ).  If it is omitted, the volume

      of the current directory will be used.



    dest_dir



      The name of the destination directory.  Here, the destination

      must be a directory name (which may or may not yet exist

      in the destination volume).  Unlike the original COPY command,

      you are not allowed to specify wildcard characters in the

      destination specifier which would be conveniently used to

      perform renaming action while copying the files.



      XXCOPY does not rename files while they are copied. therefore,

      no wildcard characters have no place in dest_dir.



  Unlike the source specifier counterpart, the destination specifier

  consists of only two parts both of which are optional.  When you

  omit both of them, then the command line would have no explicit

  argument as the destination specifier.  Don't worry, the current

  directory will be used as the default destination directory.  Or,

  you may just type "." which denotes the current directory explicitly.





Prefix and Delimiters:



  Earlier versions of XXCOPY switch used to accept either a slash (/)

  or a hyphen (-) followed by at least one letter or digit.  That was

  started with the DOS version (XXCOPY16.EXE) which did not have to

  resolve the hyphen character from filename before the long name

  was introduced.   However, due to the fact that the hyphen is now

  a legal character in Win32's long filename, this practice had to

  be abandoned.  It became clear lately that the over all price to

  pay in the twisted syntax rules to support of the Unix-like switch

  prefix has become too high for the now-questionable "benefit".



  Usually, command line parameters are separated by blanks. However,

  you may safely combine switches without separating blanks for the

  command switches (e.g., /s/t/u/v).  However, you must separate

  the source and the destination specifiers by blanks.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #02




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: What are the differences between XCOPY and XXCOPY?

Date:    2000-11-30 (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction:



  When we designed XXCOPY, one of the key design principles was to

  keep the command syntax and the behavior of XXCOPY as close to

  those of the original XCOPY program.  Although we did not agree

  with all the idiosyncrasies of XCOPY, modifying anything XCOPY

  already implements would cause substantial confusion to the users.

  If we change things arbitrarily, any incremental improvements we

  may add would be more than offset by the burden of remembering

  the specifics of changes we make.  That would not benefit anyone.



  Therefore, the changes we added to XXCOPY on purpose are kept to

  the absolute minimum.  The changes we made are those with

  substantial benefits to the users.



The key arguments, source and destination:



  Like XCOPY's predecessor, the built-in COPY command of COMMAND.COM,

  XXCOPY has two basic arguments without counting any other switches.



    XXCOPY source  [ destination ]



  Here, the semantics of the first argument (source) are almost the

  same as the first argument of the traditional XCOPY command.  It

  is the source file/directory specifier, which is a combination of

  the source directory and optional filename pattern specifier.

  To be precise, this combination of directory specification with

  the filename pattern connected by a backslash does not conform

  to a regular so-called pathname specifications. (We will discuss

  the exact definition of the source specifier in another Technical

  Bulletin article in full detail.)  Just remember that the source

  specifier is pretty much the same as that of XCOPY.



  The destination specifier is optional as in the case of the

  original XCOPY and COPY commands.  When the destination is not

  specified, XXCOPY uses the current directory as the destination

  direction.





Destination specifier (Difference #1):



  In XXCOPY, the destination specifier (when supplied by the user)

  refers to the name of a directory whether it exists or to be

  created by the command.  In any event, the destination never

  specifies any particular filename.  It always specifies the name

  of the destination DIRECTORY.



  The reason for this change was the confusing and bothersome

  behavior of XCOPY.  For one thing, when you specify a non-exist

  directory as the destination of XCOPY, you would be greeted by

  the familiar prompt:



      Does XXXX specify a filename

      or directory name on the target

      (F = file, D = directory)?



  In nearly all cases, you would type D and sigh a long DUHHHHHHH!!!!

  Yet, because XCOPY allows the action to include renaming the file

  while it is being copied, this ambiguity arises.  It is simply

  carrying on the legacy of the COPY command.  While the copy command's

  simplistic "rename-while-you-copy" features using a wildcard

  specifier works, we consider the action quite dangerous.

  When you use a wildcard with "rename-while-copy" feature which

  involves a large number of files, you may accidentally create a

  filename collision, which would abort the "rename-while-copy" action

  in the middle.  The result would be a big mess of partially

  renamed files.



  We consider the "rename-while-copy" a source of much trouble and

  therefore, we discourage your using it.  After all, XXCOPY is not

  designed to handle one or two files.  You can always use the simple

  COPY command to do just that.  Therefore, in our opinion, eliminating

  the double meaning of the destination specifier from XXCOPY's second

  argument, we can avoid the side-effects of the "rename-while-copy"

  operation altogether and also eliminate the bothersome prompt of

  "Do you mean F = File, or D = Directory".  Also, we are sure that

  everybody has experienced the huge file which is accidentally

  created by a simple COPY command with a directory as the source

  and a non-existent directory as the destination.  The copy command

  interprets the destination as a filename rather than a directory and

  accumulates all the source files combined into a huge pile of useless

  bytes.)  Anyway, we had enough confusion with the double meaning

  of the destination specifier.  XXCOPY dares to correct this problem.



  With XXCOPY, the destination is always a directory, never a file.





XXCOPY.EXE and XXCOPY16.EXE (Difference #2):



  In the case of XCOPY, it automatically switches between XCOPY.EXE

  (a 16-bit program) and XCOPY32.EXE depending on the environment.

  In fact it is quite convenient for most users to forget about

  the distinction between XCOPY and XCOPY32.  Some users may not

  even know the existence of XCOPY32.EXE.  The actual mechanism is

  that when you run XCOPY.EXE in the Win32 environment, XCOPY.EXE

  automatically detects the current environment and will execute

  XCOPY32.EXE instead.  We also consider this feature quite dangerous.

  That is because the behaviors of XCOPY and XCOPY32 are not identical.

  For example, the treatments of a pathspec with wildcard characters

  in the DOS and Win32 environments are significantly different.

  Therefore, any large-scale batch file invocation should distinguish

  the usage of XCOPY and XCOPY32 to be safe.



  Due to that consideration, we feel the danger of having unintended

  COPY operations performed in the different machine environments

  outweighs the convenience of the automatic invocation of the 32-bit

  version.  Therefore, XXCOPY (which is the 32-bit version) will NOT

  automatically invoke the 16-bit counterpart.  You must select the

  appropriate version when you need the distinction.  Since the

  16-bit version, XXCOPY16.EXE, is seldom used, we chose the scheme

  where the shorter name is for the 32-bit version.  Also, in a

  32-bit environment, XXCOPY does not have the overhead of XCOPY,

  which always loads and runs XCOPY.EXE before XCOPY32.EXE, 

  unless you specify XXCOPY32 in the first place.



  XXCOPY is always in 32-bit and XXCOPY16 is always in 16-bit.





The /C switch as the default (Difference #3):



  XCOPY32 added the much needed switch, "/C" which allows an

  automatic continuation of the copy operations after encountering

  an error condition.  The C stands for "Continue on error".



  Before Microsoft introduced Windows 95, and therefore, the new

  XCOPY32.EXE utility, DATMAN-DOS users demanded a solution to

  the "share-violation" problem in a backup job of NetWare server.

  Even within a modest sized network, there are always a few files

  which are open at the time of a server backup job.  When XCOPY

  tries to open a file which is already opened by another process,

  the access results in  the error condition where the user had

  only three choices:  Abort, Retry, or Fail.



  None of these choices would let XCOPY continue the operation.

  As a matter of fact, XXCOPY's predecessor (DCOPY.EXE) was born

  to correct this problem even in the DOS-only days.  The first

  enhancement to the XCOPY command was the /C switch.  Now, with

  XCOPY32, which supplies the much-needed switch, the problem was

  pretty much behind us.



  We had XXCOPY's /C switch work exactly the way XCOPY32's /C

  switch works.  When it was specified, an error condition that

  would have aborted the entire copy operations will continue

  until all the qualified files are copied.  Alas, the most

  frequent technical support issue with the earlier versions

  of XXCOPY was due to the omission of the /C switch.  After

  answering many tech support Emails, we have reached the

  conclusion that Microsoft should have made the /C switch its

  default mode with a provision to disable it.



  For this reason, we broke our rule of adhering to XCOPY32's

  behavior exactly, for better or worse.  Here, we made XXCOPY's

  implementation of the /C switch the exact opposite of how XCOPY32

  handles the case.  We believe it is in the best interest of the

  users.  As of this writing, Microsoft's 16-bit counterpart,

  XCOPY does not have the /C switch.



  With XXCOPY (also with XXCOPY16), the /C switch is automatically

  invoked by default.  You need to specify /C0 to disable this

  feature and to allow XXCOPY to terminate at the first instance

  of an error condition.





The /T switch always enables /E (Difference #4):



  Since the /T switch is to construct the directory tree (without

  the files), it makes no sense to run it without /S or /E (which

  handles subdirectories).  We consider the /T/S combination

  quite useless and hence chose to always include the E switch

  implicitly.  We believe the /T switch is now trouble free.





The use of quotatoin marks in a command line (Difference #5):



  When a pathname contains an embedded space, the whole string

  must be surrounded by a pair of quotation marks (").



  Microsoft's XCOPY allows a very liberal usage of quotation

  marks to an extent it even accepts bizarre strings.  For

  example, XCOPY allows the following strings without problem:

  

     "c:\Program Files\My Directory\Myfile.doc"     // OK

     "c:\Progra""m Files\My Directory\Myfile.doc"   // two pairs

     c:\Program" Files\My "Directory\myfile.doc     // bizarre



  We feel XXCOPY should not allow such questionable constructs

  even though they are accepted by XCOPY.  While it is not

  impossible for us to make XXCOPY imitate the behavior closely,

  we would have hard time defining and explaining the exact

  syntactic rules.  So, we chose to deviate from XCOPY's rules.

  

  XXCOPY's rule for the quotation mark is very simple:



    The quotation marks must be at the both ends of a pathname.





Other differences:



  In almost all other cases, the differences between Microsoft's

  XCOPY and our XXCOPY are a result of enhancements rather than

  alteration of the XCOPY behavior which already existed.



  With the few notable exceptions discussed in this article, the

  differences between XCOPY and XXCOPY are remarkably small.

  For example, XXCOPY pays attention to the short name alias

  which preserves the short name after the copy (TB#02).  But,

  this is a pure "improvement" rather than "change" which does

  not require user attention or precaution.



  Therefore, you need not worry much about how to use XXCOPY

  if you already know XCOPY.  You can pick just a few new

  features when you want to learn XXCOPY.  Over time, you may

  come to like XXCOPY and exploit its unique features to write

  your own very powerful batch script for a backup operation.





XXCOPY's major enhancements:



  0. Wild-src  Wild-Wild-Source, multi-level, multi-wildcard source

  1. /X        exclusion specifier and related switches (/EX)

  2. /IN       inclusion specifier for alternate file pattern template

  3. /Bx       variations in backup related switches

  4. /NX       retains the short name exactly

  5. /NS /NL   renaming short name and long name based on the other

  6. /D        date matching with many variations

  7. /Rx /Z    removes files using the versatile file selection schemes

  8. /SG/SX    gathering files or flattening a directory tree

  9. /SZ:      select file by the file size (range)

 10. /CC /CCY  cyclic copy cases handled with the exclusion method.





  If you have a suggestion for a new XXCOPY feature, tell us about

  it.  We will consider any user feedback very seriously.

  Please send E-Mail to <tech@xxcopy.com> for comments, suggestions,

  questions, etc.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #03




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Problems in filename aliases (8.3 names) in Win32

Date:    1999-11-27

====================================================================



Background:



  When Microsoft implemented the long filename in Windows 95,

  it came up with a scheme which assigns an alias (or short name in

  the so-called 8.3 format) for every long name.  Typically, a short

  name starts with the first 6 letters in the long name followed by

  a tilde and a digit, (numeric tail like XXXXXX~1.XXX), discarding

  remaining characters except the three-letter extension.  The short

  name is synthesized by the file system driver for the volume, in

  such a way that all filenames become unique one another within

  a given directory.  The rule to assign the numeric tail is very

  simple; it picks the smallest decimal value not yet claimed in the

  directory.



  As long as the aliases are used by legacy programs to access files,

  the actual filename assigned to a file should not be very important.

  But the truth is that even Windows 95 itself accesses certain files

  using their short name aliases.  One notable situation is when the

  most primitive virtual drivers (VxD) are loaded at the beginning

  of Windows 95 system start up sequence.  Since the long name support

  is provided by a module called IFSMgr (InstallableFileSystem Manager)

  which is itself a VxD module, locating and accessing the VxD files

  are all performed strictly using the short name alias.  If you

  examine various parts of the system registry, you will find many

  8.3 name strings.  In short, the system relies on the 8.3 naming

  scheme in a very crucial manner.





The problem:



  The problem arises when a directory contains a number of files

  whose aliases share a common base part (differing only by the numeric

  tails).  When you copy these files to another directory, the

  aliases will be assigned by the simple (first-come-first-served)

  algorithm, the first such file copied to the destination directory

  will have numeric tail of ~1 regardless of what was its alias

  in the source directory.  Therefore, the Windows operating system

  does *NOT* preserve the alias after copying.  We consider this a

  very serious defect in the file system design.  Most file copy

  programs ignore this aspect in file copying.  This includes

  Explorer (drag-and-drop), COPY, and XCOPY.





Example:



  Here, we make a simple sequence in a DOS Box to illustrate the point.

  It is assumed that you have the \autoexec.bat file handy (can be any

  file).  Let us create a pair of files with names that would have the

  same short name base for the alias.



     C:\> mkdir \src

     C:\> copy  \autoexec.bat  \src\LongNameA.bat

     C:\> copy  \autoexec.bat  \src\LongNameB.bat

     C:\> dir   \src



     LONGNA~1.BAT       1234       11-21-99 11:27p LongNameA.bat

     LONGNA~2.BAT       1234       11-21-99 11:27p LongNameB.bat



  Use the traditional method to copy the files.  When you use another

  method like Drag-and-Drop, you would get the same result.  First,

  pick the file whose short name numeric tail does not end with ~1.



     C:\> mkdir \dst

     C:\> copy  \src\LongNameB.bat  \dst

     C:\> copy  \src\LongNameA.bat  \dst

     C:\> dir   \dst



     LONGNA~1.BAT       1234       11-21-99 11:27p LongNameB.bat

     LONGNA~2.BAT       1234       11-21-99 11:27p LongNameA.bat



   Here, the first file created in the destination received the numeric

   tail of ~1, even though its alias in the source was not that.

   If you don't see the difference in the left hand side (the aliases),

   see the long names to your right (---B and ---A are opposite).





Enter XXCOPY:



   Now, try the same operation using XXCOPY in the \new directory.



     C:\> mkdir  \new

     C:\> xxcopy \src\LongnameB.bat  \new

     C:\> xxcopy \src\LongnameA.bat  \new

     C:\> dir    \new



     LONGNA~2.BAT       1234       11-21-99 11:27p LongNameB.bat

     LONGNA~1.BAT       1234       11-21-99 11:27p LongNameA.bat



   Here, the files in the \src directory and in the \new directory

   match exactly (both the long names and the aliases) albeit the

   new order reflects the order of copying.





Other cases:



   The above example is just one of the many problems with aliases.

   For example, when you delete the file with the numeric tail of

   ---~1 in the source directory and copy the files; the first

   files copied to the destination will be assigned with an alias

   ending with ---~1.  In essence, the short name alias is

   systematically synthesized by Windows kernel without regard to

   what the original alias in the source directory was.  This kind

   of discrepancies in file and directory names lead to subtle but

   serious problems which are often very difficult to even diagnose.





How safe is XXCOPY?



   XXCOPY performs the alias name change using only published

   standard Win32 file I/O API.  XXCOPY does not attempt to

   manipulate the raw directory data structure of the file system.

   Nor does XXCOPY perform any unorthodox techniques to implement

   the alias matching feature.  The operation utilizes a combination

   of simple file-renaming system calls.  Therefore, it is completely

   safe.



   On the other hand, when the destination directory already has

   a file with the needed alias (i.e., a case of alias name

   collision), XXCOPY does not perform such an operation which

   would otherwise create an invalid directory data.  Of course,

   the same name for more than one file is No No in a file system.



   Since XXCOPY supports remote machines over a network, the alias

   (8.3 name) support function also works across network.





Win95/98 and WinNT/2000/XP:



   If your use a dual-boot system (Win95/98 and WinNT/2000/XP), there

   is one more pitfall which is related to the shortname.

   Please read our new article, XXTB #08.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #04




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: What is and what is not included for copy

Date:    2001-01-18

====================================================================



[ Note:  this article is about XXCOPY's file selection mechanism

         in general, not about the recently added /IN switch that

         "includes" alternate filename pattern ]





The problem of being "Too Powerful"...



  With the huge set of command switches offered by XXCOPY, even

  a serious user starts to wonder if a particular file is included

  in the XXCOPY operation or not.  Indeed, there are a number of

  switches which sound very similar and become quite confusing

  which of the switches has "precedence" over the other.  Yet,

  there is hardly any mention of precedence in the XXCOPY help

  and documentation.  This article will give you a simple rule

  which resolves all such questions and gives you the confidence you

  need when you use XXCOPY in your day-to-day computing.





Combining switches:



  Some XXCOPY switches suggest an inclusion of files with certain

  characteristics.  For example,



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\   D:\newdir\   /H



  It is understood by many XXCOPY users that with the /H switch,

  hidden and system files (which would normally be excluded) will

  be "included" in the copy operation.  Let us add another switch.



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\   D:\newdir\   /H /U



  The /U switch is used to "update" existing files in the destination

  directory.  In this case (/H/U), hidden files will be included in the

  operation by the /H switch,  but the files which are not already

  present in the destination will be excluded by the /U switch.  Then,

  what about the files which are hidden (to be included) but are

  not present in destination (to be excluded)?  The question seems to

  be whether /H or /U has the precedence.  Let's add some more.



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\   D:\newdir\   /H /U /BI



  /BI stands for "Incremental Backup" meaning that it will select

  files which are different (by comparing the file date and file

  size between the files of the same name in the source and the

  destination).  The /BI switch includes those files which exists

  in the source but not in the destination.  But, if you combine the

  three, /H/U/BI, then the /U switch (which excludes new files to the

  destination) and the /BI switch (which includes new files) seem to

  contradict each other while the effect of /H seems fine.



  Does the order of these switch makes the difference?  The answer is

  No.  At least that is not the case because /U and /BI are not in a

  mutually exclusive set of switches.  But, clearly, these two switches

  seems to have opposing effects on the files which do not exist in the

  destination directory.  What is the precedence?  What is going on?





The golden rule:



  XXCOPY's switches are all exclusionary.



  Well, it has some element of over-simplification, but it is the

  shortest rule that you can remember.  Each XXCOPY switch excludes

  certain group of files by some measure.  By adding another switch,

  some more files are excluded.   Obviously, there are many

  switches in XXCOPY which do not participate in the file selection

  process.  For example, the /W switch is to let XXCOPY wait for a

  keyboard input before the copy action really begins.  It has

  nothing to do with qualifying files for inclusion or exclusion.

  But, for all the command switches which determine whether a

  file is to be copied or not, the above golden rule applies.





The exclusion process:



  If you consider that all of XXCOPY file-selection switches are

  exclusionary parameters, everything will start making sense.

  And you will realize that the precedence of switches becomes a moot

  point.  You may need to view some of the switches from a different

  angle.  Here, we need some rephrasing of the nature of the switches.



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\    D:\newdir\  /H



  Earlier, we said /H was to include hidden/system files.  Now, let

  us rephrase it by saying "/H does not exclude hidden/system files".

  Yes, it is still awkward.  But, remember this is a case where the

  default switch in the same category (/H0) did the exclusion and

  you are simply negating it.  Let us revisit the implied case;



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\    D:\newdir\

     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\    D:\newdir\  /H0



  These two lines produce exactly the same result.  Since it is a

  default, most XXCOPY users do not add such a switch.  These lines

  should read that "the /H0 switch excludes hidden/system files from

  the copy operation".



  Once more,



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\    D:\newdir\  /H



  We now know that the /H switch simply negates the default exclusion.

  The wording, "/H does not exclude hidden/system files" sounds OK, now.



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\    D:\newdir\  /H /U



  Adding the /U switch, it becomes "/H does not exclude hidden/system

  files" but "/U excludes files that are not present in the destination

  directory".  Here, the exclusion rule of /U goes by the face value.



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\    D:\newdir\   /H /U /BI



  Again, we have the /BI (incremental backup) switch which reads as

  "/BI excludes files that exist in destination with identical time

  and size".  This does not contradict with the /U switch which

  "excludes files that are not present in the destination".  All of

  the excluded files will be excluded.  That's simple.





Exclusion by the name:



  Of course, by far, the most obvious parameter to be used in the

  exclusion process is by the directory and filename.  Because it

  gives us a very wide range of opportunities to exploit in

  expressing what to exclude, we did put a lot of thoughts in the

  design of this (probably the single most significant enhancement)

  feature.  Therefore, the /X switch deserves its own treatment

  in a separate article, XXTB #05.



  It is indeed a very natural way of excluding a group of files.

  Now, to come to think of it, we wonder why we have not seen

  similar features in most other file copy utilities...





Conclusion:



  In essence, each command switch has its own way of specifying the

  files to exclude.  Each and every switch adds more exclusions.

  Determining whether a file is excluded from the copy operation is

  now easy.  Once a file is excluded by a switch, it is out and gone.

  Therefore, the more switches you add, the more files you are going

  to exclude from the copy operation.



  As we add more and more switches, it has become increasingly

  difficult for even experienced users to remember all the switches

  (it's now over 120 variations and still growing).  So, we added

  a new feature called "Smart-Help".  Just add "/?" at the end

  (or anywhere) in your XXCOPY command line.  It will select only

  the switches you specified in the line, their related switches and

  its opposing and mutually-exclusive switches as a group.  We find

  this new feature quite convenient.  You should definitely try it.



    Example:    XXCOPY c:\mydir d:\yourdir  /I /BI /FT /?



  To further assist the user in constructing the right combination

  of the command switches, XXCOPY now a set of useful switches

  which list pertinent command parameters.



    /OP       outputs parameter list (in exclusionary wording)

    /OX       outputs exclusion list (after optimization)

    /DEBUG    displays source and destination and prompts before continue

    /DEBUGX   displays source and destination and terminates

    /W        waits for user keyboard input after /OP and /OX switch



  Many users find the output text generated by the /OP switch more

  understandable than any other documentation of XXCOPY.  So, if you

  have any doubt on the effect of switches, just add "/OP | MORE"

  at the end of the command line.  So, to review the whole thing,

  a good alternative to the "/?" trick is "/OP/W".



    Example:    XXCOPY  c:\mydir d:\yourdir  /I /BI /FT /OP /W






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #05




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The Exclusion specifier in XXCOPY

Date:    2000-12-01  (revised)

====================================================================



Much of the mostly hidden power of XXCOPY lies in the exclusion

mechanism.  We identified the /X switch to be one of the most

important enhancements we made in XXCOPY.  Because it is a

complex scheme with many implied rules, one cannot effectively

use the full potential of the exclusion feature without a detailed

explanation of the full scope of the syntax as well as the way

the exclusion scheme is implemented.  This article will discuss

all the rules applied to the exclusion feature.





XXCOPY Exclusion switch syntax



  /X<xspec>       excludes the file or directory item given by

                  <xspec> which is an exclusion specifier.

                  If the specifier contains an embedded space,

                  the specifier must be surrounded by a pair

                  of double-quotes (").



  /EX<xfile>      specifies a text file whose name is <xfile>

                  which contains a list of <xspec> separated by space.



  /ZX             ignores the environment variable, "XXCOPYX".



  XXCOPYX         The environment variable XXCOPYX specifies a

  (env var)       list of <xspec> which are separated by a space.



  XXCOPY          The environment variable XXCOPY  specifies a

  (env var)       list of XXCOPY switches which may be /X<xspec>.



  Note that the difference between the two environment variables,

  XXCOPY and XXCOPYX is that every item in the XXCOPY value

  must be prefixed with a slash (/) followed by an XXCOPY switch

  (which can be for any XXCOPY switch) whereas XXCOPYX values are

  strictly for the /X switch as a list of exclusion specifiers in

  order to save space.



  You may specify as many exclusion specifiers as you like.





Some examples of the /X switches



  /Xc:\mydir\myfile.txt   // specifies just a single file

  /X*.tmp                 // all files that end with ".tmp"

  /Xabc*                  // all files that start with "abc"

  /Xmydir\                // the entire directory, "mydir" in the source

  /Xmydir\*\*             // same as /Xmydir\ which is a shortcut

  /Xmydir\*\*.tmp         // inside mydir, all files matching "*.tmp"

  /Xmy*xyz\*\abc*.c       // inside mydir, all files matching "abc*.c"

  /X*\cache\              // multiple-level subdirectories

  /X*\cache\*\*           // same as above with a trailing backslash

  /X*\cach?\*\*           // multiple-level subdir spec may have wildcards



  Here, you may see the glimpse of the powerful syntax in the exclusion

  specifier.  The first example seems the most straight forward.  The

  fourth example which ends with a backslash is a shorthand of for the

  common case of excluding a directory (it abbreviates "*\*" which follows).

  Therefore, all of the above examples except the first one contain

  or imply at least one wildcard specifier.  The last example includes

  one asterisks in each of the three parts.



  Don't worry about the complexity yet.  At least the first example shows

  a case which you can use it immediately without any further reading.

  Yes, if you have energy to list all of the files you want to exclude,

  you may painstakingly list all of such files by giving the full

  file specification of each file.  Since you will soon run out of the

  command line space, you will probably want to set up a text file using

  the /EX switch.





  E.g.,  /EXmyexcl.lst



   and myexcl.lst  contains the following specifiers:



     :: this is a comment line

     c:\win386.swp               :: comment may start like this

     c:\autoexec.bat  myfile.tmp :: one line may have multiple items

     "c:\program files"          :: use quotes (") for embedded space

     mydir\myfile.txt            :: pathspec relative to the source dir

     yourdir\                    :: entire yourdir\*\*





     Syntax rule for the Exclusion List File.



         An "Exclusion List File" specified in the /EX switch is a plain

         text file which contains a list of exclusion specifiers.

         You may list as many exclusion specifiers in one line.

         Exclusion specifiers are separated by one or more blank, tab,

         and/or newline character.  An exclusion specifier cannot be

         broken into two or more lines.  When a space character is

         embedded, the exclusion specifier must be surrounded by a

         pair of double-quotes (").  A line may contain a comment field

         which will be ignored by XXCOPY.  A comment field starts with

         two consecutive colons (::) and ends at the end of the line.

         We suggest the use of a line for each exclusion specifier which

         is followed by a comment.





Definition of the exclusion specifier.



    Up to now, the exact meaning of the exclusion specifier has not

    been defined.  Now, we are going to analyze the syntax and its

    meaning to its death.  (Note: the exclusion specifier has been

    revised on 2000-10-09 with the addition of the multiple-level

    subdirectory exclusion feature).





    The exclusion specifier has up to three parts.



        [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ]  [ template ]



        Although any of the three parts can be omitted, you must not skip

        both dir_spec and template at the same time.  Note that the last

        part (template) can be either a file-template or a directory-

        template which will be explained below with more details.





     Directory specifier ( dir_spec )



        The dir_spec part specifies the base directory of the exclusion.

        It is always followed by a backslash (\) character.

        The directory can be specified in an absolute path (starting with

        the root directory), or a relative path (without a leading

        backslash) which is treated as relative to the source directory

        (not the "current" directory).



        The dir_spec may contain a wildcard specification in its

        last part. For example



           /Xc:\mydir\level1\abc*\*\template

           /Xc:\mydir\level1\a*bc*.?oc\*\template



        In both of the examples here, the last part of the directory

        specifier (after \level1\) has asterisk(s) in it.  The second

        example goes one step farther by allowing multiple asterisks

        and even a question mark which is another wildcard for a single

        letter.



    The middle part (*\)



        It denotes that the exclusion specification will be applied

        not only to the dir_spec directory, but also to all of the

        subdirectories underneath.  It is equivalent of the familiar

        /S switch which is applied to modify the source specifier

        meaning that the XXCOPY action will include all subdirectories.

        Since we do not have the luxury of a separate /S switch on each

        exclusion items, we invented this notation which figuratively

        suggests the fact that the directory starts with dir_spec,

        ends with the template and anything in between is accepted.



        The following two examples highlight the effect of the middle part.



          /Xmydir\myfile.*      // myfile in mydir\ only

          /Xmydir\*\myfile.*c   // myfile in every directories under mydir\



     Template specifier ( template )



        The last part of the exclusion specifier is the template which

        may be either a file-template or a directory-template.  So, the

        exclusion specifier can be more precisely described by using the

        following two notations:



        [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ]  [ filetemplate ]

        [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ]  [ dirtemplate ]



        Here, the syntactic distinction of the two types is made by

        the ending of the template string.





Common shortcut notations of the exclusion specifier.



     File template



        When a lone template is specified without a trailing backslash,

        (e.g., /Xmyfile.txt ), it is treated as a shortcut for a

        multiple-level filename template which is equivalent to

        /X*\myfile.txt).  This is mostly for historic reason,

        (also, the frequency of this type of usage justifies it).



        If you need to specify a one-level filename template, you

        should place the dot directory (denoting the current directory)

        to distinguish it from the multiple-level case ( /X.\myfile.txt ).



        Examples:



          /Xtemplate      // file which matches the template inside

                          // the current (src) directory (Multil-Level).

          /X*\template    // the template applies to all subdirectories

                          // this is same as above (Multi-Level)

          /X.\template    // the dot denotes relative to the base (src)

                          // directory (1-Level)



     Directory template



        The directory template may have the following four variations

        in the ending.



           dirtemplate\         // full directory

           dirtemplate\*\*      // same thing with alternate notation

           dirtemplate\*        // file in the directory (one-level)

           dirtemplate\?\*      // all subdirectories but not

                                // the first-level files



           The first two notations are interchangeable and denote

           the whole directory.  And the third and fourth cases are

           partial directory notations (when the two are combined,

           it will match the whole directory.





     Examples:



        /Xdirtmpl\*\*      // excludes all matching directories in the

                           // base (src) directory and its contents

        /Xdirtmpl\         // same as above (the triling backslash

                           // denotes everything inside the directory)

        /X.\dirtmpl\       // in the case of the directory template,

                           // it applies to one directory relative to

                           // the base (src) directory (1-Level)

        /x*\dirtmp\        // you may make a directory template apply

                           // to many instances (Multi-Level)





        /xc:\windows\*     // specifies all the files in the first

                           // level of the c:\Windows directory such

                           // as, EXPLORER.EXE, WIN.INI, COMMAND.COM



        /xc:\windows\?\*   // this does not includes the first level

                           // files but all subdirectories in it such

                           // as \WINDOWS\SYSTEM\  \WINDOWS\DESKTOP\ etc.





        Since both dir_spec and dirtemplate may contain wildcards,

        it could be as complex as...



        /Xc:\mydir\pat*ern\*\dir???\*\*



        This one excludes all subdirectories which starts by "dir"

        followed by three characters which appear in any level of

        subdirectory under any directory inside c:\bydir whose

        name match "pat*ern".



     Note that the following two are distinct:



         /Xdir_spec\*     // one layer only (subdirectories not excluded)

         /Xdir_spec\*\*   // the entire dir_spec directory is excluded



         XXCOPY allows you to exclude either the entire subdirectory

         (which affects both files and directories of any level), or

         one directory layer (which affects only files in the immediate

         level but not subdirectories).





The variations in exclusion specifiers (11 cases)



    The exclusion specifier may be classified into the following

    eleven classes (A - K).



     simple cases     1-Level templates        Multi-Level templates

   -------------------------------------------------------------------

                    D dir_spec\filetmpl      H dir_spec\*\filetmpl

    A dir_spec\*    E dir_spec\dir_tmpl\*    I dir_spec\*\dir_tmpl\*

    B dir_spec\?\*  F dir_spec\dir_tmpl\?\*  J dir_spec\*\dir_tmpl\?\*

    C dir_spec\*\*  G dir_spec\dir_tmpl\*\*  K dir_spec\*\dir_tmpl\*\*



      Note that a dir_spec may be specified with wildcard characters

      in the last component level.  For example,



        c:\mydir\Level2\last?level\*              // simple case

        c:\mydir\Level2\last?level\template\      // 1-level case

        c:\mydir\Level2\last?level\*\template\    // multi-level



      Also, the file_template or directory_template may contain

      wildcard characters.



        c:\mydir\L2\last?level\file?template        // simple filepattern

        c:\mydir\L2\last?level\dir?template\        // whole directory

        c:\mydir\L2\last?level\*\dir?template\*     // 1-level files

        c:\mydir\L2\last?level\*\dir?template\?\*   // Multi-level case



        Here, to illustrate the wildcard in the respective compoents,

        a questionmark(?) was added where a wildcard is permitted

        (last?level\,  file?template or dir?template).



      Note that whereas the dir_spec shown above may consists of many

      levels of directories, the template specifiers (dir_tmpl) in

      Groups I, J and, K must be a single-level directory template

      (without a backslash inside).





The optimization of exclusion matching.



    In a very large scale backup operation, an XXCOPY job may encompass

    an entire volume as the source directory (such as c:\*).  To make

    the matters worse, the more files the source directory contains,

    the more the need for the exclusion specifiers grows.  Therefore,

    it is entirely possible that the entire C: drive may contain

    70,000 files and the total number of exclusion items the user specify

    in the exclusion list file with the /EX switch may contain literally

    hundreds of various exclusion specifiers.  If we were to test every

    file against this very large number of exclusion list, the combination

    will easily reach tens of millions which would slow down the entire

    backup process.  Therefore, XXCOPY performs preprocessing steps

    to analyze the set of exclusion specifiers.  First by classifying

    them into the five classes, some redundant exclusion specifiers can

    be removed.  For example, if a dir_spec is specified in Class B,

    any subdirectories of the same directory in Classes C, D, E, or F

    regardless of the template will be automatically excluded because

    the same directory in Class B spec overshadow any subset of the

    directory.  Moreover, in the actual XXCOPY implementation, the

    the active file pattern matching templates is computed to each

    subdirectory to reduce the number of filename matching to

    eliminate a significant number of redundant combinations.





Debug feature



    Because of the complexities of the exclusion parameters when the

    number of exclusion specifiers become substantially large,  you may

    analyze the list of exclusion parameters immediately after the

    initial exclusion parameter optimization steps are completed by the

    following two debug switches:



      /DEBUG    // displays the parameters and prompt for continuation

      /DEBUGX   // displays the parameters and exit XXCOPY.

      /OX       // outputs the exclusion parameters in the log file

      /OP       // outputs the regular parameters in the log file.



      /OX/W     // a convenient switch to test the exclusion settings





Automatically excluded files.



    Since the few output files (e.g., the error log files) which are

    generated by the XXCOPY program itself could not be successfully

    included in the current copying job if any of them happens to be

    in the source directory (or its subdirectories), those files will

    be always excluded implicitly.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #06




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: File Attributes: what are they and how to use them.

Date:    2000-01-17

====================================================================



Since XXCOPY has features which interact with the file attributes,

a discussion of XXCOPY cannot be complete without touching the basics

of the file attributes.  This article presents the fundamentals of

the file attributes and how XXCOPY manipulates them.  In addition,

some common techniques with the file attributes are discussed.





What are the file attributes?



  The operating systems (DOS, Win95/98, WinNT/2000/XP) maintain certain

  properties associated with every file and directories in addition to

  the file contents (data inside the file).  Such properties include



    file size in bytes

    file date/time (creation time, last-modify time, last-access time)

    file attributes

          archive bit   (shows that the file has not been archived yet)

          read-only bit (write-protect the file)

          directory bit (distinguishes a directory from a file)

          hidden bit    (hides from an ordinary directory listing)

          system bit    (denotes a system file whatever that means)



    These properties are mostly maintained by various components of

    the operating system and they are handled automatically.  So,

    the users may not be concerned with them.  However,  manipulating

    some of the properties are not very difficult and it can even be

    quite useful at times.  This article shows some common techniques

    associated with the file attributes.



    The file size is always determined by the actual size of the file

    and the only way to change it is to increase by appending more

    bytes to the existing file, or to decrease by overwriting with a

    shorter file.  The file date/time can be more easily changed.

    Since changing any of the three date/time values is supported by

    Win32 file I/O API, one can write a program to change them.  In fact,

    there are many utility programs available to do so.  Here, we will

    discuss the file attributes with greater details.





What is the file attributes?



    Although one can say the file size and the file date/time are file

    attributes (i.e., any properties associated with a file other than

    the file contents), with the more narrow definition and popular

    usage, the file attributes are collection of flags stored as a bit

    mapped 32-bit quantity which describes various aspects of the file.

    The original MS-DOS file attributes had only 8 bits in the file

    attributes, the Win32 file attributes are stored as a 32-bit quantity.



    Although the exact bit positions of the file attributes are not

    officially guaranteed to remain the same by Microsoft, they will

    probably never be changed.



       Bit 0     Read-Only

       Bit 1     Hidden

       Bit 2     System

       Bit 3     Volume Label

       Bit 4     Directory

       Bit 5     Archive



    Bit 3 (Volume Label) was used in MS-DOS to store the volume label

    just like an ordinary file in the directory.  Bit 4 (Directory)

    distinguish a file from a directory.  These two bits cannot be

    modified easily.  But, the remaining four bits (bit 0, 1, 2, and 5)

    can be examined and/or modified by the ATTRIB.EXE utility which is

    supplied by DOS/Windows.





The official Microsoft's way to manipulate the file attributes.



    Windows 95/98 provide a system utility program, ATTRIB.EXE which

    is usually stored in the C:\Windows\command\ directory.



    Here is the ATTRIB utility's command syntax



    ATTRIB [+R | -R] [+A | -A] [+S | -S] [+H | -H] filespec [/S]



       +   Sets an attribute.

       -   Clears an attribute.

       R   Read-only file attribute.

       A   Archive file attribute.

       S   System file attribute.

       H   Hidden file attribute.

       /S  Processes files in all directories in the specified path.



    For example if you want to clear the Archive attribute bit of all

    the files in a directory, execute the following command line.



       ATTRIB  -A c:\mydir\*





The Read-Only attribute.



    This bit is useful to make a file write-protected by software.

    For example, by setting the \AUTOEXEC.BAT file Read-only, you may

    protect the file from accidental deletion.  Or you may set a

    few files with the Read-only attributes and delete all the files

    using a "DEL *" (Delete all) command, the read only files will

    not be deleted under normal circumstances.  Certain files in the

    Win95/98 system are kept as Read-only by default (e.g., the system

    registry files).



    Before you can delete or overwrite a Read-only file, you must

    remove the Read-only file attribute bit.



    XXCOPY can force overwriting (or deletion) of a Read-only file by

    the /R switch.





The Hidden and System attribute.



    The purpose of the Hidden attribute bit is to make the file

    invisible in certain applications' file list display.  Since many

    file applications has the feature to ignore the Hidden attribute

    bit, the file with the Hidden attribute bit is not always invisible.



    The System attribute bit is probably the least rigorously

    defined in its usage.  From the early days of MS-DOS, the System

    attribute bit has been used in inconsistent manners that the bit

    seldom has much meaning.  The DIR command treat the System

    attribute similarly to the Hidden bit for directory listing.

    But, the COPY command does not care whether a file has the System

    attribute or not for copying it (Interestingly the DIR and COPY

    commands are both "built-in" commands which is implemented within

    the COMMAND.COM program).



    In most Win95/98 systems, you will find about twenty files in the

    root directory which are marked both Hidden and System.  These two

    attributes are often go hand in hand.  But, the choice seems

    quite arbitrary.



    While the usage of the Hidden and the System attribute bits are

    not well defined, the presence (or absence) of these attribute

    bits seldom change the actions of most system utilities except for

    the DIR and COPY commands, in most case, removing the Hidden and

    System attributes on most files do not cause any harm (except

    maybe some layer of protection from accidental erasure).



    XXCOPY by default (/H0) ignores a file with either Hidden or System

    attribute.  With the /H switch, you may include files with the

    Hidden or the System attributes in XXCOPY's copy action.





The Archive attribute.



    The Archive attribute was first introduced by MS-DOS version 2.0

    when the XCOPY utility was also created.  Therefore, the Archive

    attribute is probably best explained by how XCOPY handles the

    Archive attribute.  The purpose of the Archive attribute was clearly

    to quickly determine whether a file requires a back up (archiving).



    The Archive attribute is set whenever an existing file is either

    overwritten or modified (i.e., renamed or moved to another directory)

    by the file system.  A new file is usually created with the Archive

    attribute set.  The idea is to have a utility or application program

    to take the responsibility of clearing the Archive bit when a

    file is successfully backed up.  The next system backup operation

    will be made much more efficient by focusing only on the files with

    the Archive attribute bit set which are either newly created or

    modified in any way since all the Archive attributes are cleared the

    last time (i.e., the last backup time).





Incremental Backup using the Archive attribute.



    When XCOPY was the only "officially" designated system archive utility

    in MS-DOS, the Archive attribute had its usefulness.  Or, if only

    one backup regime in the system manipulates the Archive attribute bit

    and no other programs modifies the bit, the scheme works well.

    However, there are many backup and archive utilities that are

    capable of clearing the Archive attribute.



    Unfortunately, the operating systems do not enforce this

    "only-one-program-can-modify-the-Archive-bit" policy.  Because of

    possible interference with other applications which might clear the

    Archive attribute, we consider that the incremental backup scheme

    based upon the Archive attribute too risky to depend upon.



    Therefore, we do not recommend the use of the /M switch to perform

    any system backup operation.  For an incremental backup,  XXCOPY's

    /BI switch performs similar function with more confidence by

    comparing the files in the source and the destination with regard

    to the file size AND file date/time.  If either of the two does not

    match (or the file does not exist in the destination), the file will

    be copied.  This method is nearly as efficient as looking at the

    Archive bit.





Other usage of the Archive attribute.



    1.  You can determine which file(s) an application makes file

        changes (creation and modification) in a directory.  First,

        clear the Archive attribute of all the files in the given

        directory and run the application.  Then, check to see which

        files are marked by the Archive attribute.



        E.g.:  ATTRIB  -A c:\mydir\*       // clear the A bit first

               Run your application next

               XXCOPY  C:\mydir\*  /A/L    // list files with A bit set



    2.  Say, you have a directory with many files which you want to

        copy to a set of diskettes (one diskette cannot hold all of

        the files).  You can first set all the files with Archive

        attribute set first.  Then, run XXCOPY /M (or XCOPY /M).  The

        copy job will terminate as soon as the diskette becomes full.

        But the files which has already been copied are cleared of the

        Archive attribute.  So, run the same XXCOPY /M command again

        with a new diskette.  This time, the files which has been copied

        will be skipped.  Just repeat this operation until the files

        with Archive attribute run out.



        E.g.:  ATTRIB +A C:\mydir\*        // set the A bit set

               XXCOPY C:\mydir\*  A:\ /M   // copy files with A bit

               XXCOPY C:\mydir\*  A:\ /M   // repeat for next diskette

                 ...                       // continue until all files

                 ...                       // are copied.





Full Backup using the Archive attribute.



    We have stated that the use of the Archive attribute is not suitable

    for a reliable incremental backup.   However, once we abandon the

    notion that the Archive attribute serves as a persistent marker, it

    becomes even more useful.  Yes, the Archive bit as a temporary marker

    can be quite convenient.  The example in the preceding section of

    directory-copy to a set of diskette is a backup in a small scale.



    When you run Microsoft's ATTRIBUTE utility,



        ATTRIB  +A  C:\*  /S



    You will encounter the following messages:



        Not resetting hidden file C:\WINDOWS\...

        ...

        Sharing violation reading drive C

        Abort, Retry, Fail?



    In this case, entering "F" should let you continue.  But, apparently,

    the ATTRIB utility treats the "Fail" option as "Abort".  This is

    provably a bug in the Microsoft program.



    Well, XXCOPY will do what Microsoft fails to do.



        XXCOPY  C:\*  /S /AA



    The /AA and /AZ switches make XXCOPY to perform the same function

    similar to the ATTRIB utility does except it does a better job.

    XXCOPY's /AA switch sets (/AZ clears) the Archive attribute bit

    including the hidden files (it has automatically set the /H switch

    to include hidden files) and handles share-violation gracefully.

    If you need speed, you may suppress the console output by /Q or /Q2.



        XXCOPY  C:\*  /S /AA /Q    ;shows only the files which changes

        XXCOPY  C:\*  /S /AA /Q2   ;shows only statistics at the end



    After setting the Archive attribute bit of all the files in the

    volume, you can start repeated backup using the /M switch



        XXCOPY  C:\*  T:\mybackup   /S /M /H ...



        (change the target media when it is full and try again)



    You may apply the same basic technique to a full-scale volume backup

    using the Archive attribute.  This is quite useful when you are

    backing up a large volume into smaller removable medium

    (e.g., CD-R, CD-RW, Tape-based file system, or even floppy disk).



    If you have an AutoLoader tape drive (e.g., HP SureStore 12000),

    a working batch file example based on this scheme is available at

    http://www.datman.com/tbul/dmtb_038.htm.





List of XXCOPY's file attributes related switches.



    Archive bit



     /A0   Cancels *ALL* /A, /M, /AT, and /AX switches.

     /A    Excludes files without Archive bit set

     /AC   Ignores the Archive bit (always clears Archive bit)

     /M    Excludes files without Archive bit set (clears Archive bit)

     /AA   Sets   the src file archive bit (without actually copying)

     /AZ   Clears the src file archive bit (without actually copying)

           Note: Both /AA and /AZ implicitly set /H (can be overridden)



    Hidden and System bit



     /H0   Excludes files with Hidden or System Attributes bits (default)

     /Ho   Excludes files without Hidden or System Attributes bits.

     /H    Ignores the Hidden or System Attributes bits



    Destination Read Only bit



     /R0   Excludes a file when it exists in dst as read-only (default)

     /R    Allows overwrite/delete of a read-only file if necessary



    Destination file attributes



     /K0   Keeps the source attributes except the read-only bit (default)

     /KS   Keeps the source attributes including the read-only bit.

     /KD   Keeps the attributes of destination (overwritten) file

     /KN   Sets the destination attributes to normal (only the A-bit)






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #07




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY's Handling the case of Cyclic Copy

Date:    2000-02-11

====================================================================



What is a Cyclic Copy?



    Try this with Microsoft's XCOPY (not XXCOPY).



        XCOPY  C:\  C:\temp\ /S



    You will be greeted by the following message:



        Cannot perform a cyclic copy.



    A cyclic copy refers to the situation where the source directory

    contains the destination directory.  Since the destination directory

    is part of the source, the copying process eventually starts copying

    the destination directory to a deeper portion of the destination.

    This process will continue until, of course, the finite disk space

    eventually runs out.



    To avoid this condition but to achieve the objective, one can

    specify a temporary destination which is on another volume (e.g.,

    D:\temp\) and later copy the temporary destination to the final

    destination, and delete the temporary directory at the end.





The safety net against a Cyclic Copy:



    Smart programs such as XCOPY have a detection mechanism to avert

    this disastrous situation.



    In many cases it is prudent for the copy utility to detect and avoid a

    cyclic copy.  After all, most such cases are simply a user mistake.

    Therefore, that was certainly adequate for XCOPY.  That's Microsoft.



    But, in other cases, you just want to create a copy of the whole

    volume into another subdirectory (of course, by excluding the

    destination).





Cases where a Cyclic Copy is useful:



    It is certainly true with a combination with other switches such as

    /TR0 (create corresponding zero-byte files) or /T (make a directory

    tree without files).



    Or, you may be tempted to make a collection of certain data files

    into one directory:



        XXCOPY  C:\*.doc   c:\my_word\  /S



    Of course, it is senseless to let the recursive meltdown to occur

    by allowing the freshly copied files in the destination to partake

    in the copy process.  By now, it is quite apparent that what we

    really need is a mechanism to cut off this vicious cycle in the

    process.





Enter XXCOPY's new switch for Cyclic Copy.



    XXCOPY comes with a few variations to handle the cyclic copy case.



    /CC     Warns you for a cyclic copy case and gives you a prompt

            where you may terminate the process immediately, or

            you may let XXCOPY continue by adding the destination

            directory in the exclusion list.



    /CCY    Continues the copy operation by automatically adding

            the destination directory in the exclusion list without

            prompting the user (as if you typed "Y" at the prompt).



    /CC0    Terminates the copy operation always without prompt.

            (this is the default behavior --- compatible to XCOPY).



    Note that although the /CC and /CCY action is internally

    equivalent to specifying the destination directory using the /X

    switch, you must explicitly use the /CC or /CCY switch in order

    to continue the copy operation with a cyclic copy condition.





A few interesting examples using /CCY:



    XXCOPY  C:\*.doc  C:\my_word\  /CCY /S



           This example collects directories which contains .DOC

           files in the destination with the .DOC files.



    XXCOPY  C:\*.doc  C:\my_word\  /CCY /SX



           This is a variation of the fist example.  It uses XXCOPY's

           handy /SX switch.  It gathers all .DOC files from the entire

           volume and saves them in a flattened directory.  If you have

           little idea what a "flattened directory" is, just try it

           and examine the destination.  You will see what it is.



    XXCOPY  C:\  C:\skeleton\      /CCY /T



           This gives the whole volume tree (except the \skeleton

           itself) inside the destination without files.



    XXCOPY  C:\  C:\summary\       /CCY /E /TR0



           This one includes files without copying the file contents

           (creates zero-length files corresponding to the source).






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #08




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Short names made by Win95/98 and by WinNT/2K/XP

Date:    2003-10-14 (Revised)

====================================================================



In our earlier article, XXTB #03, we discussed the subtle problem

of long and short filenames commonly encountered by Windows users.

The problem has been widely known and various solutions have been

devised to handle most such cases.  XXCOPY can handle such cases

correctly in most cases.



Unfortunately, when you mix the two types of OS in operation, one

more potential problem may arise.





About the various Windows OS.



   Although all Windows operating systems except early ones (Win 3.x)

   support long filenames, there is a subtle difference in the

   algorithm of alias synthesis by the various OSes.  The difference

   may adversely affects XXCOPY's effort in preserving the short

   filename.



   First, let us examine the difference.  Windows 95 and 98 use a

   straightforward scheme in picking up the short name alia, whereas

   Windows NT4, NT5 and 2000 add a little twist in the way the numeric

   tail is generated.



   It is easy for anyone to observe the filename related idiosyncrasies.

   Just pick a file and repeatedly copy it in a directory under a series

   of long names having the same beginning.  For example:



        mkdir c:\temp

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname1

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname2

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname3

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname4

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname5

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname6

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname7

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname8

        copy  c:\autoexec.bat   c:\temp\mylongname9



   Then, using an appropriate tool, examine the destination directory.

   The following table shows the result of the copy operations in

   Windows 95/98 and the Windows NT/2000/XP variations.



        Longname         Windows 95/98/ME  Windows NT4/2K/XP

       ----------------------------------------------------------

        mylongname1          MYLONG~1          MYLONG~1

        mylongname2          MYLONG~2          MYLONG~2

        mylongname3          MYLONG~3          MYLONG~3

        mylongname4          MYLONG~4          MYLONG~4

        mylongname5          MYLONG~5          MYA476~1

        mylongname6          MYLONG~6          MYA486~1

        mylongname7          MYLONG~7          MYA496~1

        mylongname8          MYLONG~8          MYA4A6~1

        mylongname9          MYLONG~9          MYA4B6~1



   Whereas the Win9x OSes use a simple decimal number in the numeric

   tail, the WinNT family OSes follow the same pattern only in the

   first four cases.  After that, they start using a 4-digit

   hexadecimal number in the middle of the 8.3 name as the

   distinguishing part (only the first two letters remains the same).



   The hexadecimal value is probably a hash value for the string to

   supposedly shorten the filename matching operation which could be

   very time consuming.  Microsoft programmers chose to keep the first

   four match done numerically for the sake of compatibility to the

   Win9X systems.  What they failed to realize is that they allowed

   only the first four such names for compatibility.





The adverse effect of the two alias algorithms.



   As long as you use XXCOPY in a homogeneous environment where

   the files are generated under one OS, XXCOPY can preserve the

   short name.  But, when you have a mixed environment (e.g., with a

   dual-boot system), you may copy a directory with many similar

   names which were created under one OS and then perform a directory

   copy operation using XXCOPY under the other OS, XXCOPY may not be

   able to preserve the short name.



   One consolation is that the great majority of files will receive

   the correct short name alias using XXCOPY since the numeric tail of

   the first four aliases in a directory are common in all Windows OSes.

   Therefore the problem should be quite rare.  Ironically, if your

   system has many Microsoft software packages, you will find quite

   a few directories which all start like:



     "\Program Files\Microsoft xxxxx"



   One can argue that exactly because it is so rare, this phenomenon

   would not be widely known.  Therefore, when the rare problem occurs,

   it will take many agonizing hours for the user to discover the

   cause of the problem.





Then, what happens with XXCOPY?



   Since XXCOPY does not access the raw directory contents in the

   process of preserving the short name alias, its magic does not work

   all the time.  We cannot do much about this problem without making

   the XXCOPY utility breaking the rules of good programming practice.

   At least we can list the situations where the potential problem may

   arise and how you can it.



   1.  Stay within the 8.3 naming convention if possible.

   2.  Stay away from a dual-boot system if possible.

   3.  If you have a dual-boot system and you switch the OS from

       time to time, make sure a directory is written exclusively

       under one OS if possible.

   4.  Finally, when you have to copy a directory, use XXCOPY and

       perform the copy operation under the same OS in which the

       files in the directory were created.

   5.  In a networked environment with different types of OS between

       the source and the destination directories, expect the worst.



   Note that although it is ideal that when you copy a directory,

   all the files in the destination should be identical to those in

   the source, in most case, it is not the end of the world.  As a

   matter of fact, in most cases, the discrepancies in short names

   do not cause any problem.  As long as the files and directories

   that are affected by this problem is "non-system" files, the

   problem would be benign if present at all.



   In the case of Windows 95/98, the most well documented problem

   which are associated with the unmatched short name is a few

   directory and filenames which are stored in their short name

   alias in a few critical cases in the system registry.  Since

   Windows 95/98 references these files at the system initialization

   time (locating and loading VxD files using short names), the

   difference would be life and death (that is, success and failure

   in system initialization).





A final advice with XXCOPY:



   If you have a large number of collided aliases (where the short

   name distinctions are made by the synthesized numeric tail only),

   and you are copying across OSes (from Win95/98 to WinNT/2000/XP

   or vice versa), we suggest you turn off XXCOPY's short name

   preservation switch by /NX0 in order to avoid the time consuming

   and futile effort by XXCOPY.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #09




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Worldwide Network of Download Sites for XXCOPY

Date:    2001-07-10

====================================================================



If you have difficulties downloading the XXCOPY freeware copy

from our own server, select an ftp site which is close to you.



Our sincere thanks go to Simtel.Net which has the world-wide

network of mirror sites.



Unfortunately, due to the agreement with Simtel.Net we are unable

to provide direct links to the files.  You should visit the

following page which has the actuali links of the mirror sites:





   Simtel.Net List of Mrror sites







XXCOPY Freeware ver 2.60.0  (xxfw2600.zip)





FTP:// download sites

________________________________________________________________________



US, ALL (primary)        US, Arizona              US, Georgia 



US, Illinois             US, Indiana              US, Massachusetts



US, Missouri             US, New York             US, Oklahoma



US, Oregon               US, Pennsylvania         US, Virginia







Australia                Austria                  Belgium



Brazil                   Bulgaria                 Canada



Czech Republic           Denmark                  Finland



France                   Germany                  Hong Kong



Hungary                  Italy                    Japan



Netherlands              Norway                   Poland



Portugal                 Russia                   Singapore 



Slovenia                 South Africa             South Korea 



Spain                    Sweden                   Switzerland 



Thailand                 Turkey                   UK






HTTP:// download sites ________________________________________________________________________ US, Arizona US, Minnesota US, California US, Indiana US, New York Australia Austria Brazil Denmark Finland Germany Japan Norway Portugal Russia South Africa Spain UK

© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #10




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Cloning the Win9x system disk using XXCOPY.

Date:    2003-11-07  (revised)

====================================================================



The disk clone operation has become one of the most popular usages of

the XXCOPY utility.  Therefore, I decided to have this dedicated

page just for the subject.  But, if you just arrived at this page

for the first time and have not really learned much about XXCOPY,

I would like to remind you that this Disk Clone capability is rather

a small portion of what XXCOPY can do for you.  If you are in a hurry,

go ahead and finish your disk clone job by following the instructions

below.  But, I suggest you come back and explore the rest of XXCOPY.



In this article, I would like to discuss the most common case of

disk cloning operation.  Some related topics which were once part

of this article are moved to another page, XXTB #20.



Note:  The technique discussed in this article applies primarily

       for Windows 9x and ME cases.  If your C: drive is loaded

       with Win NT4/2000/XP, you will not get a bootable disk.  If you

       have a dual-boot system (Win 9X and NT/2000/XP), then it is best

       you perform the operation from Win 9x.  But even in that case,

       the newly cloned drive will not be dual-bootable because XXCOPY

       does not touch the Master Boot Record (MBR) of a hard disk

       (we believe it should be handled by FDISK or other tools).



       As of this writing, we do not have a simple solution to reliably

       produce a bootable system disk for an NT4/2000/XP system using

       the XXCOPY utility.





System Disk Cloning:



    Say, you bought a hard disk with an astronomical number of bytes

    (at least, it seems that way for now), and you want to install

    your new drive as your system disk (Drive C:).



    Typically, you would connect the brand new drive to the EIDE

    port (either as the primary port's slave or the secondary port's

    master or slave --- whichever is available on your computer).

    Most new disk drives have the jumper setting printed on the top

    cover of the drive (the selection involves only master/slave).



    The overall procedure goes like this:  first, you connect the

    new drive and assign a temporary drive letter to it.  Then, copy

    the contents of the current Drive C: to the new drive's volume.

    Usually, the new drive has more capacity than the old one.

    Therefore, you can copy the entire C: drive to the new drive

    and still you will have much free space.  After the files are

    copied from the old drive to the new one, you will remove the

    old drive and place the new one as Drive C:.  It is quite

    straightforward.  Here, I assume your new drive will be

    temporarily assigned as Drive D:.



    Summarizing this, the sequence is as follows:



       . connect the new drive as D:

       . FDISK                         (initialize a partition)

       . FORMAT D:                     (init volume for file access)

       . XXCOPY C:\ D:\  /CLONE        (copy all the files)

       . connect the new drive as C:

       . FDISK                         (set active partition)







Step-by-Step Instructions:



    Now, let me go over the sequence, step-by-step with more details.

    If you have a printer, you may make a hard copy which will be

    handy for a beginner.



    In this article, the main drive is assumed to be C: and the

    Windows directory is located at C:\Windows.  If your settings

    are different, make necessary adjustments in the commands shown

    in this article.



         -----------------------------------------------------------

           How to create a DOS Box



              XXCOPY is a console application which is most

              conveniently launched from a DOS Box in Win9x.



              If you don't have an icon handy for DOS Box on desktop,

              you may create one by Right-click at an empty point in

              the desktop and click New > Shortcut.  Then, type in

              the box labeld Command line [ command.com ] and

              click [ Next ] and then click [ Finish ].

              Now, you will find an icon labeld "MS-DOS Prompt".



              Or, you may create a DOS Box directly by starting

              at the taskbar, click [ Start ] and click [ Run...].

              Then type in the box labeld Open [ command.com ] and

              click [ OK ].

         -----------------------------------------------------------





    0. Clean up the system disk



       Before you start the disk cloning operation, it is best if

       you clean up the original disk.  It is highly recommended

       that you run the SCANDISK utility.  Since some long-named

       files/directories are not reachable in DOS, you should run

       SCANDISK in the Win32 environment (the regular Windows 9X/NT/2K).



       Perform any additional cleaning up on the drive to remove

       garbage files which include the files generated by SCANDISK

       for retrieved data (check the root directory for names like

       FILE0000.CHK).  This is an ideal time to throw away other

       junk.  Don't forget to empty the Recycle Bin at the end.





    1. Making the system diskette



       The next hard disk preparation steps (FDISK and FORMAT) may

       be carried out either in a DOS box of Windows or in the

       real-mode DOS.  Since you need to boot the system from a

       diskette at least once (to run FDISK), it is usually faster

       if you perform the initial FDISK and FORMAT operations in

       the real-mode (DOS) environment created by the system diskette.



       If you have a Win9x boot diskette, you may skip this step.

       But, the boot diskette which you create using this method

       will take considerably less time to initialize the DOS

       environment (without the access to the CD-ROM but you don't

       need CD-ROM for this) than with the Win9x boot diskette.



       In a DOS Box, run the following commands to prepare a system

       diskette for the bootup, FDISK and FORMAT operations.



           FORMAT A: /S

           COPY  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FDISK.EXE   A:\

           COPY  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FORMAT.COM  A:\

           COPY  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SYS.COM     A:\



       -------------------------------------------------------------

       Note:  In Windows ME, you have to run the "FORMAT" command

              without the /S switch which is no longer supported.

              Therefore, you need to run the following commands by

              hand from a DOS Box to achieve the same result.



                  FORMAT A:

                  COPY    C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EBD\IO.SYS      A:\

                  COPY    C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EBD\COMMAND.COM A:\

                  COPY    C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FDISK.EXE       A:\ 

                  COPY    C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FORMAT.COM      A:\ 

                  COPY    C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SYS.COM         A:\ 

       -------------------------------------------------------------



       Since you have plenty of room in the diskette, you may

       copy a few basic tools (we do not use any of them in this

       procedure).  If you don't know how to use them, skip this.



            EDIT.COM        (or your favorite text editor)

            XXCOPY16.EXE

            HIMEM.SYS

            SMARTDRV.EXE

            DOSKEY.COM

            ATTRIB.EXE

            DELTREE.EXE





    2. Attach the new disk as Drive D:



       Once you have a system diskette which can boot up the

       system, you can shut down the system now.



       If you have  not attached the new disk drive, now is

       the time to connect it as a non-boot disk by leaving

       the current system disk (Drive C:) as it is.  We assume

       your new drive is the 2nd drive (referred to as

       Drive 2 by FDISK).



       There is an well-written site which shows this step with

       good illustrations at Adding a 2nd Hard Drive.





    3. Initialize the new disk partition (FDISK)



       Power up the system and boot up using the system diskette.

       From the command prompt of DOS, run FDISK.EXE by typing:



           FDISK



       After confirming that you go along with the "Large Disk Support",

       Select choice 5 (Change current fixed disk drive), and enter

       the correct "Disk Drive Number".  After making the new drive

       the current disk drive, select choice 1 (Create DOS partition

       or Logical DOS Drive).  You now specify the space you allocate

       for the new partition (most people select 100%).  Exit FDISK.





    4. Initialize the new volume (FORMAT)



       After the new drive's partition is intialized by FDISK,

       reboot the system using the system diskette which you made in

       Step 1.  The next step is to format the new partition which

       can be done either in Windows' DOS Box or in the real DOS.  But,

       here we choose to boot up the system using the newly created

       diskette since it verifies that the diskette really works

       before we remove the current bootable hard disk.  Also, it

       is a bit faster.

       

       The diskette-reboot will lead you to a DOS prompt at A:\>.



       Before formatting the disk, you should check if the drive

       letter is right (you don't want to format the other drive).



           DIR D:



       The system should complain by saying:



           Invalid media type reading drive D

           Abort, Retry, Fail?



       This is exactly what you want with the partition which was

       just initialized by FDISK, but has not been formatted.  If you

       see any other message, you should run FDISK, select 5

       (Change current fixed disk drive) in the main menu, and

       examine the overview of the disk partitions.  The listing

       conveniently displays both the disk number (1, 2, etc.)

       and the drive letter assigned to the various partitions.

       Type ESC a few times to exit the FDISK utility.



       Once you are sure of the drive letter, run the next command.



           FORMAT D:



       This time, it may take some time (depending on the capacity

       of the drive) while the sectors are verified for read/write

       operations.  Before the FORMAT command finishes its job,

       it will prompt you to enter the volume name.  You may enter

       any name (up to 11 characters).  I urge you to name it

       something rather than leaving it blank.



       Once the volume is formatted, you may access the drive now.

       Just type the following command in a DOS Box.



           DIR D:



        If you see lines like this, then it is good.



              Volume in drive D is XXXXXXXXX

              Volume Serial Number is 1234-5678

              Directory of D:\

              ...





    5. Reboot after format (back to Windows 9x)



       Although it is possible to enter Windows from this

       environment (provided that you installed HIMEM.SYS),

       we do not recommend doing so at this point.  Remove

       the system diskette from the floppy drive and reboot

       the system and enter the regular Windows environment.



          -----------------------------------------------------

           If you were preparing the new partition inside a

           DOS Box, rather than in real-mode DOS, you could

           access the volume and proceed to the next step

           (XXCOPY /CLONE), but you should still reboot now.

           Because after a volume is formatted, it remains

           in the so-called "MS-DOS compatibility mode" where

           the disk I/O cache is disabled.  Without a reboot

           after a format, file access to the volume will be

           extremely slow --- the XXCOPY action would take

           literally hours rather than minutes without reboot!

          -----------------------------------------------------





    6. Duplicate the volume (XXCOPY /CLONE)



       Once you have prepared the new disk with FDISK and FORMAT,

       you are ready to run the centerpiece of this procedure.

       This step is the most important operation in the entire

       procedure.  You must be in the Win32 environment, that is

       you must enter the Windows' GUI world (not booting into

       the "Command Prompt Only" (real mode, DOS) environment.

       Then, open up a DOS Box.  When you have followed the standard

       XXCOPY installation procedure, XXCOPY.EXE should be present at

       the \Windows\command directory so that XXCOPY is the "path".



       Run the following command from a DOS Box.



           XXCOPY  C:\  D:\  /CLONE



          ----------------------------------------------------------

           The /CLONE switch looks deceptively simple. But,

           it is actually a combination of eight distinct

           switches.  Much of XXCOPY's flexibility comes from

           combining a variety of switches.  This particular

           case is equivalent to the following command.



             XXCOPY  C:\  D:\  /ks/h/e/r/q/y/bi/zy/ze



               Explanation:



               /ks ; keeps source files' attributes exactly

               /h  ; copies hidden and system files

               /e  ; copies subdirectories (including empty ones)

               /r  ; overwrites read-only files if such files exist

               /q  ; suppresses display of skipped file in backup

               /y  ; overwrites existing files without prompt

               /bi ; backs up incrementally (skips identical files)

               /zy ; deletes extra files in destination if present

               /ze ; disables XXCOPY's use of Envrionment variables

          ----------------------------------------------------------



       The XXCOPY operation takes anywhere from 10 minutes to

       over several hours, depending on the amount of data you

       transfer (typically 2-15 GB/hr)..





    7. While XXCOPY /CLONE is in progress...



       When XXCOPY is carrying out the clone operation, you don't

       have to sit idle.  You may actively use the computer as

       usual, browsing the Web, operate a word processor, or use

       spreadsheet --- whatever.  Just consider the on-going

       XXCOPY operation a background task.  There may be a few

       files which may not be copied the first time due to

       file-access contention.  That is expected and not a serious

       problem at all.



       Once the first round of XXCOPY /CLONE operation is over,

       finish your foreground work, close all active programs

       at this point.  Then, run the exactly same command again.



           XXCOPY  C:\  D:\  /CLONE



       The key here is that the /CLONE operation behaves as an

       incremental backup (by the virtue of the /BI component).

       It compares the source volume and the destination volume

       and skips files which already exist in the destination

       with the same size and time.  The second /CLONE step

       should take only a few minutes at most.



       You may still observe a few failed copies.  The most

       notable one in the Win9x system is the virtual memory

       swap file (WIN386.SWP).  In the case of Win NT4 and

       Win 2000, the equivalent file is named PAGEFILE.SYS.

       It is safe to ignore these swap files.



       You may run the /CLONE command as many times as you like:



           XXCOPY  C:\  D:\  /CLONE





    8. After XXCOPY /CLONE is complete.



       When the entire volume has been copied by XXCOPY, you are

       ready to remove the old Drive C: and connect the new drive

       as your new Drive C:.  Shut down your Win9x system now,

       and reconfigure your hard disks. You may need to remove

       the jumper plug which made it a slave drive.  You may also

       need to adjust the BIOS setting (Primary/Secondary IDE,

       Master/Slave drive parameters).  All recent models of

       motherboard come with a BIOS which has the AUTO sense mode

       which is trouble-free.  If you select a manual setting,

       you may need to adjust the hard disk paramters.





    9. Make the new partition "Active" (FDISK).



       Since the new drive is still not bootable, but it has to

       be connected as Drive C: since FDISK can activate only the

       first disk drive's (Drive C) Primary DOS Partition.  So,

       we need the system diskette once more to boot the system.



       Now, the remaining thing is to make the new drive bootable.

       The Master Boot Record (MBR) must contain the partition table

       where the Primary DOS partition is set "Active".



           FDISK



       Select choice 2 in the first FDISK menu (Set active partition).

       When you display Partition Information by choice 4, the main

       partition should show Status 'A' (for Active partition).

       Pressing the ESC key will terminate the FDISK utility.



   10. Make the new drive bootable (FDISK).



       The normal FDISK operation you have just performed modifies

       the contents of the partition table in the first logical

       sector of the drive (MBR).  But, the operation does not

       change the section of the MBR which contains the bootstrap

       program (a very small machine-language program which will

       receive control of the system at the very beginning of the

       system bootup process).  FDISK has a "well known" undocumented

       feature which initializes the bootstrap program inside the MBR.

       Run the following command line.

       

           FDISK /MBR 



       Unlike the regular interactive FDISK operation, with the

       /MBR switch, it quietly carries out the MBR-initialization

       operation.  As a matter of fact, it does not say anything.

       If you are a bit nervous, visit the following Microsoft site:

       

         Q69013: FISK /MBR Rewrites the Master Boot Record.



       Microsoft documents this feature in the article and yet it

       calls this feature "undocumented" in the article itself!!!

       So, I guess it remains undocumented...  



   11. Boot to the Windows (DONE)



       Remove the system diskette from the floppy drive and

       let the system boot from the new Drive C: to windows.

       You may just leave the original system disk (now as D:)

       for daily backup storage.  If you set up a well written

       backup batch file script (using XXCOPY of course), you

       may use a much smaller disk drive for system drive

       backup.



   12. If the new disk has a difficulty in booting up by itself,

       consider running the SYS command.  If you follow all of the

       steps described above, you need not run the SYS command.

       However, if you skipped the format step, the boot sector

       may not have proper boot code.  Or, if your procedure

       is slightly deviated from the above steps in any way, the

       boot sector may not have been properly initialized.  At any

       event, it does not hurt to run this step.  From the DOS

       prompt using the system disktte, run the following command:

       

           SYS  A:  C:

           

       This procedure copies IO.SYS, MSDOS.SYS, and COMMAND.COM

       from the diskette to the root directory of the C: drive

       (which is not necessary) and also re-initializes the

       boot sector of the C: drive.  (The boot sector is usually

       initialized when the volume is formatted.)  Now, you can

       try rebooting from the hard disk.



  ================================================================





Q and A about Disk Cloning:



  Q:  Can I stay in DOS (real mode) to duplicate the disk using

      XXCOPY16?



  A:  We strongly recommend the use of XXCOPY.EXE (the 32-bit

      version which must run under the Win32 environment), as

      described in this page.  When you stay in the DOS (real mode)

      environment, you may not be able to access all the files and

      directories in your disk drive.  This is due to the fact that

      the DOS environment cannot handle a pathname which exceeds

      the 80 character limit.  Although each long name comes with

      its short name (8.3 format) alias, there could still be a

      heavily nested, very long path which exceeds the 80-character

      limit after converting all of the long directory names into

      their short name alias (for the same reason, SCANDISK fails

      on certain volume in 16-bit mode).



      If all of the files in your drive have a full pathname less

      than 80 characters, you can use XXCOPY16 with the /CLONE switch

      to create an interim copy of the source disk which can be made

      bootable.  After you boot into the Win9x environment, you

      should convert all of the shortnames in your system disk

      into the corresponding longname using the following command

      (assuming the D: drive is the original source drive)



         XXCOPY D:\  C:\  /S  /NL



      This procedure lets you restore most of the long filenames.

      However, there will be a small number of files and directories

      which are made prior to this XXCOPY run (immediately after the

      first Win9x initialization).  That is, you need to perform

      additional procedures by hand to make necessary adjustments.

      In short, this procedure is troublesome at best and we don't

      recommend it to anyone who asks this question in the first place.





  Q:  I thought you need to use the /S option when you format the

      new hard disk in disk in order to make the drive bootable.

      Why?



  A:  It is true that you should take advantage of the /S switch

      when you make the boot diskette as



          FORMAT A: /S



      The bare FORMAT command formats the media (which tests the

      sectors and initializes the FAT and the root directory).

      With the /S switch, it performs additional file copy

      operation. (COMMAND.COM, IO.SYS, MSDOS.SYS, and DRVSPACE.BIN).

      Since the XXCOPY /CLONE procedure copies these system files

      anyway (provided that the source volume contains these files),

      it is redundant to run "FORMAT D:"  with the /S switch when

      you initialize the new hard disk (it does not hurt though).





  Q:  I did not find the "SYS" command in the sequence you showed.

      Why can you skip this step?



  A:  The SYS command performs the equivalent of the "/S" switch

      in the FORMAT command.  For the same reason mentioned above,

      you can skip the SYS command when you run XXCOPY /CLONE.

      Some people believe that the SYS command initializes the

      MBR (see below) to make the drive bootable.  This is not

      correct.  The MBR is usually managed by FDISK. Not by

      FORMAT or SYS utilities.  (Also, see Step 12.)





  Q:  In which steps does the Master Boot Record (MBR) of the new

      drive initialized?



  A:  If you follow the step-by-step instructions described in

      this page, you should notice that you use the FDISK utility

      three times.  The first time, you will initialize the primary

      partition of the new drive.  At that time, the drive is

      tentatively assigned as a non-bootable drive (e.g., D:).

      Unfortunately, FDISK does not allow you to make the primary

      DOS partition of the new disk "Active".  For some reason,

      FDISK sets only the first drive's (C:) primary partition

      "active".  That is why in the above procedure, you need to

      boot up the system using the boot diskette.  In your second

      invocation of FDISK, you make the primary DOS partition

      "Active".  Then, the the third time with the FDISK /MBR

      switch, the bootstrap section of the MBR is initalized.





  Q:  Can you write (or read)  the MBR using XXCOPY?



  A:  No.  XXCOPY does *NOT* touch the MBR block which is the

      very first logical sector of the volume.  It contains both

      the partition information and the system initialization

      code (a very tightly written machine language program).

      We strongly believe that a "well-behaving" program such

      as XXCOPY must not touch the area of the disk which is

      handled by specialized tools.  In this case, FDISk is the

      official utility whose only job is to manage the contents

      of MBR.  Microsoft's utilities FDISK and FORMAT have never

      been combined to be just one simple utility for this very

      reason.  In the future we may make add a MBR backup

      feature.  But, it is a dangerous operation at best.

      Of course, we all know how bad Microsoft's FDISK design is.

      But, it gets the job done..





  For more on cloning, see XXTB #20.



  Click the download file (the line below) when you are ready.



     http://www.xxcopy.com/download/xxcopy.zip



 [ This page may be accessed by its alias, http://www.xxcopy.com/clone ]




© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #11




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Cookbook: Recipes of common usages

Date:    2001-03-03

====================================================================



A few examples are often more useful than pages of rigorous and

boring definitions and reference material.



--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are made on or after February 1st, 2000.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DA:2000-02-01





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are made before January 1st, 2000.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB:1999-12-31



    Note: The date for /DA and /DB is inclusive of the date.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are made today.



  XXCOPY  c:\src\  c:\temp\   /Do:. /S



    Note: /DB:.  selects files of yesterday or earlier

          /DA:.  selects files of today (and with future dates)

         (see below for a variation)





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select all the files in the entire volume which are made today



  XXCOPY  c:\    c:\temp\   /Do:. /S /CCY



    Note: this is a case of cyclic copy situation where the

          destination is a part of the source directory (the root),

          which requires the /CC switch to avoid a recursive meltdown.

          Here, /CCY (with the Y at the end) suppresses the warning

          message for the case.



  XXCOPY  c:\    c:\temp\   /Do:. /SX /CCY



          This variation (with /SX) creates a flat list of files

          in the \temp directory.  By substituting the subdirectory

          delimiter character (backslash) by another character,

          the files in the destination are easily examined.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are modified (or newly created) today (or after).



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DA:.

  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DA#.

  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DA#0



    All of the above will give you exactly the same result.



    Note: the single dot "." is a shortcut for TODAY's date

          when used with the "After" prefix.



    Although in most system, you seldom find a file with a future

    date, the operating system does not prohibit a program from

    setting any legal time.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are created today (or after).



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /FC/DA:.

  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /FC/DA#.

  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /FC/DA#0





    All of the above will give you exactly the same result.



    Note: the single dot "." is a shortcut for TODAY's date

          when used with the "After" prefix.



    Although in most system, you seldom find files dates which

    are "newer" than the current time, the operating system does

    not prohibit a program from setting file time as such.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are made within the past 45 minutes.



  XXCOPY  c:\src\  c:\temp\   /S  /DA#30M



    Note: /DA#30M   The age parameter after /DA# (or /DB#) may be

                    appended with a suffix (D, H, M, or S for Days,



    Variations:

    

          /DA#10      10 days (Days if no suffix)

          /DA#365D   365 days

          /DA#90M     90 minutes (1 hr 30 min)

          /DA#330S   330 seconds (5 min 30 sec).

          /DB#36H     46 hours or before





--------------------------------------------------------------------



Select files that are made on or before yesterday.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB:.

  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB#.

  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB#1



    All of the above will give you exactly the same result.



    Note: the single dot "." is a shortcut for YESTERDAY's date

          when used with the "Before" prefix.



 Caution: The meaning of the dot "." character used in conjunction

          with the "B(efore)" prefix is different from that with

          the "A(fter)".  That is because "On-or-Before-Today" is

          hardly ever used and there is no use to designate a

          special shortcut for it.  On the other hand, the number

          of days specified with the "#" prefix always counts the

          days from today (which is designated by #0).



--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are older than 30 days.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB#31



    Note: /DB#30  would include the 30th day.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are 30-60 days old.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB#30 /DA#60





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are *NOT* 30-60 days old.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DA#29 /DB#61





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Select files that are 6-12 hours old.



  XXCOPY  c:\srcdir\  d:\dstdir\  /DB#6H /DA#12H





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Copy files and remove extra files in the destination



  XXCOPY \src\  \dst\  /Z



    The /Z switch remove all files in the destination whose

    counterpart is not present in the source.  In this most

    primitive form, the /Z switch itself does not check whether

    the remaining files are the same or not.  But, in this

    particular case, all files in the \src directory will be

    copied to the \dst directory.  If the file to be copied to

    the destination is brand new (no file with the same name

    exists in the destination), then the file will be copied

    quietly.  The file that exists in the destination will give

    you a warning for overwrite (Yes/No/All).  If you say No,

    then, the old file will be left alone --- possibly causing

    some mismatch in file.  You may automate this command by

    adding /Y which is equivalent of typing 'Y' to all prompts.

    But, for each extra file to be deleted from the destination,

    XXCOPY will give you another warning with Yes/No/All prompt.



  XXCOPY \src\  \dst\  /Y /ZY



    This variation suppresses the two types of warning prompts.

    But, in order to make the two directories really the same,

    a number of additional consideration must be made.



    1. hidden and system files are not included in a normal copy.

    2. subdirectories in the directory should be included.

    3. you may want to preserve the file attributes exactly.

    4. a read-only file in destination would prevent an overwrite.



    So, you need a combination of more switches to really make

    two directory the same (see below).



  Caution:



    The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

    directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

    specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

    severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Variations in directory synchronization to F: (e.g., a Zip disk).



  XXCOPY  "C:\My Documents\" F:\        /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY



    This example is the standard way to duplicate the source

    directory at the destination.



      /KS    Keeps the file attributes of the source exactly

      /H     Includes hidden and/or system files

      /E     Copies subdirectories including empty ones

      /R     Overwrites existing files that are read-only

      /Q     Suppresses display for skipped files

      /Y     Suppresses the Y/N/A prompt for a file overwrite

      /BI    Backs up incrementally (skips file with same size/time)

      /ZY    Deletes extra files in destination (without Y/N prompt)



      Note that the first argument was surrounded by a pair of

      double-quotes (").  This was necessitated by the presence of

      embedded space (between My and Documents).



  Caution:



    The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

    directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

    specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

    severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!





  XXCOPY  "C:\My Documents\" F:\        /CLONE



    The /CLONE switch is equivalent to typing the /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY

    combination.



  XXCOPY  "C:\My Documents\" F:\MYDOC   /CLONE/I

  XXCOPY  "C:\My Documents\" F:\MYDOC\  /CLONE



    These variations show the use of subdirectory in the destination.

    The /I switch or the trailing backslash in the destination name

    suppresses a possible Y/N prompt in case the destination

    directory does not exist.



    When you use a removable media (e.g., a diskette, or Zip disk),

    you should just reverse the action on the target system.



  XXCOPY  F:\   "C:\My Documents\"      /CLONE



    In this example, any extra files that exists on the target

    system will be deleted.  If you do not want to delete any of

    existing files (or directories), you should do the following:



  XXCOPY  F:\   "C:\My Documents\"      /CLONE /Z0



    The /Z0 switch after /CLONE will negate the /ZY switch which

    is declared within the super /CLONE switch.  This command

    will leave any additional files and directory in the destination

    untouched.



    Note that if any opposing or mutually exclusive switches exist

    on a command line, they are interpreted from left to right.

    Therefore, if you place /Z0 before /CLONE, the effect of /Z0

    will be lost.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Cloning a DOS/Win9x drive to another



  XXCOPY  C:\  D:\     /CLONE



    Cannot be simpler than this!!!  The above section scrutinizes

    exact meaning of /CLONE in terms of its true switch components.

    This command is repeatable (first time, you run this command

    in background while you continue using the system).  While you

    are running this command, you may type a Ctrl-C or Ctrl-Break

    to abort the command.  You can always run the exactly same

    command to resume where you stopped the last time.  While you

    are running this command in the background, a number of files

    may be created.  No problem.  When you are ready for the final

    round, just stop all activities and just run the command once

    more.  It will quickly save the newly created file.  Usually,

    the virtual memory swap file (WIN386.SWP) cannot be accessed

    when you run Win9x.  For all practical purposes, this file

    need not be duplicated in order to use the drive as the system

    (bootable) drive.  You need not format the hard disk as the

    system disk prior to running this XXCOPY command.  Nor you need

    to run the SYS.COM command (to transfer the system files).

    All hidden/system files necessary to boot the system will be

    there.



  Caution:



    The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

    directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

    specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

    severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!



  Note:



    The only thing which may be missing from the newly cloned disk

    is the Master Boot Record (MBR) which is not really a file.

    The first logical sector (512 bytes) on the drive is called MBR

    which must be initialized by FDISK (or by some third party

    products).  Keep a bootable diskette with FDISK.EXE handy.

    After connecting the new drive as the first drive (FDISK

    call the first drive DISK 1), reboot the system using the

    bootable diskette, run FDISK and make the first Primary DOS

    partition Active.



  Note:



    We do not recommend using XXCOPY16 to clone the entire drive.

    (details are discussed the XXCOPY10.HTM article).





    A complete discussion is found in another article (XXTB #10)





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Coping files from another computer on a network.



  XXCOPY  \\myserver\c\yourdocs\*.doc   c:\mydocs\



    This command copies all .DOC files (Microsoft's Word document)

    from a computer named "myserver", drive named 'C'. directory

    named \yourdocs\.  The source name starting with two consecutive

    backslashes are so-called UNC (Universal Naming Convention) name.

    When a resource (such as a hard disk) is made sharable to other

    users outside the computer, the resource must be given a name.

    Usually Drive C is named just 'C' by convention (NetWare encouraged

    the naming like "DRIVEC").  Therefore, the "root" of the remote

    resource over the network will not be the computer name alone.

    At the minimum, you need to specify the resource name for the

    drive (such as \\myserver\c\" which will act as the root directory

    of the volume).  In this example, the source directory is locally

    (on the computer) known as C:\dest\.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Coping files to another computer on a network.



  XXCOPY  c:\mydir\*.doc    \\myserver\c\dest\



    The UNC path specifier can be used for the destination directory.



    Caution:  If the target resource is available on a read-only

    basis, then, it cannot be made the destination of copy operation.

    Some system allows you to access only on a read-only basis.  In

    that case, you can read the files but cannot write to the

    directory, rename or, delete.  Any modification of the contents

    is considered a write-access.



    Check with your network administrator for details.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

List up device driver files of certain date.



  XXCOPY  c:\Windows\*.DLL      /S /L /DO:1999-04-23



    The date shown here happens to be one of the Microsoft release

    dates.  The DLL files originally installed from the setup

    CD-ROM will be listed by this command.



  XXCOPY  c:\Windows\system\*.DLL  /L /DO:1999-04-23



    This is a variation of the above, without /S so that the listing

    is made only from the specified directory.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Create a list of all files in the volume.



  XXCOPY  c:\  c:\mylist\   /H /E /TR0 /CCY /KN



    This command creates a directory entry for each and every file

    in the volume in the destination directory.  The file contents

    are not copied (using /TR0 to limit the new file to be 0 byte).

    It effectively create a catalog of existing files.  /CCY prevents

    the cyclic copy meltdown. /H includes hidden files.  /KN is an

    optional switch to convert hidden/system files to visible file

    for your convenience (you may drop this switch).



  XXCOPY  c:\  c:\mylist\   /KS /H /E /R /Q /Y /BX /ZY /TR0 /CCY



    A variation to the one before.  This command synchronizes the

    file list created earlier by removing extra files (/ZY) and

    adding those files that has different file time (/BX).  Although

    we could have chosen /KN as before.  But, we chose to use a

    different way to save the file attributes using /KS.  It retains

    the same file attributes as they are in the source directory

    --- which in turn necessitates /R which is needed to overwrite

    read-only files.  Here, the /BX is a superior choice to /BB

    because /BX rewrites the file which had a different file time

    whereas /BB would skip the file which already exists --- leaving

    files with old file time without being updated).  /BX is better

    than /BI (which checks both file time and file size).  That's

    because with /BI, the presence of /TR0 forces the file size to

    be different (0 byte) for nearly all files, almost all files

    would be rewritten.



  Caution:



    The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

    directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

    specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

    severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Copy files and delete them from the source (i.e., move files).



  XXCOPY \src\  \dst\  /RCY /S



    The /RC switch stands for Remove-after-Copy.  The Y suffix

    suppresses the (Y/N/A) prompt on each file delete.  To suppress

    the (Y/N/A) prompt for file-overwrite cases, add /Y.  /S goes

    through subdirectories.  Of course, you may add other common

    switches such as /H (include hidden/system files), and

    /R (overwrites even read-only files),





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Delete files which are present in the reference directory



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /RS /U



    The /RS switch removes files in the first (src) directory which

    matches the template (*.doc).  The /U switch specifies that the

    delete operation will be performed on files that are present

    in both the ssrc directory and the reference directory.  To

    understand the file selection mechanism, first consider this is

    an ordinary file-copy operation.  If so, the /U switch (which

    stands for "update") selects files which exists on the

    destination directory.  The /RS switch changes the mode of

    operation from file-copying to file-deletion.  But, the file

    selection mechanism is identical.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Clean up the Windows temporary directory



  XXCOPY %TEMP%\  /RS /DB#1 /R /H /PD0 /Y /ED



      /RS    Removes files in the source (the only) directory

      /DB#1  Selects files made on or before yesterday

      /R     Deletes even a read-only file

      /H     Deletes even a hidden/system file

      /PD0   Suppresses the prompt which would appear on a directory

      /Y     Suppresses the prompt prior to each file-delete

      /ED    Preserves the directory even if it becomes empty



      In the standard Win9x system setup, the %TEMP%  Environment

      variable is set to the Windows designated temporary directory

      (usually C:\Windows\temp).



      By specifying the files that were made on yesterday or earlier,

      this command will not accidentally delete files that may be

      still in use in the current session (i.e., files created today).





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Treatments of redundant files



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\dst\   /BI /S



    This command is a common case where incremental backup is

    performed on a selected (*.doc) files in the source (and its

    subdirectory).  The /BI switch skips files that are already

    present in the destination with the same file time and size.

    That is, files which are different or the files that are

    new to the destination will be copied.



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\dst\   /BS /S



    This is a hypothetical command and such an operation is seldom

    carried out.  But, it helps understand what /BS does.  /BS is a

    strange switch for an ordinary copy operations.  That is because

    /BS (Backup Same) is exact opposite of /BI (Backup Incremental).

    It selects and copies files that are identical in file date and

    the size --- which results in no net change!!!  The /BS is not

    useful under normal circumstances (unless you want to exercise

    the hard drive for testing purposes).



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /RS /BS /S



    The funny /BS switch now makes a lot of sense when combined

    with /RS (remove files in source).  Files which are present

    in both the source and reference directories will be examined

    with respect to the file time and file size.



    Here, the files with the same file time and size which matches

    the pattern (*.doc) in the source directory (/S specifies its

    subdirectories) will be removed.



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /RS /BS /S /L



    The /L switch gives you a list of files which would be

    selected by the duplicate-elimination operation.



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /BS /S /L



    For that matter, the presence of /RS makes no difference

    because, /L has precedence over /RS.  Therefore, the operation

    becomes file-listing only.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Eliminate redundant files (delete identical files)



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /RS /BS /S



    This is another RS variation.  Again, two directories are

    given (the second directory provides the reference files for

    comparison).  /BS is a strange switch for an ordinary copy

    operations.  That is because /BS (Backup Same) is exact opposite

    of /BI (Backup Incremental).  The BI switch compares a pair

    of files between the source and destination and checks whether

    the pair of files have the same file-time and size.  If both

    matches, the two files are considered to be the same and file

    copy will be skipped.  Being the exact opposite of /BI, the BS

    switch would normally copy only identical files --- which

    results in no net change!!!  But, the file selection mechanism

    makes a lot of sense when it is applied for file deletion.



    Here, the files with the same file time and size which matches

    the pattern (*.doc) in the source directory (/S specifies its

    subdirectories) will be removed.





  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /RS /BS /S /L



    The /L switch gives you a list of files which would be

    selected by the duplicate-elimination operation.



  XXCOPY c:\src\*.doc  d:\reference\   /BS /S /L



    For that matter, the presence of /RS makes no difference

    because, /L has precedence over /RS.  Therefore, the operation

    becomes file-listing only.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Remove files in all subdirectories but leave certain files.



  XXCOPY c:\mydir\  /RMDIR /Y /Xtemplate.* /X*.doc



    /RMDIR is like DELTREE.  Here, /Y suppresses confirmation.

    The two /X switches specify filename patterns to avoid

    deletion.





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Three-way Differential Backup



  The scheme works like this:



  1.  Initially you make a full backup from \src\ to \ref\.

  2.  Later, you want to perform a daily differential backup

      from \src\ to \dst\ using the difference between \src\ and \ref.



  The initial step is usually a full backup



    XXCOPY  \src\  \ref\  /CLONE



  The daily differential backup requires three steps as follows

  (for illustration purpose, common switches are deliberately left

  out here).



    XXCOPY  \src\          /AZ

    XXCOPY  \src\  \ref\   /AA /BI

    XXCOPY  \src\  \dst\   /A



    The first step clears the archive bit of every file in the source.

    The second step sets the archive bit of the files you select.

    The third step performs the actual file copy.



  Very common cases (subdirectory included, hidden files also copied)



    XXCOPY  \src\          /AZ     /S

    XXCOPY  \src\  \ref\   /AA /BI /S /H

    XXCOPY  \src\  \dst\   /A      /S /H /KS



  With a twist of incrementally do the three-way differential backup

  to the same destination every day (remove extra files)



    XXCOPY  \src\          /AZ     /S

    XXCOPY  \src\  \ref\   /AA /BI /S /H

    XXCOPY  \src\  \dst\   /A      /S /H /KS /ZY



  Caution:



    The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

    directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

    specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

    severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!





--------------------------------------------------------------------

Differential Backup using a skeleton directory.



  This scheme is similar to the Three-way differential backup

  described above.  In that case, the reference directory \ref\,

  consumes a relatively large storage space just to provide the

  reference (where the file contents are never referenced).

  This variation drastically cuts down the storage usage by the

  reference directory by storing only zero-length files.  It

  still allows you to compare filename and the file date as the

  criteria for differential backup.  In other words, the skeleton

  directory serves as a file set specifier for regularly performed

  backup.



  The initial step here uses /TR0 to make zero-length files.



    XXCOPY  \src\  \ref\  /CLONE /TR0



  You may remove whatever files you are not interested in

  backing up (such as WIN386.SWP), thereafter in order to

  make the most desired file set in the reference directory



  The daily differential backup in this case uses /U to

  (for illustration purpose, common switches are deliberately left

  out here).



    XXCOPY  \src\          /AZ /S

    XXCOPY  \src\  \ref\   /AA /S /H /U /BX

    XXCOPY  \src\  \dst\   /A  /S /H /KS



    Note: the second step here uses /U (selects files that are

    present in the reference directory) and  /BX (exclude files

    with the same file date).



  Caution:



    The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

    directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

    specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

    severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!





This page will remain forever under construction...






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #12




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The file removal features in XXCOPY

Date:    2000-11-17  (revised)

====================================================================



Why are we always short in the storage space?



  No matter how big your hard disk is, it gets full sooner or later.

  Microsoft is often blamed for their "bloatware".  But, here is

  another theory.  There are just more programs which create files

  than those which delete files.  If you look at common applications,

  usually they offer more ways to create files than to destroy them.

  Therefore, to maintain a healthy equilibrium between the file

  creation and the file deletion, we need to put more conscious

  effort in file removal.  In the case of XXCOPY, it has been used

  primarily for file copying, and not much for file removal.



  Now, starting with Version 2.25, XXCOPY has a whole new set of

  file removal features.





File removal using a file copy utility?



  Why are we adding to XXCOPY more features which are not directly

  related to the file-copy function?  A good question.  Why not

  produce a separate file-delete utility?  That makes sense if you

  expect a simple one.  But, for that matter, you already have

  DELTREE from Microsoft.  Again, XXCOPY starts where Microsoft's

  imagination ends.



  Once you learn XXCOPY's rich set of file selection scheme in

  various file copy operations, you would want the same kind of

  power in file removal operations as well.  Therefore, instead of

  making a very similar program for file deletion, it is more

  natural to use the exact same file selection mechanisms of

  XXCOPY for file removal operations.  The notion of a file copy

  utility with a patch to handle file deletion should be thrown

  away.   It is only in its name, XXCOPY, which may mislead you on

  what it is capable of.  It is now a general purpose file management

  tool and the file removal feature is certainly an important one.

  In totality, we believe that you will spend less time learning the

  new features in the enhanced XXCOPY utility than you would spend

  in studying a brand new file delete tool.





The design principle of XXCOPY's file removal.



  We added just a few file removal functions which combine well with

  existing framework of XXCOPY's file selection schemes.  The new

  file removal functions all start with the letter R (for removal).



   Switch   Mnemonic          Files to be removed

   ------------------------------------------------------------------

    /RC   Remove-after-Copy   files in source after a successful copy

    /RS   Remove-Source       files in source which qualify

    /RD   Remove-Destination  files which qualify to be overwritten

    /RX   Remove-Extra        files which do not exist in the source



    (More minor variations are specified by optional third letter).



  Any of the above switches modifies the basic operation from file-

  copy to file-removal.  But, most other switches which engage in

  the file selection process apply equally to the file removal case.





The actions by the four variations in the file removal.



  With the first two variations (/RC and /RS), the file removal takes

  place in the source directory whereas in the last two cases (/RD

  and /RX), the operation takes place in the destination directory.



  The file copy operation is performed only with the first variation

  (/RC) and no copy is performed by the other three (/RS, /RD, /RX).

  Therefore, the designation of the source and destination for the

  command arguments (the non-switch parameters, ones without a slash)

  is admittedly weak.  But, in light of their origin being the file

  copy operation, they still carry some nuances.  The reference

  (destination) directory plays a vital role in file selection.





  /RC  (Remove-after-Copy)



        This switch first performs a regular file copy operation,

        and then removes the source file when the copy is successful.

        In essence, it is a file move operation.  Nearly all common

        XXCOPY switches designed for file copy apply in this case.



  /RS  (Remove-Source)



        This switch removes the source file without a copy action.

        In some cases, you specify only the first argument

        (the source specifier) without the destination.  However,

        there are many instances where you select files based on

        the relationships to the files in the reference (destination)

        directory.  For example, you may delete the files in the

        source that are older than the one in the destination.  You

        will probably use this switch more often than the other

        switches in this group.



  /RD  (Remove-Destination)



        This switch removes the files which would normally be

        overwritten.  The file selection process is exactly the

        same as in the cases of file copy.



  /RX  (Remove-Extra)



        This switch removes the files in the destination whose

        corresponding file is not present in the source directory.

        This command is somewhat similar to the /Z switch which

        accompanies regular file copy operations.  The difference

        with the /Z and /ZY commands is, of course, these commands

        carry out file copy actions whereas /RX does not copy at all.





The cases with /RD and RX --- Cautions.



        When you use the /RD or /RX switch, there are a few things

        you should remember.  Although the focus of the action is

        on the files which are to be removed, when these files are

        in the destination, many of the XXCOPY switch parameters

        does not work with the files in the destination directory.



        For example, when you specify /RD (remove destination) with

        /DB#4 (files more than 5 days old), the file date in the source

        is checked, not the one that would actually get removed.  This

        is because the /RD switch borrows XXCOPY's basic file-selection

        mechanism to determine which source-destination file pair

        to operate on.  This particular operation happens to be to

        remove the file in the destination rather than the one in

        the source.  It may be a little confusing but we can't help.



        It may be even more true with the /RX switches where the

        files are removed simply by the virtue of being in the

        destination as extra.  In this case, your additional switches

        such as /A (files with Archive bit set), /DB#4 (older than

        four days), or even /DA (when the file in destination is

        older than in the one in the source).  Remember, with the

        /RX switch, the files to be removed has no counterpart in

        the source!!!  So, all these switches will be just ignored.



        Our recommendation is that you should use the /RD and /RX

        switches for relatively simple file selection cases only.

        When you start adding many file selection switches, we advise

        you rewrite the XXCOPY /RD command using /RS/U with the source

        and destination reversed.  Similarly, an XXCOPY /RX command

        can be written using /RS/BB with source and destination

        reversed.  By having the files for removal in the source

        side in the command, you will have all the switches which

        applies to the files which would actually be removed.





Convenient shortcut:



  /RMDIR  Removes the specified directory including the files and

          subdirectories inside.



  This /RMDIR switch makes XXCOPY to behave like Microsoft's

  DELTREE utility.  The following two commands are very similar.



    DELTREE c:\mydir



    XXCOPY  c:\mydir  /RMDIR



  However, the power of XXCOPY become evident when it is combined

  with other switches.



    XXCOPY  c:\mydir  /RMDIR /DA:2000-04-01 /Y /X*.doc



      This command removes files inside the directory which are made

      on or after the specified date but avoids deleting .DOC files.





Examples of the file removal switches.



  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*  c:\destination\  /RC



    The files which match the pattern, "myfile.*" in c:\mydir\ and

    all of its subdirectories will be deleted after copying.  If

    copy fails for any reason, the files in the source will *NOT*

    be removed.  It behaves essentially like the MOVE command.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*  /RS /S /H



    It is similar to DELTREE, subdirectories are specified.  The

    files which match the pattern, "myfiles.*" in c:\mydir\ and all of

    its subdirectories will be deleted.  No copying will take place.

    The /H switch is needed if you want to include hidden and/or

    system files.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*  c:\reference\   /RS /S /H /DB



    The /DB switch uses the second directory (c:\reference) which

    supplies the filenames to compare the file time against the

    files in the source.  The files in the source which are made

    before (/DB stands for DATE:BEFORE) their counterpart in

    destination will be removed.  In this case, the files that

    do not exist in the reference directory will also be removed.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*  c:\reference\   /RS /S /H /DB /U



    This is exactly same as the one above except this has the

    /U switch (update --- applies only to files that exist in the

    destination) will not remove files that do not exist in

    the destination.  This is a quite useful combination to remove

    those files whose new version exists in the reference directory.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*      c:\reference\   /RS /S /H /U

  xxcopy c:\reference\myfiles.*  c:\mydir\       /RD /S /H /U

  xxcopy c:\reference\myfiles.*  c:\mydir\       /RD /S /H



    Here, three variations of file removal actions are specified.

    But, they achieve exactly the same result.  The first one

    removes the qualified files in the source (and its

    subdirectories) if they exist in the reference directory.

    Please note the change in the position of the c:\mydir

    argument in the second and third examples above.  In the

    second example, the /U is superfluous because the /RD switch

    (file in the destination that would be overwritten) implies

    that in order to be overwritten, its counterpart must exists

    in the source.  The third example proves that /U in the second

    example was not necessary.  On the other hand, /U must be

    in the first example; without it, the files in the reference

    directory will be totally ignored.





  xxcopy c:\reference\myfiles.*  c:\mydir\       /RX /H /S

  xxcopy c:\reference\           c:\mydir\       /RX /H /S



    These examples eliminate all files in the destination whose

    counterpart does not exist in the source directory will be

    removed.  They resembles the /Z switch where qualified files

    will be overwritten by the source files.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*  c:\destination\     /RS /H /S

  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*                      /RS /H /S





    These two will result in the same action, namely, removing

    the matched files in the source and its subdirectories.

    In the first example, since there is no switches which

    references the second directory specifier (c:\destination),

    the second argument was totally unnecessary and ignored

    (without warning).





  xxcopy c:\mydir\myfiles.*   /RS /S /H /DB#7



    Remove files which match the template in the source and

    its subdirectories which are more than seven days old.





  xxcopy c:\       /RS /S /H /DA:2000-02-01 /DB:2000-02-29





    Remove all files which were made during the month of

    February 2000.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\  c:\backup\   /RS /S /H /BI



    Remove files in c:\mydir\ and its subdirectories that are

    identical in date and size.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\               /RS /S /Ho



    Remove all hidden files in c:\mydir\ and its subdirectories.





  xxcopy c:\                    /RS /A



    Remove all files in the root directory with the archive bit set.





  xxcopy c:\mydir\*.jpg         /RS /Xmydear.jpg





    Remove all .JPG files but keep mydear.jpg.





Confirmation prompts.



  Since file removal is a serious business, XXCOPY always asks you

  for confirmation before removing a directory.  As a matter of fact,

  XXCOPY provides two levels of confirmation prompts.



  1.  On each directory to process.

  2.  On each file to delete.



  Of course, for batch file execution, you normally do not want such

  confirmation.  Also, to allow flexible control, the prompt includes

  a choice to eliminate further confirmation in the current and

  subsequent items.



  Unfortunately, the rules for the confirmation prompts are quite

  complicated because of the many cases involved.  You may skip the

  following three sections for now and come back to read the gory

  details later.  Just remember that you can suppress the Yes/No

  prompts in the two levels by /PD0 and /Y, respectively.





Directory-removal confirmation prompt.



  Before each directory to process, you will be given a chance to

  skip the directory by a prompt with



   (Y/N/A/R/S)?



   Y  for Yes (Yes, process the current directory for removal)

   N  for No  (No, skip the current directory and go to the next one)

   A  for Yes for All remaining directories (suppresses subsequent prompts)

   R  for Yes for the current and Remaining siblings and its subdirectories.

   S  for Yes for the current and its subdirectories.



  The Y(es) and N(o) inputs are the most obvious cases.  They apply

  to the current directory only.  The A(ll) input is also pretty easy

  to understand.  It applies the current and all subsequent cases by

  and suppresses the prompts once for all.  The R and S inputs are

  partial suppression and a bit confusing: When you type R, the current

  directory and remaining (sibling) directories will be removed without

  further prompting.  But, the effect of R response will not affect the

  parent directory level.  When you type S, it is the most restrictive

  response of all.  It affects the current and its subdirectories only.

  The next directory in the same level will not be affected by the R

  input.



  Here are how to suppress and unsuppress the directory-removal prompts.



    /PD   Enables the directory-level prompt.

    /PD0  Disables the directory-level prompt.





File-delete confirmation prompt.



  Another level of confirmation is on a file-by-file basis.  Before

  each file is to be deleted, you will be asked by a prompt with



   (Y/N/A)?



   Y  for Yes (Yes, delete this file)

   N  for No  (No, skip this file)

   A  for Yes for All remaining files (suppresses subsequent prompts)





  Here are how to suppress and unsuppress the file-delete prompts

  (applicable for /RS, /RD, and /RX cases).



    /Y   Disables the file-delete prompt.

    /-Y  Enables the file-delete prompt.

    /Y0  Enables the file-delete prompt (same as /-Y).





More confirmations on /RC (Remove-after-Copy).



  The /RC switch is a special case in the removal switch group.  It

  performs a file copy action before the source file is deleted.

  As with other file-copy functions, /P insert a confirmation prompt

  (Y/N/A)? to perform the copy operation first.  The regular rules

  for the /P switch applies exactly in the case /RC switch.  There is

  one more case of (Y/N/A)? prompt which may appear with the /RC

  operation --- file-overwrite confirmation.  Just like the regular

  file copy operation, when there is a file in the destination, you

  will be asked for confirmation.  The /Y, /-Y, and /Y0 for /RC switch

  control the suppression of the file-overwrite prompt rather than

  the delete-after-copy prompt.  Therefore, we need one more switch

  convention to enable/disable the file-delete confirmation prompt:



    /RC  (Remove-after-Copy) enables Y/N prompt on remove (same as /RCP)

    /RCP (Remove-after-Copy) enables Y/N prompt on remove

    /RCY (Remove-after-Copy) suppresses Y/N prompt on remove



    The optional third letter (P or Y) specifies the removal prompt.



  Similarly, the other variations in the file remove operation also

  accepts the third letter (to be symmetrical to the /RC switch).



    /RS  (Remove-Source)   enables Y/N prompt on remove (same as /RSP)

    /RSP (Remove-Source)   enables Y/N prompt on remove

    /RSY (Remove-Source)   suppresses Y/N prompt on remove



    /RD   (Remove-Dest)    enables Y/N prompt on remove (same as /RDP)

    /RDP  (Remove-Dest)    enables Y/N prompt on remove

    /RDY  (Remove-Dest)    suppresses Y/N prompt on remove



    /RX   (Remove-Extra)   enables Y/N prompt on remove (same as /RXP)

    /RXP  (Remove-Extra)   enables Y/N prompt on remove

    /RXY  (Remove-Extra)   suppresses Y/N prompt on remove



  The /Y and /-Y switches also control the prompt for file remove

  action for /RS, /RD and /RXn (not with /RC) switches.



  To undo any of the /RC, /RS, /RD, or /RX switches, append letter zero

  (e.g., /RC0, /RS0, /RD0, and /RX0 respectively).





Conclusion:



  The examples given here hopefully show that the file removal

  feature in XXCOPY is merely an extension to other XXCOPY switches

  and basically the same rules apply here.  In the case of file

  removal, probably less than a half of operations use the files

  in the second directory (destination) as a reference where the

  /RS switch is usually selected.  The next common cases involves

  in /RD which is used for elimination of multiple copies of the

  same files.  Although there are some switch combination which

  makes no sense with the file removal cases, many are expected

  to be quite useful.  Since not all of the switch combinations

  are thoroughly tested, there may be some contradictory definition

  of rules (or even actions) may arise during the beta testing.



  If you find an interesting switch combination which is quite

  unique and valuable in common cases, please let us know.  it

  seems that this scheme generates a very large number of

  combinations many of which are not intuitive.  It is entirely

  possible that someone may come across an interesting behavior

  which none else has ever thought of.  Only time can tell.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #13




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Frequent Asked Questions (FAQ)

Date:    2001-09-01

====================================================================

 

Q0:  Can I do xxxxxxxxxxx with XXCOPY?

     (Fill in xxxxxxxxxxx with your own words)



A0:  The most likely answer to the question is YES.  XXCOPY can do

     most common file management jobs quite nicely.  But, as the

     number of the XXCOPY switches grows, it is getting harder and

     harder to find the right command line argument for a given job.

     The recent addition of a few technical bulletins should help.



       for Command Line Syntax                          XXTB #25

       for Command Reference Alphabetic Listing         XXTB #26

       for Command Reference Functional Classification  XXTB #27

       for The Wild-Wild-Source Specifier               XXTB #28



     Especially, the Functional Classification article, XXTB #27

     seems to be the easiest way to see the overall picture.



     If your company has an urgent need for a file management job whose

     requirements are mostly met by XXCOPY but not exactly, and you wish

     to have an XXCOPY with a minor customization, please consult us.

     We may provide solutions to your need at reasonable time/price.



 

Q1:  What is the difference between XXCOPY, XCOPY, and other similar

     programs.



A1:  Let us list the utility programs which are related one another.



       XXCOPY.EXE   The logical extension to XCOPY - most powerful.

       XCOPY.EXE    Microsoft's command-line based copy utility

       COPY         Internal command to COMMAND.COM (Microsoft)

       XCOPY32.EXE  XCOPY's Win-32 program which XCOPY runs when

                    invoked inside Win9x/ME/NT/2K.

       XXCOPY16.EXE XXCOPY's predecessor. written for 16-bit (real mode)

                    environments such as DOS.  Supports most but not

                    all of XXCOPY's switches.

       ROBOCOPY.EXE Microsoft's version of an extended XCOPY utility.

                    It is bundled in Windows NT/2000/XP Resource Kit.

                    ROBOCOPY runs on WinNT or Win2000, not DOS nor Win9X. 

       DCOPY32.EXE  Essentially the same as XXCOPY.EXE.  It is bundled

                    with Pixelab's DATMAN-99 tape control software.

       DCOPY.EXE    Essentially the same as XXCOPY16.EXE.  It is bundled

                    with Pixelab's DATMAN-DOS tape control software.



     In short, XXCOPY and XXCOPY16 are Pixelab's products which

     extend the features of XCOPY32 and XCOPY respectively.



 

Q2:  I need to copy the top level of a directory structure only.

     I want to copy the user home directory structure from one server

     to another without copying any sub dirs or files.  I have tried

     the /T switch but it seems to copy the sub dirs.



A2:  Among all switches, the feature to go deep into subdirectories

     is controlled by /S (for subdirectory) and /E (for subdirectory-

     even-if-it's-empty).  Therefore, if you don't use /S or /E in

     the switches, it's OK.  However, these switches are also

     incorporated in a few other combined switches such as /BU

     (equivalent to /R/I/BI/Q/C/H/E/V/Y) and /CLONE (equivalent to

     /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY) which makes it tricky.



     The easiest way to avoid the inclusion of /S or /E in such hidden

     cases is to explicitly cancel such hidden inclusion by adding

     /S0 the end of your switches.  That is, you can combine with any

     switches and put the /S0 switch to the right which will be

     evaluated last and therefore override any earlier inclusion.



        XXCOPY c:\mysource  c:\mydest  /CLONE  /S0



 

Q3:  I want to clone source to destination but only files with certain

     extension(s). When I use    XXCOPY c:\src\*.ext d:\dest /CLONE

     it also deletes files with different extension at destination.

     I cannot figure out which switches to use.



A3:  As explained in A2 above, the /CLONE switch is a shortcut for a

     combination of switches.  In this particular case, the /ZY switch

     is responsible for the file deletion.  As the name implies,

     the CLONE operation is to create a destination directory which

     resembles to the source directory as closely as possible.  That

     includes the removal of extra directory and files that should not

     be there.  So, to retain all the component switches of /CLONE

     except the /ZY part, just add the cancelling switch (/Z0) to the

     right hand side.  That is  /CLONE /Z0  will do the job.

     

     When you glance over the set of switches that are supported by

     XXCOPY, you will find a cancelling switch for nearly every switch

     (which usually ends with a zero (0) at the end).  The cancelling

     switches are convenient to reverse the effect of a long combination

     of switches which has been set earlier (to the left hand side).

     

 

Q4:  When I use the Win9x boot diskette, I cannot use XXCOPY since

     it is the 16-bit (essentially a DOS) environment.  Although I

     can use XXCOPY16, it does not use any long filename.  How can

     I copy directories in DOS (real mode) and restore long names.



A4:  It is true that there is no one-step solution to deal with the

     long filename.  But, this is what we recommend.



     1. Copy files using any of the 16-bit utilities you have.

        This will give you many files and directories with funny

        names (e.g., \PROGRA~1).  That is fine as the fist step.



        We suggest the use of XXCOPY16, simply because it is the

        most versatile utility with lots of options.  If you want to

        include hidden files and also to preserve file attributes,

        we suggest XXCOPY16.



          XXCOPY16  c:\mydir  d:\mydir /KS /H /E /R



     2. Once you are in Win32 (Win9x/ME/NT/2K), run XXCOPY with the

        special file renaming switch as follows



          XXCOPY  c:\mydir  d:\mydir  /NL /E



        In most cases, you probably want to add the /E switch to

        handle all files and subdirectories inside.



 

Q5:  When I use the /RS switch to delete a directory, it always shows

     a prompt "Dir (Y/N/A/R/S)?  How can I get rid of the prompt inside

     a batch file.  Also, what are the meaning of the prompt?



A5:  The Remove switch group has additional level of confirmation

     prompt due to the deadly consequences.  The prompt is controlled

     by the /PD (Prompt-on-Directory) and /PD0 (No Prompt-on-Directory)

     switches.  It appears before a directory is to be processed.



     Rather than having All-or-Nothing control, it provide the R and S

     responses which gives you Partial-Yes options.



     (Y/N/A/R/S)?



     Y  for Yes (Yes, process the current directory for removal)

     N  for No  (No, skip the current directory and go to the next one)

     A  for Yes for All remaining directories (suppresses subsequent prompts)

     R  for Yes for the current and Remaining siblings and its subdirectories.

     S  for Yes for the current and its subdirectories.



 

Q6:  I try to run a server backup using XXCOPY's incremental backup

     switch (/BI).  It works well with local drives.  But when I

     try /BI from one volume to another, sometimes nearly half of the

     files always get copied even though I know most of them have never

     been changed since the last backup.  Why /BI does not work on

     some volume?



A6:  Add the /FF (Fuzzy Filetime) switch in such cases.  With the

     switch, XXCOPY considers two timestamps the same if they are

     within a pre-determined number of seconds (/FF is the same

     as /FF2 --- for plus/minus 2 seconds).  In most cases, the

     default setting of plus/minus 2 seconds works well.



     Here is why...



     The /BI operation compares the file size and time stamp between

     the file in the source directory and in the destination.  Due to

     different file time format used in various file systems, the time

     stamp on a file gets truncated, resulting in a different file time

     after a copy.  When such files are compared against their

     counterparts in the source directory, the file times do not match.

     This is most commonly experienced when you copy files from an

     NTFS volume to FAT (both FAT16 and FAT32) volume.  Similarly,

     FAT and Unix/Linux file system has file date incompatibilities.



        File system    Time Resolution (Granularity)

       ----------------------------------------------

           FAT12             2 sec

           FAT16             2 sec

           FAT32             2 sec

           NTFS              100 nsec

           Unix/Linux        1 sec



     Whenever you run XXCOPY operation which involves a file date

     comparison (e.g., /BI, /BX) across different file systems,

     use the /FF switch.  



     The new /FF switch supercedes /FT and /FR which were /FF's

     prececessors.



 

Q7:  Is there a way to perform an incremental backup but ignore the

     file time.  That is, I want to select files of different size.



A7:  Yes, the /BZ switch is for you.  You can choose a backup scheme

     from the following variations.



      /BI  Backs up incrementally, different (by time/size) files only.

      /BB  Backs up brand new files only (does not overwrite existing ones).

      /BN  Backs up newer files only     (includes brand new files).

      /Bo  Backs up older files only     (includes brand new files).

      /BX  Backs up different-date files (includes brand new files).

      /BZ  Backs up different-size files (includes brand new files).

      /BS  Selects exactly the same files (this is useful with /RS).

      /BU  Standard Backup switch (same as /r/i/bi/q/c/h/e/v/y)



      /U   Updates the files that already exist in destination.



      Note:  The /Bx switches are mutually exclusive one another,

             but /U may coexist with a /Bx switch.



 

Q8:  I have seen variations for the home page URL of XXCOPY.

     Which is the real home page?



A8:  The current official home page URL for XXCOPY is



        http://www.xxcopy.com/



     Our corporate home page is

     

        http://www.pixelab.com/



     Now, all of the freeware download files are stored at the

     following directory:

     

        http://www.pixelab.com/download/

     

     In the past, we have also used the following addresses  



        http://www.xxcopy.com/xxcopy/

        http://www.datman.com/xxcopy/



     Now, we encourage you to use the shorter form.





     * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *



     We also run a beta test for which we estabished a full web site:

     

        http://www.xxcopy.com/betatest/



     If you are looking for a feature which is not supported by the

     current release version, you may try the beta test site.  The

     documentation files in the batatest site reflect the extended

     functionality of the beta version.



     Usually, a beta test version is well debugged.  But, of course, 

     it is less mature than the current release version.  Since we

     pay close attention to bugs and we try to correct serious

     problems as soon as they are discovered, you may estimate the

     stability of a particular beta test version by the date it was

     created.  If you feel uneasy to run an "untested" version, wait

     a few weeks.  If the same beta test version is still there,

     it will have gone through the scrutiny that much longer.



 

Q9:  I can't back up the Program File directory using XXCOPY.  Why?



A9:  It is very likely that you are not using quotation marks around

     the source directory name.  XXCOPY processes the command line by

     splitting the string of command line text into pieces using the

     space (or tab) character as the delimiter which separates the

     line into components.  When you have a multi-word name such as

     "Program Files",  XXCOPY will see it as two components.  You

     must tell XXCOPY that the two words are actually just one piece

     by surrounding the directory name using the double quotes (").



       XXCOPY c:\Progam Files     d:\dest\      // WRONG!!!



       XXCOPY "C:\Program Files"  d:\dest\      // CORRECT



     This is not XXCOPY's idiosyncrasies.  You can apply this technique

     to any operation in a DOS Box.  E.g., try it with DIR, CD, etc.



       DIR  "C:\Program Files"

       CD   "C:\My Documents\My Pictures"



 

Q10: I can't make the /Fo, /ON and even /OA to work.  Here's my command

     line looks like.  What is wrong?



        XXCOPY  c:\mysrc\  c:\mydest\  /s  /Fo c:\temp\mybackup.log



A10: This is a quite common problem with first time users.  As stated

     in the previous answer (A8), the space (and tab) character plays

     a very important role in the command line.  Although it may seem

     hard to read, any parameter for an XXCOPY command switch (such

     as /Fo which needs the filename) must follow the command switch

     immediately without a space character.  So, in your case, type



        /Foc:\temp\mybackup.log    (without space after /Fo)



     Although there are many command-line programs which permit or

     even require a space between the command switch and its parameter,

     XXCOPY is one of those programs that does not allow a space there.

     Actually, allowing an optional space between the command letter(s)

     (such as /Fo) and its parameter would create undesirable ambiguity

     in the command line syntax, it is best to keep it strict, albeit

     a bit ugly to read without a space there.



 

Q11: My log list which is created by either /ON or /OA does not

     include the list of files just copied.  How can I list the

     files which are successfully copied in the log file?





A11: The /ON/OA output was meant to be for error logging.  When

     you make a big backup job and save a log file, the few lines

     of error will be buried in the huge list of filenames.  Therefore,

     it is a deliberate XXCOPY design not to dilute the log file

     with voluminous success cases.  If you want a list of backup log

     that contains the names of the files which are copied, use the

     /Fo switch which is equivalent to the console output you get

     using the /F switch.



 

Q12:  But, /Fo always overwrites the existing list file.  Is there

     a switch which allows me to append the list to an existing

     list file?



A12:  No, there is no Append equivalent in the /Fo switch.  But, you

     can write the following sequence in your batch file to achieve

     the same goal.



         ...

         xxcopy  \src\ \dst\ /fonew.lst

         type    new.lst >> grand.lst

         ...



 

Q13: When I run a backup using XXCOPY (XXCOPY src dst  /CLONE), on

     some file, I get a "data mismatch" error message.  What does it

     mean?



A13: Immediately a file is copied, XXCOPY checks the size of the newly

     created file in the destination directory.  If the file size does

     not match the source, the error message will be shown.  Under

     normal circumstance, this should not happen.  But, in a multi-

     tasking environment such as Windows, a file which was just

     closed may be subjected to a modification by another process which

     is not necessarily a fatal condition.  XXCOPY does not interpret

     the severity of such an incident.  Therefore, it is up to you to

     make the assessment as to the purpose of the file.  In many cases,

     the error condition is not  very serious.  Otherwise, you may turn

     off *ALL* processes except XXCOPY when you clone the current volume

     to another volume.



 

Q14: I want to obtain a list of files using XXCOPY's rich set of file

     selection mechanism but without acutally causing any actions like

     copying or removing files --- just a listing only.  Also, I want

     just a bare listing without even the file size info.



A14: XXCOPY is no longer just a file copy utility, but a general purpose

     file management tool and searching and making a list of files is one

     of the jobs XXCOPY is well equipped.  I will show you a few examples

     as the answer



     XXCOPY  c:\mydir\*.jpg  /S /L



         The searchspec has the base directory part and a template part.

         /S is to include subdirectories (which usually the case)

         The /L switch is the starting point.  It shows file size.



     XXCOPY  c:\mydir\*.jpg   /S /L /ZS



         /ZS  without the sign-on and statistics info.  The bare list.



     XXCOPY  c:\mydir\*.jpg   /S /LL /ZS



         /LL  gives you longname only



     Actually, /Lxxxx is a general purpose list-formatter.  You can add

         L(ongname), S(hortname), Z(size), D(ate), T(ime), A(ttributes).

         Since Longname varies in length, for best list, place L last.



     Some more variations:



     XXCOPY  c:\mydir\*.jpg  /S /ZS /LD      // D(ate) L(ongname)

     XXCOPY  c:\mydir\*.jpg  /S /ZS /LDZL    // D(ate) S(ize) L(ongname)

     XXCOPY  c:\      /DA#0  /S /ZS /LDZL    // Only the files made today



 

Q15: When I use XXCOPY16 in DOS and duplicate the entire C: drive to D:

     using the following command, I get funny filenames in the destination

     like XXXXXX~1.XXX.



       XXCOPY16  C:\  D:\  /CLONE



     How come the files are not copied correctly?



A15: Although XXCOPY16.EXE supports almost all XXCOPY.EXE command switches,

     the longname related features (such as the handling of files using

     the long filename) cannot be supported.  The limitation is not of

     the XXCOPY16 program.  It is the real mode (DOS) environment which

     does not support the long filenames.  This is exactly why Microsoft

     invented the "alias" 8.3 filename in order for legacy (DOS) programs

     to be able to access files created under Win9x and NT/2000/XP with a

     long filename.  For more information about duplicating a disk drive

     under Win9x, there is another article on the subject with great detail

     XXTB #10.



 

Q16: I understand XXCOPY can duplicate the system disk for Win9x/ME.

     What about the WinNT or Win2000?



A16: No.  Not at this moment.  We have not come up with a sure way to

     make a bootable WinNT or Win2000 disk using XXCOPY and standard

     set of tools.  We have been asked by many users why not.



     Let me briefly explain what is involved in making a bootable disk. 

     The initial step in booting a Windows system is to have BIOS access

     the Master Boot Record (MBR, the first sector of the first drive),

     which determines the partition information and supplies the initial

     bootstrap program.  This very small program is then copied into the

     main memory and the processor will start executing the program.

     Normally, the MBR data is initialized by FDISK (or other specialized

     toos).  XXCOPY does not access the MBR.  That is why in the article,

     we show you when and how to use FDISK.  In the case of WinNT/2000/XP,

     the lengthy OS installation procedure writes the MBR with its own

     boot program.  So, the MBR certainly is one factor.

      

     Secondly, a handful of key files (such as \WinNT\system32\security) 

     are locked by the system while WinNT/2000/XP is running.  Since the

     system refuses to share these files with any other application,

     XXCOPY can never access these files (about a dozen or so). In the

     case of Win9x, most system files in the \Windows directory are

     accessible in read mode, and XXCOPY has no problem accessing nearly

     all of them from a Win9x session.  It is entirely possible that one

     can write an elaborate multi-step batch script to access those key

     files from DOS.  We just have not done our homework on this subject.



 

Q17: Is there a way to backup a directory and keep the time-stamp of

     the source directory (and those of the subdirectories) so that

     when I restore the directory later, the time-stamps will exhibit

     the original directory-creation time?



A17: If you run XXCOPY under NT/2000/XP, newly created directories in

     the destinaion will get the same timestamp.  But, under Win9x/ME,

     unfortunately no.  As far as we know, there is no File I/O API

     in the Win9x programming (or in DOS for that matter) which allows

     a program (such as XXCOPY) to set or modify the time value for

     a directory.  We feel it is a serious omission of in the Win32

     implementation.  The only ways to achieve the objective are to use

     some programming tricks.  But, possible side effects and risk of

     compromising the system integrity is too great.  It is a serious

     omission in API functionality when Microsoft implemented Win32

     for the Win9x/ME environment. 



 

Q18: When I right-click the icon of the XXCOPY.EXE file and examine

     the version number, it is different from the one the program

     shows at the banner line.  Why?  And, which one to believe?



A18: We have traditionally used version numbers which consist of

     four digits which are grouped in to three parts like 2.60.0.

     Unfortunately, the version information which can be attached

     to an EXE file (to be viewed in the property sheet of the

     EXE file) has a format of four digits which are always split

     into four parts of single digit.  We don't really like the

     format and we can't do anything about it.



     Besides, it is somewhat time consuming to set the property sheet

     version number every time we build a beta version (which are

     often made for tentative debugging purposes).  To be honest,

     more often than not, we forget spending time in adjusting the

     property sheet section while we are concentrating on removing

     bugs and making a few experiments to see a particular problem

     is gone for a user's environment.  The property sheet is just

     a distraction as far as we are concerned. 

     

     Just disregard the version number property sheet and take

     XXCOPY's banner line (which are very prominent) at its face

     value.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #14




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Tutorials in Command Line (DOS Box) Operations

Date:    2001-09-02

====================================================================



One of the common problems in providing a command line tool like

XXCOPY is that many computer users now do not feel comfortable with

non-GUI operation.  They prefer the comfort of drag-and-drop and

mouse clicks.  While the GUI operation is certainly more intuitive

and quicker to learn, it is not the fastest way to get job done

when the job is to handle several thousand files in hundreds of

directories.  And, that's what you have now in your humble disk!!!



We see no substitutes for command line processing especially with

batch file programming (or other scripting techniques) to automate

it.  Once you have set up a well-written script with XXCOPY commands

inside, you can make an icon for it and you will then enjoy the

comfort of clicking the icon, sit back and relax while XXCOPY is

doing the hard work.



You should at least give yourself a chance to acquire the basic

skill of exploiting the power of your computer (and it will remain

with you for the rest of your life).  The basic DOS-box skill helps

you not just for XXCOPY.  Moreover, the command line operation will

probably be there for many more generations of operating systems

(Win9x, NT/2000/XP/XP, and beyond).



The following list is a non-exhaustive collection of pointers to

tutorials in command line (DOS) operations. 



=================================================================





1. http://home.att.net/~gobruen/progs/dos_batch/dos_intro.html



       4-page series.  Step by step.  Good narrative tutorial.





2. http://www3.sympatico.ca/rhwatson/dos7/commandintro.html



       Good as a reference, each command is explained with

       a dedicated page with examples.





3.  http://teckies.com/tutor/dos/



       A very good site.  It is shorter than the earlier one.





4. http://www.animatedsoftware.com/faqs/learndos.htm#cd_command



       This site is shorter.  Therefore, if you are in a hurry,

       this page may be good.  But, less text per command and

       that may possibly make this page harder to learn.





5.  http://www.glue.umd.edu/~nsw/ench250/dostutor.htm



       Six lessons.  The page is text-only.  Looks good.





6.  http://cs.senecac.on.ca/~ops134/resources/commandline1.htm



       Shortest of all.





===============================================================



If you have seen good sites which are not listed here, please

let us know for future inclusion in this list.








© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #15




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Windows File Date and Time

Date:    2000-06-07

====================================================================



File time in DOS



  The good old DOS had just one file date value which keeps track of

  a file in your storage (hard disk and floppy).  To be precise, the

  value has two parts, the date part (year, month, and day) and the

  time part (hour, minute, second ---- measured in two second interval),

  but we will call it just "file date" in this discussion.



  Whenever a file is created, the current system time is stamped to the

  file which would remain constant even if it is copied or moved to a

  new directory.  A complete rewrite, partial rewrite, or partial

  deletion would update the file date value.  Therefore, the DOS file

  date represents the last-write (or, last-modified) time.  It was

  quite simple and well.





File time in Win32:



  The new so-called Win32 environments (Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000)

  expanded the file date to hold more information about the history of

  the file.  Win32 maintains three distinct time stamps on every file.

  Inside Windows Explorer, you can examine these values in the property

  sheet for a file.



    1. Created:    It is the time when the file is created in the

                   current directory.  When the file is copied to a

                   new directory, a new value will be set.



    2. Modified:   It is the time when the file is last modified.

                   When the file is copied to elsewhere, the same

                   value will be carried over to the new directory.



    3. Accessed:   It is the time when the file is last accessed.

                   This value is set by the application program that

                   sets or revises the value.  Unfortunately some

                   applications do not revise this value.



  The file date value commonly referred to under Win32 is the "Last-

  modified" value (2nd one in the list above) whose behavior is

  consistent to the DOS file date value.  The Win32 file date values

  are stored in much finer resolution than the DOS time stamp (16 bits

  for the date and 16 bits for time).   The Win32 file date value

  is a 64-bit quantity which represents the time elapsed from

  January 1, 1601 (the first date of the current quadri-century)

  in 100 nsec granularity.  For the compatibility's sake, even WinNT/2K

  uses the same 2-second granularity for the "Last-modified" time for

  FAT-based file system (does not apply for NTFS files).





XXCOPY's file date treatments:



  XXCOPY provides the following switches to select one of the

  three timestamps as the filedate value for time comparison.



     /FC     File-Create time

     /FW     Last-Modify (Last-Write) time (default)

     /FA     Last-Access time



  These switches do not perform any action by themselves.  They

  are used to modify the semantics of other switches which use

  the file date parameters in the file selection process.  For

  example, /DA and /DB are often modified by the /FC switch.





The file date (Last-Modify date):



  The common file date value (more precisely, the Last-Modify-date)

  is the most intuitive and probably the easiest to use.  So, by

  default, XXCOPY's file date functions use the Last-Modify date by

  default.  For example,



    XXCOPY  c:\mydir\  d:\backup\  /DA#7



  The /DA#7 switch selects files which are last modified within

  the last 7 days.  This selection includes files which are created

  or modified elsewhere and brought to the source directory by

  either a copy or move operation.  The COPY or MOVE operations

  carried out by practically all file copy utilities (i.e.,

  Drag-and-drop, COPY, XCOPY, MOVE, or XXCOPY) preserve the file's

  Last-Modify date.





The file creation date (File-Create date):



  Another useful date value is the File-Create date.  Unlike the

  Last-Modify date, this value represents the date the particular

  copy of the file is created in the directory.  Here, the meaning

  of creation includes both the case of a newly created file, and an

  existing file brought in to the directory by a copy operation.

  So, the File-Create date is often newer than the Last-Modify date.

  Note that sometimes, the "File-Create" date could be a little

  misleading.  But, in this article we use the "File-Create" date

  consistent with the way Microsoft calls it.



  With XXCOPY, you may use this creation-date value instead of the

  more common Last-Modify date.  Here is an example:



    XXCOPY  c:\mydir\  d:\backup\  /S /FC /DA:.



      This command copies all the files which are either made in

      or brought into their present directory today regardless of

      the age of the file.  With the /FC switch, XXCOPY uses the

      File-Create date rather than the Last-Modify date.  The

      /DA:. switch selects files of today or a future date.



  Since the use of the File-Create date has serious problems, we

  generally discourage the use if this date





Problems with the file creation date (File-Create date),



  The problems of the File-Create date can be traced back to

  the inconsistency in Microsoft's various file management

  utilities.  It seems that the purpose of three distinct

  variations in the file date values were never clearly defined

  by the designer of the feature.  We as software developers

  have not come across any official documents on this subject.

  So, we conduct a few experiments using Microsoft's programs

  which are part of Windows 95.  Then, you will find many

  inconsistent usages in the File-Create date.



  Observation 1:  When you perform a copy operation of a file

                  which results in a new physical copy in the

                  destination, the File-Create date is set to

                  the current date.



  Observation 2:  When you move a file within a volume, the

                  operation is translated to the more efficient

                  renaming operation.  Since renaming a file does

                  not involve in a newly created file, the File-

                  Create date will not be updated.



  Observation 3:  When you move a file across the volume boundary

                  (e.g., from C: to D:), the move operation is

                  carried out as a file copy action followed by

                  a file delete action, the file in the new

                  location will receive a new File-Create date.



  Observation 4:  Edit a file using either NotePad.exe, WordPad.exe

                  or WinWord.exe (word), and save the file.  The

                  newly update file will have the same File-Create

                  date, but a new Last-Modify time.





  The inconsistencies listed above make the File-Create date unfit

  for a general-purpose file selection criterion by XXCOPY.  On

  the other hand, if you have full control of the file creation

  process in a given directory (say, you always use one of the

  file copy operations to manage files in the directory), you may

  still use it with caution.





The case with the Last-Access date:



  This parameter is also a very controversial value that goes with

  every file in the Win32 system.  The Last-Access date is set whenever

  the file is "Accessed" by a program.  Then, the next question is

  what really constitutes an "Access" to a file?



  Is opening the file by a program, by any program, treated as an

  "Access"?  Thank God, the answer is no.  If that were the case,

  whenever the Windows Explorer displays an executable file using its

  icon (which is stored inside the file), the Last-Access date would

  be set to the current date.  That is because display of the icon

  involves fist opening the file and reading the contents to locate

  the internal icon.  In this case, although the treatment of the icon

  is rather elaborate under the cover, it is not regarded as an "Access".

  On the other hand with .EXE and .DLL files, executing the program

  constitute the Last-Access.  That makes sense.



  But, there are plenty of silly mistakes committed by Microsoft's

  programmers which makes the Last-Access date of little use.  The

  possibly the worst program mistake with this value is by Windows

  Explorer.



  As shown above, when you click the right button on an icon of a file

  and select the properties menu, you can examine the Last-Access date

  (in this case you get only the date without time) along with the other

  two file date values.  But, if you are alert, you will notice that

  the Last-Access date is always today's date.  Yes, the very act of

  examining the Last-Access date value triggers the update of the value.

  That is sad.  Very sad.



  When a system administrator makes a regularly scheduled backup, he

  usually performs a full backup every so often, copying every file

  in a drive.  Now, that is an act of Access.  Copying a file will

  also update the Last-Access date.





Conclusion:



  If Microsoft's programmers had been very careful not updating the

  Last-Access values under certain common file access cases, this

  value could have become a very useful parameter in file selection

  for file management (backup) activities.  Unfortunately, they wrote

  so many programs that ignored the designer's apparent intention.

  Now, it is too late.  The Last-Access date is even more useless

  than the doomed File-Create date.



  We recommend the use of /FC (File-Create date) only in carefully

  controlled circumstances.  The Last-Access date (selected by /FA)

  seems nearly useless for meaningful file management activities.



  Original DOS file system had only 32 bytes to represent a file in

  the directory.  The very restrictive 8.3 filename and the limited

  granularity (2 second) in file date are corrected in the Win32

  file systems (VFAT).  But, the generous allocation of lots of

  bytes (24 bytes just to store the file date in three flavors) which

  bloats the system resource usage but provides little useful

  information seems to symbolize what we know as Windows Operating

  System.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #16




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Gathering files into one directory using XXCOPY

Date:    2000-09-14

====================================================================



The trouble is...



  Do you know approximately how many files there are on your disk?

  Many people don't have a faintest idea.  But, if you find the XXCOPY

  utility useful at all, you should check the numbers every now and then.

  By the way, in my own modest machine, the C: drive has approximately

  150,000 files in 8,000 directories totaling about 20 GB.



  At any rate, we all face the same headache; too many files in too

  many directories.  Finding a file now becomes a project.  We try

  hard to come up with a better tool in our losing battle.





Search and collect files into just one directory.



  In many cases, collecting certain files into a directory may save a

  lot of time.  For example, if you gather all Microsoft Word document

  (.DOC) files from the entire volume into just one subdirectory,

  browsing them and locating a particular file become much easier.

  That is what XXCOPY's /SX, /SG and their variations are for.



  The traditional way to do this is (don't type beyond the semicolon),



     XCOPY  C:\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /S       // using Microsoft's XCOPY

     XXCOPY C:\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /S       // the same here with XXCOPY



       The /S switch makes the copy operation to recursively

       go inside subdirectories and copy all matching files.

       If subdirectories are not present in the destination,

       they will be created as needed.



       ----------------------------------------------------------

         Note that the destination directory was deliberately

         chosen in a different drive in the examples above.

         Watch out if the destination is in the same volume...



           XCOPY  C:\*.doc  C:\mydocs\   /S       // a FATAL error

           XXCOPY C:\*.doc  C:\mydocs\   /S /CCY



         This is a classic case of the cyclic copy situation which

         Microsoft's XCOPY cannot handle.  Using /CCY, our XXCOPY

         allows you to specify the destination in the same volume.

         See XXTB #07 for detail.

       ----------------------------------------------------------



     Although the files you wanted are all copied into the destination,

     the destination directory will inevitably have many subdirectories

     which makes your next step still very time-consuming.





XXCOPY provides better solutions.



  XXCOPY has a better way to deal with the situation that avoids making

  subdirectories in the destination.  Of course, it is inevitable that

  many files share the same filename.  So, XXCOPY synthesizes new

  names when duplicate files are to be copied into the destination.



     XXCOPY C:\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /SX

     XXCOPY C:\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /SG



  Our original directory-flattening functions (/SX, /SL and /SR) combine

  the source directory path (only the distinguishing part) with the

  source filename to form a long filename which is always unique

  (and you can tell where the files are from).



      /SL     Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Left

      /SX     Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Middle

      /SR     Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Right



  By popular demand by XXCOPY users, we re-engineered the new file-gathering

  functions /SG and its variations which retain the original filename.



      /SG     same as /SGN (newest one and sorted by newness)

      /SGN    sorted, newest file first

      /SGO    sorted, oldest file first

      /SGF    unsorted, first come first served



      /SGNO   picks the newest file

      /SGOO   picks the oldest file

      /SGFO   picks the first file encountered



  That's a total of nine flavors to choose from!  Our favorite is /SGN

  which got the honor of being equivalent to its shorter version, /SG.





The /SX (/SL or /SR) switch flattens a directory.



  To understand how these schemes work, it is easiest to actually

  run the command and take a look at the destination directory.

  Let us start with the directory-flattening functions.



    XXCOPY C:\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /SX     // puts path in the middle



       The result would be



       D:\mydocs\MYFILE`My Documents`word`.DOC

       D:\mydocs\MYFILE`Junk`Vote2000`gore`.DOC

       D:\mydocs\MYFILE`Junk`Vote2000`bush`.DOC

       D:\mydocs\MYFILE`Junk`Vote1996`dole`.DOC

           ...



     The four MYFILE.DOC files are collected from four directories.

     In this case, the backslash (directory name delimiter) is converted

     into a legal character which is infrequently used in filenames

     (default = back-apostrophe (`)).  (See below to select the directory

     name delimiter character other than the default character).



     The /SL and /SR variations respectively place the pathname part

     either at the left or at the right of the filename.  We like the

     /SX version the best among the three variations because the new

     filename starts like the original and the ending also remains

     the same so the Windows knows which application to associate

     the file when you double click the file icon.





The /SG switch gathers files into a directory.



  All the file-gathering functions (/SG and its variations) work

  identically if there is only one file for a given filename.

  The switches with O (not zero, but Oh) at the end keep only one file

  Newest, Oldest, or the First one found) for a given filename.



  On the other hand, other /SG functions have to gather all files

  with the same filename into one directory.  Therefore, we need to

  synthesize the filenames for the duplicates.  XXCOPY simply adds

  a "middle name" to the filename.  For example,





     XXCOPY C:\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /SG     // sort, newest file first



       The result would be



       D:\mydocs\MYFILE.DOC                // the newest file

       D:\mydocs\MYFILE.0001.DOC           // 2nd newest

       D:\mydocs\MYFILE.0002.DOC           // 3rd newest

       D:\mydocs\MYFILE.0003.DOC           // 4th newest

          ...





  These functions are fun to play with.

  For example, just see how many .JPG (image) files are on your system



      XXCOPY C:\*.jpg  C:\temp\   /SG /CCY



      You may be surprised how much space is tied up with them.

      This particular example may become your favorite tool to

      snoop your children's computer for questionable pictures!!!





Reversal of flattening = rebuilding the tree.



  With regard to the difference between /SX and /SG, for a casual and

  temporary usage, the /SG switch seems easier for most people.  The

  most important difference of the two approaches is that the /SX (and

  also /SL and /SR) switch synthesizes the new filename without losing

  the origin of the file.  As a matter of fact, XXCOPY provides the

  following three switches which allow you to rebuild the original

  directory structure from the destination (flattened) directory.



      /SLR   Rebuild the original directory from directory made by /SL

      /SXR   Rebuild the original directory from directory made by /SX

      /SRR   Rebuild the original directory from directory made by /SR



      Note that these switch must match the way the flattened directory

      was made.  For example if you flatten a directory using /SL, you

      must use /SLR and so on.  Also, the directory name delimiter

      character must be consistent between the flattening and the

      rebuilding steps.





      Examples:



           XXCOPY C:\word\*.doc  D:\mydocs\   /SX        // flattens

           XXCOPY D:\mydocs\     C:\word2\    /SXR       // rebuilds



         The ultimate destination directory (C:\word2\) would contain

         the same files and subdirectories as in the above two steps

         when you run the following command which copies the files

         to the destination directly.



           XXCOPY C:\word\*.doc  C:\word2\    /S





About the directory name delimiter character.



  The directory name delimiter can be any legal non-alphabetic,

  non-blank character.  The following line lists all such characters:



          !  #  $  %  &  '  (  )  -  .  @  ^  _  `  {  }  ~



      Since many of them are frequently used in common English usage

      and therefore likely to appear in filename, the choice for the

      default delimiter character (the back-apostrophe character `)

      was chosen.  The next good candidate is probably the caret symbol (^).

      The trouble here is that the character used as the substitute for

      the backslash character must be a legal character for a filename,

      therefore, it is inevitable that the chosen delimiter may already

      be a part of existing filename.  In such unfortunate cases, the

      directory name which would be rebuilt from the synthesized name

      would not be identical to the original path, a small inconvenience.





Final note.



  Lastly, let me remind you that gathering files into a directory

  is nice, but that contributes to yet more redundant files.  So, make

  sure that you remove all the files you collected for a temporary

  purpose as soon as you are done with them.  One way to deal with

  it is to always use the same one directory for temporary jobs.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #17




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Selecting files by file date amd time using XXCOPY

Date:    2001-02-23  (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction



  The filedate value offers yet another trait to select files for

  various file management operations.  Microsoft's XCOPY allows you

  to specify a cut-off date to select some recently created files.

  Our XXCOPY, on the other hand, seizes the opportunity with respect

  to the filedate (and time) to a much greater extent for qualifying

  files for a large collection of functions.



  While the fundamental elements of filedate-related operations are

  quite simple, the total number of variations may be daunting

  to some users.  So to ease the pain of memorizing the details,

  here in this article, simpler things are presented first, followed

  by more complicated aspects.





The file date/time related XXCOPY switches.



  The ten basic filetime switches fall into either of the two groups:



    Comparison to the reference file (newer/older/same/different)



        /DA,  /DB,  /DS,  /DX         ; newer, older, same, different



    Relative and Absolute date specifiers (you give the range of date)



        /DA#n,    /DB#n,    /DO#n     ; as how many days ago from today

        /DA:date, /DB:date, /DO:date  ; date specified as yyyy-mm-dd





Comparing the filetime of two files



  The filetime comparison switches are used mainly for directory

  synchronization and various backup operations based on file time.

  Therefore, in all cases, the file time comparison is made on a

  pair of files; one from the first (source) directory, and the other

  from the second (destination ,or sometimes reference) directory.



  In this case, the pair of files are compared not only by the

  filedate, but also by the file time to the finest value (hour,

  minute, and second) (see below for /FT for details).  Since the

  comparison is made on the file time value which are stored in

  the respective directory, the XXCOPY user does not specify the

  value and therefore, the command syntax for these switches are

  the simplest; /D, /DA, /DB, /DX, /DS without any user-specified

  parameter.



     /D   Same as /DA

     /DA  Copies newer files and brand new files.

     /DB  Copies older files and brand new files.

     /DX  Copies different-date files only.

     /DS  Copies same date/time files only.





Testing file's date against a user-specified date range



  Unlike the file time comparison method presented in the preceding

  section, XXCOPY allows you to select files based on the filedate

  associated with each file which are expressed in either the relative

  date (how many days ago from today), or the absolute date (specified

  in year, month and day).  For this feature, XXCOPY maintains one

  or two dates to qualify files for file management operations.



     "A-date value" for On-or-After date  (entered by /DA: or /DA#)

     "B-date value" for On-or-Before date (entered by /DB: or /DA#)





  The relative date specifiers



      System administrators often refer to a group of files by the age

      of the files for backup operations.  One of the most natural ways

      of specifying them is the file age measured in days (relative to

      the current date).



      /DA#<n>  Copies files that were changed on or after  <n> days ago.

      /DB#<n>  Copies files that were changed on or before <n> days ago.





      Examples of command lines using the relative date:



        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA#60            // After 60 days ago

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DB#30            // Before 30 days ago

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA#60  /DB#30    // files with age of 30-60 days

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /D#100            // same as /DA#100



      As you can see from the examples, you may specify only one of

      the "A-date value" and "B-date value" or both.  If you specify

      only one date value, then the other end is open-ended.



      Note that the file age is measured by the number of days starting

      0 (zero) as the value for files made today, 1 (one) for files made

      yesterday, and so on.



      When you specify both the "A-date value" and "B-date value", the

      date range you specify may be used for an inclusive selection or

      exclusive selection, depending on which of the two values are newer.

      The following examples illustrate this point more clearly.



        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA#60  /DB#30    // files with age of 30-60 days

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DB#60  /DA#30    // age >= 60 or age <= 30



        Here, two same date values are specified for the opposite

        /DA: and /DB: switches.  The first example is the most common

        case where the two dates specify the beginning and the end of

        a single period.  On the other hand, the second example shows

        different case where the two date are applied toward the

        opposite direction in the timeline which in effect excludes

        files in the excluded period (files with age 31-59 days are

        NOT selected) --- such a case is accepted as a valid command.



      Note that when the age is referred to by the number of days,

      it is not measured by the multiple of 24 hours.  Rather, the 0th day

      (today) began at midnight today to take care any fraction of today.

      That is, /DA#0 specifies the files made on or after midnight today.

      This scheme allows the cut-off time to be midnight of each day.





  The relative time specifiers



      The relative time specifier adds few more twists to the relative

      date specifier.  In the /DA#n  /DB#n or /DO#n switches, when the

      age value n is given as a number without a suffix, the age will

      be measured by number of the days.  This is probably most common

      usage.  But, you may add a single-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S)

      to the value (for Days, Hours, Minutes or Seconds, respectively).



      Examples:



        XXCOPY  src /S /LDT /DA#30M   // list files made within 30 min.

        XXCOPY  src dst /s  /DA#24H   // copy files made within 24 hours

        XXCOPY  src dst /s  /DA#0     // copy files made today (since midnight)





  The absolute date specifiers



      Since we reference dates by year, month and day quite often in

      our day-to-day lives, it is also very natural for us to specify

      the file time as such.



      /DA:<date> Copies files that were changed on or after the specified date.

      /DB:<date> Copies files that were changed on or before the specified date.





      Examples of command lines using the absolute date:



        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000-1-1

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DB:1999-12-31

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:1998-1-1 /DB:2000-8-31

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /D:1998-1-1              // same as /DA#1998-1-1





  Now, you already know the essential mechanism of XXCOPY which controls

  file selection based on the filedate.  Nearly all of the remaining

  discussion is for various shortcuts and clarifications of details.





The "O-date value" for the same parameter



  When the "A-date value" is the same as the "B-date value" (to specify

  a particular date), you may use the third way, the "O-date value" to

  combine the two into one parameter.

  You can use the "O-date value" (On the date) whenever the "A-date value"

  and the "B-date value" are the same.  (Here, the letter O (oh, not zero)

  is shown in lowercase (o) to avoid confusion.)



      The following two commands are equivalent:



        XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000-5-1 /DB:2000-5-1

        XXCOPY  src  dst  /Do:2000-5-1



     It also applies to the relative date specifier.  The following

     two commands are equivalent.



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA#80 /DB#80

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /Do#80





Shortcut for Today and Yesterday



  One of the most common date used with XXCOPY is the current date

  (today) and one day earlier (yesterday).  So, we assign the dot (.)

  parameter as a shortcut for today's date for the /DA and /Do switches,

  and as a shortcut for yesterday's date for the /DB switch.



      /DB:. or /DB#.  specify filedate date is Yesterday or earlier.

      /DA:. or /DA#.  specify filedate that is today or later.

      /Do:. or /Do#.  specify filedate that is today only.





Partial date specifiers



  You may specify a month by omitting the day-of-the-month value.  If

  only two numbers are given, one must be a 4-digit year value.  The

  following command lines all specify the entire month of February, 2000.

  The "B-date value" in this context specifies the last day of the

  month, and the "O-date value" in this context specify the whole month.



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000-2-1 /DB:2000-2-29

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000-2   /DB:2000-2

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /Do:2000-2



  Similarly, you may specify the filedate by the year.

  The following three cases are equivalent.



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000-1-1 /DB:2000-12-31

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000     /DB:2000

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /Do:2000



  The partial date specifiers that are shown so far are for the cases

  of the whole month and the whole year.  But, the usage of partial date

  specifier is not limited to such cases.  When it is used for the

  /DA parameter, the partial date value specifies the first day of

  the month/year.  When it is used for the /DB parameter, it denotes

  the end of the month/year.  And, when it is used for the /Do

  parameter, it selects the whole month/year.  Here are some examples.



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:1999-4           // same as /DA:1999-04-01

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:1998             // same as /DB:1998-01-01



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DB:2000-5           // same as /DB:2000-05-31

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DB:1998             // same as /DB:1998-12-31



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /Do:2000-2           // the month of Feb, 2000

     XXCOPY  src  dst  /Do:2000             // the whole year 2000



     XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:1998-4 /DB:1999  // /DA:1998-04-01 /DB:1999-12-31





Odd cases:



   The relative and absolute date specifiers can be mixed in a command.

   Although most users avoid mixing the two types of expressing the

   date value, there is nothing inherently wrong about using both the

   relative and absolute date specifiers.



       XXCOPY  src  dst  /DA:2000-1-1  /DB#7



       This example specifies files that are at least one week old

       which are made in the year 2000.



   You cannot specify two periods in timeline in one XXCOPY command.

   That is, XXCOPY maintains one "A-date value" and one "B-date value".

   If you specify two A-date values, the first such value will be

   discarded.





International conventions



   We endorse the ISO-8601 convention (DMXXTB #025) which denotes the date/time value in

   the most logical order.  But, XXCOPY also accepts other conventions

   if the date value is unambiguously specified.  It allows one of the

   three (ISO, US and EU) conventions to be used for an absolute date

   specifier as long as it is value is unambiguous.  For example,



       /DA:2000-01-02      // ISO  the first value is larger than 1970

       /DA:0-1-2           // ISO  0 (for 2000) cannot be for month or day

       /DA:12-13-2000      // US   the value 13 cannot be a month value

       /DA:01-13-01        // US   the only one to have 13 in the middle

       /DA:13-10-2000      // EU   the value 13 cannot be a month value



    This applies to the partial date specifiers.  Therefore, both

    /DA:2000-03 and /DA:03-2000 are accepted as equally unambiguous.



    But, when there are more than one way to interpret the date value,

    the system's date format setting will be used to resolve ambiguity.

    The following date specifiers are such ambiguous cases and we

    suggest you avoid these cases.



       /DA:1-2-3           // can be ISO, US, or EU;  pretty bad

       /DA:12-12-12        // can be ISO, US, or EU

       /DA:1-2-2000        // can be US or EU

       /DA:11-12-13        // can be ISO, US, or EU

       /DA:13-12-11        // can be ISO, or EU



    I hope by now, you are convinced of the superiority of the ISO

    notation which also gives you the convenience of easy sorting.



    In the case of the partial date specifier, the year value must

    always be in a full 4-digit value.  In this case, the order of

    the year and month value can be switched without causing any

    ambiguity.  For example;



       /DA:2000-01         // partial ISO notation

       /DA:12-1999         // US/EU





File time-related switches



  All file time related functions can be further modified by various

  switches to meet your specific needs which may be different from

  the majority users.





  /FW, /FA, /FC (Last-Written, Last-Accessed, Created)



    Under normal circumstances, the file date/time XXCOPY uses is the

    time the file was last written (the commonly used file time value,

    /FW as the default), it can be substituted by the last-accessed

    time (/FA) or file creation time (/FC).



  /FL, /FU (Local time, UTC time)



    The commonly used file time is expressed by the local time (/FL

    as the default).  However, in networking environment, it may be

    more convenient for some users to enter the file time using the

    UTC time (/FU) which is also known as GMT (Greenwich Mean Time).



  /FT (File time truncation)



    When file time is compared against one another in a mixed OS

    environment, the granularity of the file time stamp (which is

    usually set by the particular file system) may cause problems.

    For example, the FAT based file systems (FAT12, FAT16, FAT32)

    uses file time which is measured by two second interval whereas

    unix-based file system uses one second interval. The NTFS uses

    much finer file time.  The /FT switch forces XXCOPY to truncate

    a file time to the coarsest (two second interval) unit before

    file times are compared.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #18




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The filename matching schemes in Win32 and DOS

Date:    2001-02-14  (revised with a new subject)

====================================================================



Longname revisited



  When Microsoft introduced the long filename to the Windows operating

  systems (Windows 95, 98, ME, NT4, and 2000), the legacy file access

  method using the shortname alias (the so-called 8.3 format) had to

  be supported.  Having two names for an object solved many problems.

  Yet, it also created a few undesirable side effects, albeit they

  are rather subtle.



  The most notorious aspect of the dual identity for the file and

  directory, is probably the synthesized shortname when a file is

  copied.  XXCOPY's /NX switch (by default) solves most of this

  problems by preserving the shortname.



  Recently, Microsoft added the new /N switch to its XCOPY utility

  which handles the filename using the shortname.  That is, the

  behavior of Microsoft's XCOPY is somewhat like our XXCOPY16

  (which can be launched in the Win32 environment).



   ------------------------------------------------------------------

    Microsoft's recent addition of the new /N switch to its XCOPY

    forced us to provide the same function in our XXCOPY in order to

    maintain full compatibility.  The function which was previously

    assigned to the /N switch (the shortname preservation) is now

    denoted by /NX (and /NX0 to disable).

   ------------------------------------------------------------------





The filename matching schemes (Loose name-matching)



  A close examination of the behaviors of Microsoft's XCOPY utility

  with regard to the filename matching function reveals an interesting

  but potentially troubling implementation.  That is, the filename

  matching in XCOPY (as well as the DIR command) is performed on both

  the longname and the shortname.  When either of the names matches

  the filename template, the file is selected.



  Say, you have a file \src\longname5.txt (shortname LONGNA~1.TXT).



  When you use Microsoft's file utilities such as the DIR, COPY,

  or XCOPY commands in the Win32 environment, the file can be

  accessed in any of the following commands,



     DIR     \src\*5.txt

     DIR     \src\*1.txt

     COPY    \src\*5.txt

     COPY    \src\*1.txt

     XCOPY   \src\*5.txt

     XCOPY   \src\*1.txt



  So, in the Win32 environment, a filename pattern applies to both

  the longname and the shortname.  As you might expect, our XXCOPY

  also behaves in the same way.



     XXCOPY  \src\*5.txt

     XXCOPY  \src\*1.txt





The /N switch of XCOPY



  Presumably, the idea behind the /N switch of Microsoft's XCOPY

  utility is to emulate the DOS (real mode) environment by handling

  the filename by the shortname (8.3) format.  Indeed, when files

  are copied, the destination will only have the shortnames.

  But, Microsoft programmed XCOPY's filename matching to behave

  identically whether or not you specify the /N switch.



  Let's look at the following lines for the two files listed above.



     XCOPY   \src\*1.txt   /N

     XCOPY   \src\*5.txt   /N



     XXCOPY  \src\*1.txt   /N

     XXCOPY  \src\*5.txt   /N



  In either case, the file, LONGNA~1.TXT will be copied into the

  destination.



  Wait a minute.  You asked for \src\*5.txt, and you got LONGA~1.TXT.

  We have problem with this behavior.  The filename matching scheme

  produced this side effect, thanks to the double identity of files

  in Win32.





Ideally speaking,



  We have to characterize the filename matching scheme implemented

  by Microsoft's various file utilities as sloppy at best.  And,

  our XXCOPY must faithfully reproduce the same sloppiness :-(

  Ideally, you should be given an option to exclude either of the

  longname or the shortname from the file matching scheme.  At least,

  the shortname-only copy operation would not bring in files which

  does not match in the context.





Enter the /NP (Precise name-matching) switch



  XXCOPY allows you to specify a more precise filename matching

  operation by the /NP switch.  When this (/NP) switch is present,

  the filename matching operation will use the more precise filename

  matching method by selecting only one name (long or short) to

  match the filename.  If it is absent (/NP0), then, the filename

  matching uses both the longname and shortname to select the file.

  that is, there are four possible switch combinations:



   Switch combination  Long/Short name matching scheme    File handling

  ----------------------------------------------------------------------

   /N0 /NP0 (default) both long and short (loose match)      longname

   /N  /NP0           both long and short (loose match)      shortname

   /N0 /NP            only longname       (precise match),   longname

   /N  /NP            only shortname      (precise match),   shortname



   Note: Since the /N0 switch is default, you may not see it in examples.





Examples of usage



   XXCOPY \*~*    /S /LSL /NP   // list files with the tilde(~)

                                // character in the longname



   XXCOPY \*~*    /S /LSL       // without /NP, you get a list of

                                // mostly shortname aliases.





   XXCOPY \*1.DOC /S /NP        // copy document files with the

                                // first part ending with "1"



   XXCOPY \*1.DOC /S            // again, without /NP, the pattern

                                // is too common in the shortnames





Wildcards: the DOS-way and the Win32-way.



  With the longname in the Win32 environment, came the new filename

  matching algorithm which accommodate the new reality.  But, the

  reality is not very clean when you take a closer look.



     For example,try Microsoft's XCOPY with "very_long_name.html"



     XCOPY  ????????.htm  // 8 characters before the dot

     XCOPY  ????.???      // 3 characters after the dot



     Notice that the filename has 14 and 4 character before and after

     the dot respectively.  But, both of the above command line

     succesuflly matches the file and proceeds.  This is in Win32!!!



     The following command lines using Microsoft's XCOPY behave

     differently depending on the DOS/Win32 environments.



     XCOPY   AB*XYZ.??    // In DOS, ABCDEFGH.OK and ABCDXYZ are copied.

     XCOPY   AB*XYZ.??    // In Win32, neither of them is copied.



     Our XXCOPY/XXCOPY16 faithfully imitates the behavior of XCOPY

     (to do otherwise would make the user even more confused).



     There are many other cases which cause unwelcome surprises...



  We expect many system administrators find themselves in both the

  DOS and Win32 environments from time to time and choose the

  appropriate version (XCOPY16 or XXCOPY) accordingly.  So, having

  two sets of file-matching rules is last thing the users need.

  This is especially true with XXCOPY which now has a lot more cases

  of filename matching situations:  the Wild-Wild-Source, the

  exclusion specifiers, and the inclusion specifiers (e.g., alternate

  filename templates).





Enter the /NW and /ND switches:



  With both XXCOPY and XXCOPY16, you have full control of the

  algorithm on filename matching with wildcards.



    /NW     Win32-scheme in filename matching (default in XXCOPY)

    /ND     DOS-scheme in filename matching   (default in XXCOPY16)





    With XXCOPY (Win32 version)



      In the case of XXCOPY, you may combine this switch with other

      filename-related switches (/NP /N /NX).  In most situations,

      the best choice for XXCOPY is /NW/NP/N0/NX (which is just /NP

      by relying on the defaults).  You may use /NW and /N

      combination which applies the Win-32 wildcard matching scheme

      to the shortname.



      Note the use of /ND (DOS-way) forces the /N switch enabled.



    With XXCPY16 (DOS version)



      In the case of XXCOPY16, you don't have other choices in

      filename handling.  Due to the operation environment, it

      the following switches are not supported by XXCOPY16:



      /N  /N0    // shortname/longname access scheme (always /N)

      /NP /NP0   // loose/precise filename matching  (always /NP)

      /NX /NX0   // does not support longname        (always /NX0)



      Note that here with XXCOPY16, in the 16-bit DOS environment,

      you can use the more advanced (preferred) wildcard treatments

      by choosing /NW even though the underlying filename is still

      in the short (8.3) format.  This is in contract to the fact

      the opposite is not true that XXCOPY, the 32-bit version,

      cannot select /ND switch for longname (/N0) format.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #19




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY in batch files

Date:    2000-12-31  (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction:



    XXCOPY as a general purpose file management tool, works well

    as a hand-typed command in a DOS Box.  It is also a useful

    building block of a complex task written as a batch file

    for a job like a full system backup, daily incremental backup

    as well as a specialized project archiving.  In these cases,

    the whole job is made of a series of XXCOPY commands since

    XXCOPY is better suited to handle one directory (and its

    subdirectories) at a time.  It is not uncommon that a well-

    written batch file  for a backup job consists of ten or more

    lines of XXCOPY commands.



    Since XXCOPY plays an important role in batch programming,

    mastering its command switches which are designed for such

    purposes will help you write better batch files.  The switches

    that are particularly useful inside a batch file are:



       /YY /CB /CBQ /CE /EC /IA /IP





How to get rid of the Y/N prompt.



    This is probably the most frequently asked question with

    regard to batch files.



    -------------------------------------------------------------

     The following command shows the switches which prompt you.



         XXCOPY /YY /?

    -------------------------------------------------------------



    XXCOPY provides various switches to suppress specific

    user prompts.  For example, /ZY is a variation of /Z

    which does not produce user prompts and good for batch

    file.  Similarly, /PD0 suppresses a user prompt for

    directory processing (mostly for deletion).  But, it becomes

    a hassle even to an experienced XXCOPY users.  Yes, XXCOPY

    has grown to be a monster with so many switches, you just

    can't remember all.  So, we now have an all-purpose prompt

    buster switch, /YY (super-YES).



    -------------------------------------------------------------

     Note:  although the use of /YY is very convenient to remove

            the various warning prompts, it is recommended only

            in well-tested batch files where any typing error

            would not cause any serious damage.

 

       E.g. XXCOPY  %1  %2  /CLONE /YY

  

            This is probably the worst place to use the /YY

            switch.  A user-supplied parameters (%1 and %2)

            in a batch file make the command is susceptible to

            human error.

            

            Just remember that the various warning prompts are

            there for good reason.  Using the /YY switch, you

            are denying yourself benefit of the safeguard.

    ------------------------------------------------------------



Example of a standard batch file.



    Advanced batch programmers test the exit code (ERRORLEVEL)

    returned by a program and branch off if certain conditions

    are met (e.g., terminate when a fatal error occurs).  Due to

    the severe limitation in the batch language, a typical batch

    file with conditional branching usually looks quite unsightly.



      ------------------------------------------------------

       XXCOPY c:\windows\  d:\backup\windows\   /S /Y

       IF ERRORLEVEL 100 GOTO step2

       IF ERRORLEVEL 1   GOTO end

       :step2

       XXCOPY c:\mydir\    d:\backup\mydir\     /S /Y

       IF ERRORLEVEL 100 GOTO step3

       IF ERRORLEVEL 1   GOTO end

       :step3

       XXCOPY c:\yourdir\  d:\backup\yourdir\   /S /Y

       IF ERRORLEVEL 100 GOTO step3

       IF ERRORLEVEL 1   GOTO end

       ...

       :end

      ------------------------------------------------------



    Here, the ERRORLEVEL returned by XXCOPY is tested for both

    the lower and the upper bounds to perform the conditional

    branching.  Most of the typing is consumed for the error

    handling.  It takes a lot of self discipline to write a good

    bath file with proper testing.



    By the way, a list of the exit code generated by XXCOPY can

    be viewed by running the following command:

    

        XXCOPY  /HELPE



    Also see article: XXTB #31, about Exit Code.





Using the /CB switch, the same sequence becomes...



      ------------------------------------------------------

       XXCOPY      c:\windows\  d:\backup\windows\   /S /Y

       XXCOPY /CB  c:\mydir\    d:\backup\mydir\     /S /Y

       XXCOPY /CB  c:\yourdir\  d:\backup\yourdir\   /S /Y

       ...

       :end

      ------------------------------------------------------



    In this alternative batch file, the IF ERRORLEVEL... lines

    are eliminated by the use of the /CB switch (except the first

    line).  The /CB switch which stands for "Continue-Batch"

    examines the exit code returned by the previous execution of

    XXCOPY and immediately terminates the current execution if

    the previous error condition was fatal (such as disk-full,

    or a user-abort).  How does one instance of XXCOPY know

    the exit code of its previous run?  Simple.  XXCOPY stores

    its exit code in the system registry for its own retrieval

    later.  Notice that there is no awkward branching in the

    batch file.  Actually, the exit code of one XXCOPY is NOT

    examined by the batch execution mechanism.  Therefore, the

    flow of the batch file is always to execute all the lines

    in the file.  The /CB switch provides a mechanism where a

    fatal error reported by one XXCOPY instance will propagate

    through the rest of the batch file execution that all

    subsequent XXCOPY lines with the /CB switch will be nullified.



    Note:  The position of the /CB switch within the command

           line is not significant.  Because of it's early action,

           it seems most appropriate to place it early on the line.





/CBQ for a cleaner screen when the batch file is aborted.



    Actually, /CBQ (the quiet version) is preferred by most

    users since this version will keep the console screen

    much cleaner when it is combined with a "ECHO OFF"

    statement in the batch file.



      ------------------------------------------------------

       @ECHO OFF

       XXCOPY       c:\windows\  d:\backup\windows\   /S /Y

       XXCOPY /CBQ  c:\mydir\    d:\backup\mydir\     /S /Y

       XXCOPY /CBQ  c:\yourdir\  d:\backup\yourdir\   /S /Y

       ...

       :end

      ------------------------------------------------------



    The virtue of running the batch file with the ECHO OFF

    setting is that the XXCOPY lines subsequent to a fatal error

    of an XXCOPY will not clobber the screen.  The last XXCOPY

    line with the error message will not be pushed off the screen

    with echoed command lines even though they terminate immediately.



            ---------------------------------------------------------

             What does the @ECHO OFF statement do?



             ECHO OFF inside a batch file turns off the display

             of the command line (the current line in the batch

             file.  Without it, every line in the batch file will

             appear on your console.  An at sign (@) at the beginning

             of a line in a batch file turns off echoing just one

             line (You may add an at sign (@) on every line to have

             the same effect as ECHO OFF.  The first at sign (@) in

             the first line suppressing the echoing of its line, too.

            ---------------------------------------------------------





/EC and /CE for even a better batch file.



    The problem of running the batch file with ECHO OFF mode

    is that the screen will not show the command invocation.

    What we really want is to generate no output to the console

    when XXCOPY is terminated by the /CB mechanism but to echo

    the invocation line if it will continue the execution.

    That is what /EC (to echo the command line) does.  Moreover

    the /CBQ/EC combination is so handy in a batch file, XXCOPY

    assigns a new switch, /CE as the shortcut for /CBQ/EC.

    So, rewriting the same batch file, it should look like



      ------------------------------------------------------

       @ECHO OFF

       XXCOPY /EC  c:\windows\  d:\backup\windows\   /S /Y

       XXCOPY /CE  c:\mydir\    d:\backup\mydir\     /S /Y

       XXCOPY /CE  c:\yourdir\  d:\backup\yourdir\   /S /Y

       ...

       :end

      ------------------------------------------------------



    Note that it is not a typo!  The first line uses /EC (echo)

    and the other lines are with /CE (shortcut for /CBQ/EC).

    It looks symmetrical and even cute.





Using XXCOPY macro to create a unique destination.



    When you create a batch file for a periodic (daily) backup,

    you may want to encode the current date (today) as a part

    of the destination directory name you create.  XXCOPY's macro

    reference feature (/$xxxx$) was designed exactly for that.



    For example, when you can enter



        XXCOPY C:\  D:\mybackup\DB/$YYMMDD$\  /CLONE



    and it will be expanded to



        XXCOPY C:\  D:\mybackup\DB011225\     /CLONE



    (assuming the current (today's) date is December 25, 2001.)

    See article: XXTB #24, about Macros.





Testing if a directory exists



    The following sequence is a well established technique to

    test whether or not a directory exists in a batch file.



      ------------------------------------------------------

       IF EXIST d:\backup\mybackup\nul goto next

       XXCOPY c:\  d:\backup\mybackup\ /CLONE

       :next

      ------------------------------------------------------



    The IF EXIST (and IF NOT EXIST) construct is good only for a

    file, not a directory.  Here, the neat trick is based upon the

    fact the virtual file, "NUL" is guaranteed to exist on any

    directory.



    Now, using XXCOPY'S /IA (which stands for "If Absent"),

    the same command line will be re-written as



      ------------------------------------------------------

       XXCOPY c:\  d:\backup\mybackup\ /IA /CLONE

      ------------------------------------------------------



    The /IA switch continues to run only if the destination directory

    is absent (that is, /IA will terminate immediately if the

    destination exists).  It is equivalent to the "IF NOT EXIST"

    construct in the batch file.  On the other hand, /IP (If Present)

    continues to run only if the destination is present (that is,

    /IP will terminate immediately if the destination does not exist).

    it is exact opposite of /IA.





Testing a directory using macro.



    The power of /IA and /IP becomes even more evident when you use

    a destination directory which is specified by a macro reference.



      ------------------------------------------------------

       XXCOPY c:\  d:\backup\DB/$YYMMDD$\ /IA /CLONE

      ------------------------------------------------------



    In this case, it's not a matter of making the batch file shorter

    and prettier.  There is no simple way to test the presence or the

    absence of a directory whose name is "synthesized".



    This command executes only when the directory is absent.

    This technique prevents running the same daily backup routine

    twice on the same day.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #20




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: More on Directory Cloning using XXCOPY

Date:    2000-10-31

====================================================================



The topics included in this page were originally in the Disk Cloning

article XXTB #10.  Since most first-time visitors want to learn the simple

disk clone operation and tend to be in a hurry, I decided to do them

a favor by removing much of the variations and related materials from

the page and keep the other article focused on the disk clone case

only.  Here, a few variations which are related to the /CLONE switch

are discussed.





1.  Partial Disk cloning (bootable):



    This is a variation of the first one (Full Disk Cloning).

    It copies the minimum set of files into the new disk so that

    the new disk will become a bootable disk.  You may selectively

    add more directories and files if you want.  Here, the windows

    directory is assumed to be named C:\Windows (this is the default;

    but some people may call the windows directory C:\Win95, C:\Win98

    or whatever...)



    Batch file contents

    ----------------------------------------------------------

     XXCOPY C:\        D:\         /h/r/y/ks/zy

     XXCOPY C:\Windows D:\Windows  /h/r/y/ks/zy/e/i/xtemp*\

    ----------------------------------------------------------



      Explanation:



        /i    // initializes (creates if absent) the new directory

        /x    // excludes (in this case, directories starting "temp")



    This batch file works even when the destination volume is

    not empty.  It handles only the root directory (the top layer

    only without including all the subdirectories) in the first

    statement.  The second one will handle the entire windows

    directory.  The /xtemp*\ switch excludes all directories whose

    name starts "temp" in \Windows.  This eliminates the official

    windows temporary directory (C:\windows\temp\) and the hidden

    internet-related temporary directory used by Internet Explorer

    (C"\windows\Temporary Internet Files\).  You may add more

    exclusion items.



    Caution:



      The /CLONE, /Z, and /ZY switch performs deletion of extra

      directories and files in the destination.  If you inadvertently

      specify a wrong destination, the consequence will be very

      severe.  Some careless users have lost many files by this!!!



    Note that this script does not give you the absolute minimum

    set of files in the destination for Win9x.  It will contain many

    files that are not essential to the minimum Win9x.  Also note

    that an international (non-US) version of Windows may require

    additional language-specific files.





2.  Partial Disk cloning (bootable, even smaller):



    This is another variation of the second one with more strict

    selection of files (but not the absolute bare minimum).



    Batch file contents

    ----------------------------------------------------------------

     XXCOPY C:\                D:\                 /h/r/y/ks/zy

     XXCOPY C:\Windows         D:\Windows          /h/r/y/ks/zy/i

     XXCOPY C:\Windows\system  D:\Windows\system   /h/r/y/ks/zy/i

     XXCOPY C:\Windows\fonts   D:\Windows\fonts    /h/r/y/ks/zy/i

     XXCOPY C:\Windows\inf     D:\Windows\inf      /h/r/y/ks/zy/i

     XXCOPY C:\Windows\command D:\Windows\command  /h/r/y/ks/zy/i

    ----------------------------------------------------------------



    Note that this script does not give you the absolute minimum

    set of files in the destination for Win9x.  It will contain many

    files that are not essential to the minimum Win9x.  Also note

    that an international (non-US) version of Windows may require

    additional language-specific files.





3.  Backup to multiple removable media (floppy, CD-R, zip drive, tape)



    A very common headache in backup today is that none of our

    removable storage device such as the CD-R and Zip drive gives

    us a sufficient capacity for a full backup in one volume.

    Since most device drivers do not provide a volume-spanning

    capability, we are left without a decent solution.  Here's

    one way to do it using XXCOPY.  This technique is nothing

    new.  It is as old as XCOPY and the Archive attribute bit.

    The basic principle is described in our earlier article, XXTB #06.

    Here, in the following example the A: (floppy disk) drive is

    used the destination --- but let's not kid ourselves...



    Batch file contents

    ----------------------------------------------------------------

     XXCOPY C:\                /aa/h/s/q

     :looptop

     @echo.

     @echo  Insert a blank media and hit a key to continue

     @echo.

     @pause

     XXCOPY C:\   A:\          /m/h/r/y/ks/zy/s/q

     goto looptop

    ----------------------------------------------------------------



      Explanation:



        /aa  // sets the archive attribute bit (no copy takes place)

        /q   // quiet (reduces screen output on superfluous info)

        /m   // copies files with archive bit and clears the bit



     The first statement simply sets the archive bit on every file in

     the source directory.  Then, the batch file enters an infinite loop

     (from which you can exit only by typing Ctrl-C or Ctrl-Break)

     where you are asked to insert a new diskette (or whatever),

     and exactly the same XXCOPY command copies a diskette-full chunk

     at a time.  The trick here is the good old /M switch which clears

     the archive bit of as soon as a file is successfully copied to

     the destination.  It's not really a fancy technique but it works.



     This technique is not limited to a full backup.  You may choose

     a subdirectory and apply the same method (add the /i switch then).



     In a real life backup situation, I strongly suggest that you

     learn and use XXCOPY's /X and /EX switches in order to avoid

     files that do not need a backup.  Otherwise, you will end up

     creating a massive amount of backup data where most of the files

     are available on your CD-ROMs somewhere.



     As Microsoft's programmers bloat the Windows software and force

     us to buy ever increasing amount of hard disk space, the

     percentage of user-generated data is declining in most computer

     systems.  Therefore, we need to be clever and more selective in

     setting up the backup script.





If you have a nifty batch file using XXCOPY and want to share with

other XXCOPY users, please let us know.  We may publish good ones.



Please send E-Mail to <tech@xxcopy.com>.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #21




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY in a network environment

Date:    2000-11-14

====================================================================



While XXCOPY is useful in a stand-alone PC, it is widely used in

network environments.  Since the default settings of various XXCOPY

operations are designed primarily for copying local drives, you

need to pay special attentions when you operate XXCOPY in a

network environment.



In this article, the following XXCOPY command switches are examined

specifically with networked environments in mind.



   /NX0    Disables the shortname preservation feature

   /FT     Truncates the time value to be FAT-compatible

   /CK0    Disables pre-checking of the remaining space

   /FU     Selects universal time (UNC) for file time





1.  The Shortname preservation.



      One of the reasons XXCOPY enjoys its popularity among freeware

      users is the shortname preservation feature.  While this

      feature is essential to ensure a proper duplication of the

      system drive, the feature may not work (and even becomes a

      detriment) in some networked environment with mixed Operating

      Systems (or file systems) where the source and the destination

      volumes are of different type in file system.  It is best if

      you test whether the shortname-preserving feature is working

      for you on your particular environment.



      Since shortname preservation feature requires XXCOPY to

      issue a sequence of system calls for renaming, it is a

      time consuming operation especially when it fails.  If your

      XXCOPY exhibits an inordinately low performance, you should

      suspect this feature as the likely cause of the trouble.

      In that case, just add  /NX0 to disable the feature (giving

      up the idea of preserving the shortname).  For example,

      it would be futile for XXCOPY to save the shortname while

      the underlying OS (e.g, Linux) does not even support it.



      XXCOPY sets the /NX switch on a local drive copy.  And, if

      either the source or the destination is specified by an UNC

      (starting with two backslashes.  E.g,  \\myserver\cdrive\),

      the /NX0 is used as the default setting.  If you assert your

      desire by an explicit /NX switch, the switch will be honored.



      Unfortunately, it is not always easy for XXCOPY to determine

      whether the combination of the source and the destination is

      suitable for the /NX operation, an explicit command switch

      of /NX and /NX0 should work the best.



       -----------------------------------------------------------

        Starting with v2.43.x, the shortname preservation feature

        is disabled by an UNC specifier either on src or dst.



        Due to Microsoft' XCOPY added their /N switch in recent

        Windows 9x release, XXCOPY's shortname preservation

        feature is no longer assigned to /N.  Starting with

        v2.42.0, it is controlled by /NX and /NX0.  We regret

        that this change forced us to broke existing batch files.

       -----------------------------------------------------------



      See article: XXTB #03, for related topics.





2.  Time stamp granularity.



      Different file systems use different ways to keep track of

      the date and time information associated with a file.  When

      you use XXCOPY to transfer files from one file system to another,

      you should be aware of the characteristics of the file system.

      The granularity of the file time maintained by the OS is the

      first one to note:



            File System             File time granularity

           -----------------------------------------------

            FAT12/FAT16/FAT32            2 sec

            NTFS                       100 nsec

            Unix/Linux                   1 sec



      If your XXCOPY operation does not check the file time as the

      criteria for file selection, the granularity is not an issue.

      However, when you use an operation which involves the file time,

      you should know more.  The following list shows the switches

      which depend on the time stamp of the file.



          /BI     Backup Incremental

          /BN     Backup Newer files

          /Bo     Backup Older files

          /BS     Backup Same-time/size files

          /BX     Backup Different-time/size files

          /BU     Backup (combination using /BI)

          /DA     Copies Newer files

          /DB     Copies Older files

          /DS     Copies Same-time files

          /DX     Copies Different-time files

          /CLONE  Backup (combination using /BI)



      The best way to handle such a case with mixed file systems is

      to use the /FT (Filetime-Truncate) switch.  It converts all

      file time values into the FAT representation (2-second

      granularity) before a comparison is made.





3.  Remaining space check.



      Ideally speaking, a file copy utility should know the remaining

      space on the destination before a copy operation is started.

      That is exactly what XXCOPY does.  However, when the destination

      directory is on a remote machine, the value XXCOPY receives as

      the remaining space from the Operating system is sometimes

      not accurate.  When this happens, XXCOPY terminates the current

      session and returns the "Disk Full" error condition.



      Many users have reported that XXCOPY prematurely terminates

      a session due to a false reading on the remaining space.  That

      is, XXCOPY's idealistic design backfires --- and the more

      primitive design (e.g., the COPY command) works better by not

      checking the remaining space.  So, you can override XXCOPY's

      pre-check feature by /CK0  (default is /CK).





4.  Time stamp type, and locality .



      The original FAT12 and FAT16 file systems used by DOS had only

      one type of file time which represents the last-modified time.

      The FAT32 and NTFS maintain three types of time stamps for each

      file.



          Time when the file was Last-modified  (/FW  default)

          Time when the file was First-created  (/FC)

          Time when the file was Last-accessed  (/FA)



      By default, XXCOPY uses the Last-modified value as the file

      time (/FW).



      The file time is referenced either by the local time or by the

      universal time (UTC, also known as GMT).  The default setting

      uses the local time since most of us eat lunch at Noon(?).

      The setting is either /FL (Local, default) and /FU (UTC).





      Since we do not hear much problems associated with the

      time-representation aspects, we assume this is not a serious

      issue with XXCOPY.  But, XXCOPY is prepared to deal with it.



      See article: XXTB #15, for related topics.





5.  Conclusion



      In this article, a few solutions are provided to alleviate

      common problems dealing with XXCOPY operation across networked

      drives.  The solutions listed here generally works.  However,

      they are only a guideline and your case may involve other

      factors which are overlooked in this article.



      For example, there is an inherent limitation to the accuracy

      of backup operation when you use the /FT switch to truncate

      the file time before comparison.  If you do not use the /FT

      switch, XXCOPY may select more than 50% of files for incremental

      backup while only a small fraction of them are really different.

      On the other hand, if you use /FT, a few unfortunate pairs

      of files whose time difference of 1 second is genuine would

      not be selected.  In a case like this, XXCOPY cannot help

      (nor any other utility).  It is a trade off.



      Please note that this article does not cover all common pitfalls.

      We welcome your feedback when you encounter similar problems

      which we have not yet addressed.





Please send E-Mail to <tech@xxcopy.com>..






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #22




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The leading backslash in a filespec

Date:    2002-01-03 (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction:



  As we see more and more IT professionals who are born after the

  WYSIWYG/GUI scheme was invented, certain key concepts which we

  took for granted are no longer a commonsense...



      xxcopy c:\  d:\  /clone

      xxcopy c:   d:   /clone



  If you know the difference of the two lines, just forget this.

  But, if you consider the two are about the same, this article

  is for you.  The difference is subtle and in many cases, the

  two lines are the same, indeed.  Howerver, in the second line,

  the context determines what will be copied and where will be

  the destination directory (and what will be deleted from the

  destination).





Absolute pathspec and Relative pathspec.



  The first line of the above example explicitly specifies

  that both the source and the destination are the root

  directory of respective drives.  The second line does not

  specify which directory in the source and which directory

  of the destination within the respective drives.  That is,

  the second example above relies the exact location of both

  the source and the destination directories on the default

  behavior of the OS.  Microsoft's OSes keep track of the current

  (default) directory on each volume.  If it has not been

  defined yet, it will go to the root directory (which is what

  most users want).  Depending on the setting, when you open up

  a DOS box, the current (default) directory may or may not be

  at the root directory.  Also, the current directory of C: may

  be at c:\windows whereas on D:, it may be D:\.  You just

  cannot easily predict what it may be.  Therefore, the common

  assumption that an unspecified path is equivalent to the root

  directory is extremely dangerous with a tool like XXCOPY.

  The consequence of the /ZY switch (which is part of the

  /CLONE switch) on a wrong source or destination could be quite

  FATAL (wipes out all mismatched directories along with their

  entire contents).





Actual examples:



  Let me give you one concrete example.  If you run the

  following command,



      cd  d:\mydir



  The current directory of Volume D: will be set to d:\mydir.

  So, unless you change the current (default) directory of

  Volume D: back to its root, when you say



      xxcopy c:\  d:        /clone



  Then, the line is equivalent to



      xxcopy c:\  d:\mydir  /clone





  Similarly, when volume C:'s current directory is not at the

  root directory (it could be at c:\windows) and you try to copy



      xxcopy c:  d:\          /clone



  In this case, it is equivalent to



      xxcopy c:\Windows  d:\  /clone



  Again, it would give you quite a surprise.





More than one "current" directory:



  With the most popular setting of the DOS prompt which usually

  shows you the "current directory of the current drive" such as

  the following,



    C:\Windows> _



  You don't get any feedback on what is the setting of another

  drive.  For example, the same example shown above, the console

  (the DOS box window)



    C:\Windows> cd d:\mydir

    C:\Windows> _



  When the cd (chdir) command succeeds, there will be no confirming

  message.  The command is quietly accepted and executed.





Why XXCOPY does not supply the leading backslash for you?



  Believe it or not, the way the Absolute pathspec and relative

  pathspec are handled throughout the command line environment,

  be it DOS, Win32, or even Unix, the convention for the absolute

  pathspec and the relative pathspec are so fundamental and

  ubiquitous, if we were to implement XXCOPY's own convention

  and let XXCOPY implicitly supply the missing leading backslash,

  it would create an unbelievable chaos.



  Therefore, XXCOPY cannot help you on this, except it prompts

  you with an additional warning prompt.





Similar cases everywhere:



  The distinction of the absolute and relative path is not limited

  to the source and the destination pathspecs.  It applies to

  any filename you specify in the XXCOPY command line (and also

  for most other programs in Windows).  For example, we often

  hear users complaining about XXCOPY not creating the log file.

  You may have a habit of being casual about creating a log file,



      XXCOPY c:\src\  d:\dst\  /onmyerror.log



  and find no problem.  Yet, when you make a batch file using

  the same line, you may not find the log file as easily.  If you

  don't control the "current directory" of the batch file

  invocation, you may have a hard time locating the log file.



      --------------------------------------------------

       In Windows (for all the 9x and NT families),

       every shortcut object comes with a setting of

       the "current directory" (Right-click on the icon

       and look for the "Start in" setting).  In a case

       of a program file or a batch file, the directory

       specified in the "Start in" setting becomes the

       current directory when the program is executed.

      --------------------------------------------------

 

  My advice is to spell out the full filespec always:

  

      XXCOPY c:\src\  d:\dst\  /on"C:\My Document\myerror.log"





Conclusion:



  So, if you are in a position to advise others on how to use

  XXCOPY with a concrete example, please do not abbreviate the

  leading backslash for cloning a directory.  This one-character

  difference could be just too great to ignore.



  Let me repeat,



  PLEASE NEVER USE A SLOPPY COMMAND LINE LIKE THIS



      xxcopy c:  d:   /clone     // BAD BAD BAD EXAMPLE!!!



  The /CLONE switch is too dangerous to let the system default

  setting determine the fate.  Instead always specify the

  directory using the full (absolute) directory path



      xxcopy c:\  d:\  /clone






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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #23




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The enhanced features of XXCOPY at a glance

Date:    2000-12-06

====================================================================



Here are some of XXCOPY's enhanced features over Microsoft's XCOPY.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 1. "Wild-Wild-source"



    XXCOPY c:\windows\*\*cache*\*\*.jpg  c:\myimages\



    Note the number and the positions of asterisks in the source.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 2. Exclusion switch (file template)



    XXCOPY c:\*\*cache*\*  \dst\   /X*.gif /X*.bmp



    /X allows you to exclude files that match the tempalte



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 3. Exclusion switch (directory template)



    XXCOPY c:\  \dst\ /S  /Xtemp*\*\*.gif /X*\internet\*\*.mp3



    /X allows you to specify a group of directories and/or files

    that match quite a variety of directory/file patterns.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 4. Inclusion switch (file template only)



    XXCOPY c:\*.img   \dst  /S /IN*.bmp /IN*.gif /IN*.bmp



    /IN allows you to specify an "include" filespec (alternate

    filename pattern).



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 5. Limit by file size



    XXCOPY c:\   d:\backup\  /S /SZ:-10000000



    This example copyies files whose size is 10MB or less.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 6. Select files by age



    XXCOPY c:\   d:\backup\  /S /DA#5



    This command copies files that were made within 5 days



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 7. Select files by year/month/date



    XXCOPY c:\   d:\backup\  /S  /DA:2000-10



    This command copies files that were made in October, 2000 or later.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 8. Select the range of file date



    XXCOPY c:\   d:\backup\  /S  /DA:1999-1-1  /DB:1999-6-30



    The file range of Date betwen Jan 1 and Jun 30 of 1999.

    /DA (On-or-After) and /DB (On-or-Before) bracket the date range.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



 9. Alternative to DELTREE



    XXCOPY "c:\My Documents\*\*.mp3" /RMDIR /DB:1999-12-31



    XXCOPY is not just for file copy.  The rich set of file selection

    switches can be applied to file deletion as well.



--------------------------------------------------------------------



10. Complex file search for a listing of custom output format.



    XXCOPY c:\windows\*\*cache*\*\my*\*\*.jpg  /LZDTL



    The /L switch offers a search and list capability with format control.

    This example lists Z(file size), D(ate), T(ime), and L(ongname).



--------------------------------------------------------------------



This list gives you only ten relatively straightforward switches to

illustrate the power of XXCOPY.  The over 200 enhanced switches in

XXCOPY can be combined for millions of combinations to fit your

needs.  For a complete list of switches, see XXTB #01.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #24




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY's Macro processing feature

Date:    2003-05-01  (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction:



    When you create a batch file which performs a daily backup, you

    may want to name the destination directory after the current

    date and/or time.  Using the standard batch file this is rather

    difficult without a help of some fancy batch enhancer.



    For example, you may want to name today's backup destination

    directory using the current time



       XXCOPY C:\   D:\BACKUP\DEC-20\                   /S

       XXCOPY C:\   D:\BU001225\                        /S

       XXCOPY C:\   D:\BACKUP\2000-12-25\               /S

       XXCOPY C:\   D:\BACKUP\DAILY\FEB.04.2000.BUP\    /S

       XXCOPY C:\   D:\BACKUP\WEEK\BKUP_WED.BUP\        /S



    What is needed is to synthesize certain names based on the current

    system time.





The XXCOPY macro processing feature.



    XXCOPY provides a set of predefined variables which can be entered

    in your command line (or the current value in the string of environment

    variable, XXCOPY).  The technique used here is sometimes called

    "Macro processing" albeit this is a very small implementation which

    allows you to reference (you cannot add new macro definitions) a

    predefined value through a simple rule of substitution.



    Macro reference may be used anywhere in your command line (or the

    XXCOPY environment variable (XXCOPY and XXCOPYX), or even in the

    exclusion item parameters.  That is, anywhere you normally supply

    a string of characters, you can place a macro reference.



    The trouble is, people's tastes are so different, providing just

    one way would always make someone unhappy.  Take the date for

    example, despite our crusade in advocating the ISO 8601 standard

    (yyyy-mm-dd), few would listen.  So, XXCOPY provides just a few

    building blocks and lets you combine them whichever way you want.





The macro reference examples



    Before showing the gory details, let me show you examples which give

    you a good start.  Just observe what is going on.  You will get a

    pretty good idea how XXCOPY processes the macros.



    Let's assume it is  Friday, July 4, 2003 01:05:30 pm.



    /$DATE$        --->  0704          // common 4-digit month/day

    /$TIME$        --->  1305          // common 4-digit hour/minute

    /$YYYY-MM-DD$  --->  2003-07-04    // hyphens may be added

    /$M-D-YY$      --->  7-4-03        // no leading zeros for mn dy

    /$DD.MM.YY$    --->  04.07.03      // Europeans may like this

    /$MON-DD$      --->  JUL-04        // 3-letter month may be used

    /$WWW$         --->  FRI           // 3-letter day of week

    /IIII-IWK-K    --->  2003-W17-5    // ISO-8601, Year, week no, day-of-week





What is a valid macro reference?



    /$xxxxxx$



    XXCOPY's macro reference always starts with a slash (/) which is

    immediately followed by a macro reference string which starts with

    a dollar sign ($) followed by zero or more macro keywords and ends

    by a dollar sign.



    Within the two dollar signs of a macro reference (xxxxxx shown above),

    zero or more of predefined macro keywords may be specified (multiple

    keywords are combined without any separating character).



    The following keywords are currently supported (we may add more

    later).



      Keyword     Value       comment

     -----------------------------------------------------------

      HOST        MYWINPC     up to 15 character machine name

      YYYY        2003        4-digit year (good for 10000 years)

      YY          03          2-digit year (good for a century)

      Y           3           1-digit year (good for a decade)

      MON         DEC         3-letter month name

      MM          07          2-digit month

      M           7           1 or 2 digit month (without leading 0)

      DD          04          2-digit day

      D           4           1 or 2 digit day (without leading 0)

      HH          13          2-digit hour (00-23)

      H           13          1 or 2 digit hour (0-23) (without leading 0)

      NN          05          2-digit minute

      N           5           1 or 2 digit minute  (without leading 0)

      SS          30          2-digit second

      S           30          1 or 2 digit second  (without leading 0)

      DATE        0704        same as MMDD

      TIME        1305        same as HHNN

      WWW         FRI         3-letter day of week name

      W           5           1-digit day of week (Sun:0 - Sat:6)

      IIII        2003        4-digit year (ISO week number notation)

      II          03          2-digit year (ISO, 2-digit-year value)

      IWK         W17         2-digit week number (always prefixed by W)

      K           5           1-digit day of week (ISO, Mon:1 - Sun:7)





Single-key macro reference



    The simplest macro reference is made of one keyword inside.



      /$DATE$    --->   0704



    You may combine as many single-key macros



      /$YYYY$/$MM$/$DD$   --->    20030704





Multiple-key macro reference



    You may chain two or more keywords within a macro reference

    without any other character.  A macro reference is parsed

    from left to right and the longest string which matches the

    pattern will be used first.



      /$YYYYMMDD$  --->   20030704     // same as /$YYYY$/$MM$/$DD$

      /$YDATE$     --->   30704



    For readability and punctuation, the following characters are

    also supported.



       T ! # % & ' ( ) , - . @ _ { } ~ `



    These characters function as a keyword and represent the character

    literally (after expansion, they appear as typed in the reference).



      /$YYYY-MM-DD$  --->   2003-07-04





Miscellaneous rules.



    1.  You may use a keyword within a macro reference more than once.

        (In nearly all cases, this makes little sense, but it's allowed).



         /$YYYYYYYY$  --->   20032003  ( YYYY  and YYYY )

         /$YYYYYYY$   --->   2003033   ( YYYY and YY and Y )

         /$WWWW$      --->   FRI5      ( WWW and W )



    2.  Macro reference is case-insensitive



         /$DATE$      --->   0704

         /$date$      --->   0704

         /$DaTe$      --->   0704



    3.  Macro reference is case-preserving



         /$MON        --->   JUL

         /$mon$       --->   jul

         /$Www$       --->   Fri

         /$wWw$       --->   fRi



         Note:  Of course, this feature is good only for XXCOPY.

                Since XXCOPY16 is governed by the DOS rule, all

                filenames will be converted to uppercase only.



    4.  A dollar sign ($) cannot be inside a macro reference.

        If you need a dollar sign, you should do it outside.



         /$MM$$/$DD$  --->   07$04    // a macro, $, and another macro



    5.  Year, followed by week-number should be denoted by

    

         /$IIII-IWK$  --->   2003-W27 // See below for details





Where can a macro reference be placed?



    You may use a macro reference string ( /$xxxx$ )  anywhere in your

    command line as well as in the environment variables, XXCOPY and

    XXCOPYX (yes, even inside an exclusion specifier).  That means, you

    may place it in the external exclusion list file (specified by

    the /EX switch).  It is also permitted in alternate filename template

    (/IN) specifiers.  In short, practically anywhere you enter a string

    of text, XXCOPY will accept a macro reference and expand it

    accordingly.





Recommendation of macro usage.



    For DOS-compatibility, you should keep the directory names to

    the 8.3 format.  It will be much easier to access directories

    from a real mode (DOS) environment.



    For routine backup, a five- or six-digit date code is probably

    a good choice for most occasions.



     d:\bu\bu/$yymmdd$.c\    --->   d:\bu\bu030704.c\

     d:\bu\b/$ymmdd$_c\      --->   d:\bu\b30704_c\

     d:\bu\bu_/$MONYY$\c\    --->   d:\bu\bu_JUL03\c\



    Using two-digit year value as opposed to one-digit year value

    is all up to you.  In general, just 1-digit year format gives

    you values that are unique for ten years.  That's quite adequate

    for most backup operations.  In this context, using a four-digit

    year value (/$YYYY/) in the directory name is overkill especially

    if the directory name exceeds the 8.3 format.





The ISO 8601 standard.



    We take a very strong position in endorsing the ISO 8601 standard

    which provides logical and convenient guidelines in describing

    date and time values.  Visit http://www.iso.ch.



    The most prominent aspect of the ISO 8601 standard is of course,

    its date order in the YYYY-MM-DD format and the 24-hour notation,

    hh:nn:ss.  XXCOPY also supports ISO's lesser-known week date

    representation.

    

    According to the ISO definition, the week begins on Monday and

    ends on Sunday.  XXCOPY denotes the ISO's day-of-the-week

    value using /$K$.  The only difference between ISO's day-of-the-

    week value (/$K$) and the traditional day-of-the-week radix (/$W$)

    counterpart is the value for Sunday (/$K$ = 7 and /$W$ = 0);

    other days (Monday through Saturday) will have the same values.



    ISO 8601 also defines the "Week date" which assigns a number to

    each week of the year (More examples can be found here).

    Unfortunately, when the first day of the year does not coincide

    with the beginning of the week (Monday in ISO's specification),

    the week will straddle over two years for which special rules

    are made.  A week belongs to the year which is more dominant

    (has four or more days in the week).  So, the first week of

    the year (W01) is defined as the week which contains the 4th day

    of January.  With this rule, up to three days at the beginning

    of the year and also up to three days at the end of the year

    the date may become a part of the previous calendar year or the

    next calendar year, respectively.  This may be a bit confusing,

    but that's the rule and we understand why it is necessary.

    

    The Week-of-the-year value is always described with the prefix, W

    followed by a two-digit decimal value (starting 01) which is

    referenced by the /$IWK$ keyword.



    E.g.   Fri, 2003-07-04  --->  2003-W27-5

           Sun, 2003-12-28  --->  2003-W52-7

           Mon, 2003-12-29  --->  2004-W01-1  == next year value

           Thu, 2004-01-01  --->  2004-W01-4

           Sat, 2005-01-01  --->  2004-W53-6  == prev year value



    For this irregularity in the year values, XXCOPY assignes the

    /$IIII$ (and /$II$ for the two-digit notation) to be used in

    the week-of-the-year context to differentiate it from the

    calendar year value (/$YYYY$ and /$YY$, respectively).





Q and A:



   Q:  Why T is in the list of punctuation characters?



   A:  T is a special punctuation character as an exception since

       our favorite standard, the ISO 8601 stipulates the use of T

       to connect the date part and the time part.



         /$YYYY-MM-DDTHH.NN.SS$ ---> 2003-07-04T13.05.30



       (Alas, the colon (:) character is not a legal character

        for a filename and the dots are used instead.)



       You may use @ as an alternative separator:

       

         /$YYYY-MM-DD@HH.NN.SS$ ---> 2003-07-04@13.05.30



   Q:  Is there any way to test exactly how my macro usage is working?



   A:  If you are not sure of the effect of a macro, add the

       /EC (echo) switch that displays the full command line

       after the macro references are expanded.



       Example:



          XXCOPY  \src  \dst\/$DATE$\/$YYMMDD$\  /EC /W



          Here, the /EC gives you the line after the macro expansion,

          and /W will pause and let you terminate the command if you

          don't like the effect of the macro.





   Q:  Why the slash (/) is used in the macro prefix?



   A:  We wish we have more characters in the keyboard.  Seriously,

       the design goal of the XXCOPY Macro feature was to allow you

       to use it in as many places as possible (within the source and

       destination specifiers, as well as in other switch parameters).

       Since the macro reference should be anywhere (including a

       partial word), the macro syntax has to use a terminator (hence,

       the $xxxx$ sandwich).  Because the dollar sign ($) is a valid

       character for filename, we need a prefix character which is

       not permitted in filename.  Actually, there are only nine

       such characters in English alphabet ( " * ? : < > | \ / ) that

       are not permitted in Windows' filename.



       Every one of these character has some form of conflict with

       other usages.



         "  *  ?  \ are out of the question.

         <  >  |  are reserved by the command shell (COMMAND.COM).



         :  used only at the drive letter designator.

         /  used as the prefix for the command switch.



       So the choice was between the two (: and /).  We chose the

       two-character sequence, "/$" of the macro reference as a

       distinguishing feature from other switches.  Fortunately,

       XXCOPY's command syntax stipulates that the source and destination

       specifiers to be always separated from other switch arguments by

       a space, therefore, a macro reference embedded inside source or

       destination specifier can unambiguously parsed.  It's not pretty.

       It took us several months to settle on this syntax.  Now the

       journey is over.  Enjoy the macro.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY
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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #25




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Command Line Syntax

Date:    2002-05-07 (revised)

====================================================================



Basic Command Parameter Syntax:



  XXCOPY   source   destination    (simplified syntax)



  In its simplest form, XXCOPY takes two parameters,



      from WHERE to WHERE



  This very intuitive command syntax has its root in the COPY command

  introduced in 1981 as a PC-DOS (MS-DOS) built-in command.



  The first parameter is the source specifier and the second one is

  the destination specifier.  These two parameters must be in this

  order.  As common to the COPY and XCOPY command syntax, the

  destination specifier can be omitted.  Then, by default, the

  current directory in the current drive becomes the destination.



  XXCOPY   source  [ destination ]



  By convention, an optional parameter is denoted in the syntax

  definition with a pair of square-brackets surrounding it.

  In addition, you may add command switches that starts with a

  slash (see below).





The Command Line Delimiter:



  XXCOPY   source  [ destination ]  [ switches... ]



  These up to three (or more) parts must be separated by at least one

  blank (usually the space character but a tab may be used).  The role

  of the blank character as a separator (which is called "delimiter")

  in the command line is very important.  XXCOPY relies on the

  separating blank characters to know where the end of the source

  specifier and where is the beginning of the destination specifier.

  For this reason, if you have a source specifier (such as "My Documents")

  which has a space inside, you must enclose the whole source specifier

  by double quotes.



     Example:



       XXCOPY  "C:\My Documents\"



  If you omit the double quotes, like the following line,



       XXCOPY  C:\My Documents



  XXCOPY would interpret "C:\My" as the source specifier and "Documents"

  as the destination (If you have another item which you really meant

  as your destination, it would be ignored as a third and useless item).

  It does not hurt to surround the source (or destination) specifier by

  double quotes.





Full Command Parameter Syntax:



  XXCOPY   source  [ destination ]  [ switches... ]



  All switches start with a slash (/) character whereas the source

  and the destination specifiers do not have the slash(/) prefix.

  The source and the destination specifiers must be separated from

  other items in the command line by at least one blank (space or tab)

  character.  On the other hand, you may omit blank characters between

  switches in order to minimize the total length of the command line.



  Example:



     XXCOPY  C:\mydir\   D:\yourdir\   /S/H



     Here, "C:\mydir\"  is the source specifier and "D:\yourdir\" is

     the destination specifier.  They do not start with a slash (/).

     It has two (/S and /H) switches.



  Note that the positions of the switches need not be at the end

  of the command line.  Switches may begin even before the source

  specifier.  The following command line is equivalent to the one

  shown above.

  

      XXCOPY /S  C:\mydir\  /H  D:\yourdir\

  

  The order of the switches is not generally important except when

  a conflicting switches are specified, the rightmost switch will

  prevail.  More rules for special cases are discussed at the end

  of this article.  For a complete syntax and semantics for the

  source specifier, see XXTB #04.



  Once you learn this simple rule, it is quite easy to understand a

  long XXCOPY command line.





XXCOPY switches:



  A command switch (we call it just switch most often) is any command

  paremeter that is neither the source specifier (referred to as

  "source" above) nor the destination specifier (referred to as

  "destination" above).  A switch instructs XXCOPY the details of

  the operation which deviates the default behavior.  As a matter of

  fact, without the switches, XXCOPY is only as boring as the standard

  COPY command.



  For example,



      XXCOPY c:\mydir\  d:\yourdir\



  This line copies the files from one directory to another.  Since

  the default behavior is not to include hidden or system files, and

  not to include subdirectories, this operation will copy just a handful

  of regular files.  If the destination already has some of the files

  you will be greeted by a prompt asking whether you want to overwrite

  the file or not.  Moreover, if the existing file has the read-only

  attribute (i.e., write-protected), you are out of luck.



  The rich set of command switches set XXCOPY apart from other file

  management tools.  Being a command line program, XXCOPY is not

  easy to use.  You have no choice but to become familiar with the

  very large collection of switches (over 175 switches and growing),

  if you want to harness the power of XXCOPY.  The good news is that

  you need not learn all.



  Syntactically, all of XXCOPY's command switches starts with a slash

  ( /  some people call it forward-slash).  To keep the command line

  somewhat more manageable, XXCOPY allows you to connect one command

  switch with the next without any delimiting character (typically

  a space).  With just one exception (XXTB #24), an item that starts

  with a slash is a command switch.



  For more discussion of XXCOPY command switches and the detailed

  discussion of the source specifier, see the following



      for Command Parameter Reference                  XXTB #01

      for Command Reference Alphabetic Listing         XXTB #26

      for Command Reference Functional Classification  XXTB #27

      for The Wild-Wild-Source Specifier               XXTB #28



 = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =





Source Specifier (XCOPY-compatible standard):



  XXCOPY's first argument (without regard to command switches) is

  the source specifier.  The source specifier is usually a path

  specifier for the source.  But, for Microsoft's XCOPY (and also for

  our XXCOPY), the source specifier may contain the directory and

  an optional file pattern specification whose subtleties are not

  fully appreciated by many XXCOPY users.



  The XCOPY-compatible source specifier has three parts:



     [ volume_spec ] [ directory ] [ file_pattern ]





  Example (the destination specifier is omitted here):



     XXCOPY    c:\mydir\*.doc

     XXCOPY    \\myserver\drivec\config.sys





  Here, the three parts in the XCOPY-compatible source specifier

  are quite obvious.  The second example is with the UNC which is

  how you specify a remote drive (via a network).



    volume_spec



      In most cases, the volume spec is a drive letter followed by a

      colon (e.g., C: ).  But, it can be a universal naming convention

      (UNC) string for a volume in a network (e.g., \\myserver\drivec ).

      If you omit volume_spec, the current drive is assumed.



    directory



      The name of the source directory.  When the XXCOPY command

      contains the subdirectory switch (/S and/or /E), the directory

      specifier denotes the starting directory where the source

      files and subdirectories are located.  The XCOPY-comatible

      directory part does not contain a wildcard character.  The

      more advanced "Wild-wild-source" feature in XXCOPY accepts

      wildcards.  For example,



          XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\?cache*\*\*.jpg  \dst\



      A separate article, XXTB #28 gives you the full detail.



    pattern



      The last part within the source specifier denotes the pattern

      matching string which may contain wildcard characters (* or ?).

      It matches only the last components within a full filename.





Destination Specifier:



  Just to make the discussion of XXCOPY's command parameter syntax

  complete, let us go over the subject of the remajing item, the

  destination specifier.  Fortunately the rules for this are not

  complicated.  The destination specifier has two parts:



     [ volume_spec ] [ dest_dir ]



    volume_spec



      As for the source specifier case, the destination may contain

      a volume specifier (e.g.,  C: ).  If it is omitted, the volume

      of the current directory will be used.



    dest_dir



      The name of the destination directory.  Here, the destination

      must be a directory name (which may or may not yet exist

      in the destination volume).  Unlike the original COPY command,

      you are not allowed to specify wildcard characters in the

      destination specifier which would be conveniently used to

      perform renaming action while copying the files.



      XXCOPY does not rename files while they are copied. therefore,

      no wildcard characters have no place in dest_dir.



  Unlike the source specifier counterpart, the destination specifier

  consists of only two parts both of which are optional.  When you

  omit both of them, then the command line would have no explicit

  argument as the destination specifier.  Don't worry, the current

  directory will be used as the default destination directory.  Or,

  you may just type "." which denotes the current directory explicitly.





The Base Directory:



  When a directory (and the subdirectories) is copied from the

  source to the destination, the first level of the source directory

  will correspond to the first level of the destination directory

  that is specified as the destination.  We call the first level in

  the source directory the "Base Directory".  Since the destination's

  first level directory is named by the destination specifier that

  you provide in the command line, the directory name in the destination

  is not always the same.



  For example, when you run the following command,



     XXCOPY  c:\mypath\mysrcdir\   d:\your\dstdir\  /S



  Any part of the Base Directory is not necessarily become a part

  of the destination directory.  This is true even the last name

  (mysrcdir) does not automatically appear in the destination side.

  The end result will be like this.



     c:\mypath\mysrcdir\file1.doc   --> d:\your\dstdir\file1.doc

     c:\mypath\mysrcdir\sub1\a.doc  --> d:\your\dstdir\sub1\a.doc



  Here, the Base Directory is c:\mypath\mysrcdir\.  The concept of

  the Base Directory is even more important in the treatment of the

  exclusion parameter.  When an exclusion item is given as a relative

  path, the directory path specified is relative to the Base Directory.



  For example, with the same directory



     XXCOPY  c:\mypath\mysrcdir\   d:\your\dstdir\  /S /Xtemp*\



  The exclusion switch's parameter (temp*\) is understood to be

  relative to the Base Directory which is in this case:



     c:\mypath\mysrcdir\temp*\



  Of course, you may always use an absolute path for the /X parameter:



     XXCOPY c:\mypath\mysrcdir\ \dst\ /S /Xc:\mypath\mysrcdir\temp*\



  A more rigorous definition of Base Directory will be given in the

  discussion of the source directory which contain wildcards

  (Wild-Wild-Source)  XXTB #28.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY
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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #26




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Command Reference Alphabetic Listing

Date:    2003-05-01  Revised for ver 2.84.2

====================================================================



This article lists XXCOPY's command switches in alphabetic order.

For a functional classification of the command switch, see XXTB #27.





         /?  Shows a summary of the switches on one page.

     ... /?  Shows related switches when entered with other switches.



         /0  Disables DATMAN One-pass copy (not recommended, but allowed).

         /1  DATMAN One-pass copy (when copying from DATMAN tape, default).



         /A  Same as /ATA. Copies files with the archive attribute set.

             Doesn't change the attribute.



        /A0  Ignores the archive attribute bit and does not change it.



        /AA  Sets the src file archive bit (without actually copying).



        /AC  Copies specified files irrespective of the archive attribute.

             Turns off the archive attribute after XXCOPY is done.



  /AN<mask>  Sets a new value to file attribute bits (replace the value).

             The <mask> value is a combination of letters, ASHR.



  /AR<mask>  Resets file attribute bits (clears specified bits).



  /AS<mask>  Sets file attribute bits (sets specified bits).



      Note:  The <mask> value for /AR and /AS specifies attributes (AHSR)

             whose bits are either reset or set respectively to the existing

             file attributes. Unspecified attributes bits are kept unchanged.



  /AT<mask>  Selects files by the attribute bits (AHSR).

             You may use two or more /AT<mask> switches to specify multiple

             attributes required.  E.g., /ATA/ATH qualifies files with both

             the A(rchive) bit and the H(idden) bits.

             Or, you may use one /AT<mask> switch with multiple letters to

             select alternative attribute bits to select files.  E.g.,

             /ATAH qualifies a file which has either A-bit, H-bit or both.



  /AX<mask>  Excludes files with the specified attribute bits (AHSR).

             You may use two or more /AX<mask> switches to specify

             attribute bits to exclude files for file operations.  E.g.,

             /AXA/AXH excludes files with A-bit, H-bit, or both.

             Or, you may use one /AX<mask> switch with multiple letters to

             exclude files with only the specified combination of attribute

             bits.  E.g., /AXAH excludes files with both A-bit and H-bit.



      Note:  The /AT<mask> and /AX<mask> switches have opposite conjugation

             rules (the effects of combining attribute bits --- AND and OR).



        /AZ  Clears the src file archive bit (without actually copying).



      Note:  The /AA, /AN, /AR, /AS and /AZ switches modify the file

             attributes without copying the files to the destination,

             whereas the /A, /AT and /AX switches select files by the file

             attributes for various operations (copy, list, remove, etc.).



        /B0  Undo any of /BI, /BB, /BN, /Bo, /BX, or /BZ switches.



        /BB  Backs up brand new files only (does not overwrite existing ones).



        /BE  Backs up exactly the same files(includes brand new files).



        /BI  Backs up incrementally, different (by time/size) files only.



        /BN  Backs up newer files only      (includes brand new files).



        /Bo  Backs up older files only      (includes brand new files).



        /BS  Selects exactly the same files (this is useful with /RS).



        /BU  Standard Backup switch (same as /r/i/bi/q/c/h/e/v/y).



        /BX  Backs up different-date files  (includes brand new files).



        /BZ  Same as /BZX.



       /BZE  Backs up equal-size  files  (includes brand new files).



       /BZS  Backs up smaller-size files (includes brand new files).



       /BZL  Backs up larger-size files  (includes brand new files).



       /BZX  Backs up different-size files  (includes brand new files).



    /BACKUP  Standard Backup without deleting any file (/CLONE without /ZY).

             A shortcut for the following combination: /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZE/oD0.



         /C  Continues copying even if errors occur (default).



        /C0  Disables the /C switch (terminates upon error).



        /CA  Enables all cache.  Same as /CA7 (default).

       /CA0  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = OFF

       /CA1  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = ON

       /CA2  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = OFF

       /CA3  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = ON

       /CA4  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = OFF

       /CA5  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = ON

       /CA6  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = OFF

       /CA7  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = ON



        /CL  Legacy switch, replaced by /CA



        /CB  Continues batch file if XXCOPY ended OK last time.



       /CBQ  Same as /CB except suppresses console output to end immediately.



       /CB0  Cancels the /CB and /CBQ switches.



        /CC  Warns a cyclic copy with a Y/N prompt.



       /CC0  Disallows cyclic copy (src includes the dst directory) (default).



       /CCY  Allows a cyclic copy by excluding the destination from the src.



        /CE  Same as /CBQ/EC (most useful in batch file with @echo off).



 /CF<fname>  Specifies a Command File which provides text as if it were typed

             at the positoin where the switch appeared in the command line.

             The Command File is a text file which may have multple lines.



        /CK  Checks remaining space before copy (default).



       /CK0  Disables the pre-check of remaining space before copy.



      /COPY  Selects the file copy action (default).



     /CLONE  Duplicates a directory (volume).  This switch is a shortcut for

             the following combination: /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY/ZE/oD0.



     /CR<n>  Sets the retry period (n seconds, default = 3) on failed copy.



         /D  Same as /DA.



        /D0  Cancels all file-date related (/D...) switches.



  /D:<date>  Same as /DA:<date>.



        /DA  Copies newer files and brand new files.



    /DA#<n>  Copies files that were changed on or after  <n> days ago.



      /DA:.  Copies files that were changed today or later (same as /DA#0).



 /DA:<date>  Copies files that were changed on or after the specified date.



        /DB  Copies older files and brand new files.



    /DB#<n>  Copies files that were changed on or before <n> days ago.



      /DB:.  Copies files that were changed yesterday or earlier.



 /DB:<date>  Copies files that were changed on or before the specified date.



 /DA:<time>  Same as /DA:<date> except an additional time value may be added.



 /DB:<time>  Same as /DB:<date> except an additional time value may be added.



             The <time> parameter starts with the <date> (as shown above)

             followed by 'T' or '@' and hh:mm:ss, hh:mm, or hh.



       e.g., 2002-10-25T15:25:30  (recommended as ISO 8601 std)

             31-10-2002@13:00   10-31-2002@13 (min and sec may be omitted)

             (/D0:<date> cannot be specified with the <time> value).



    /Do#<n>  Copies files that were changed on the day   <n> days ago.



      /Do:.  Copies files that were changed today only.



 /Do:<date>  Copies files that were changed on the specified date.



      Note:  A "brand new" file refers to a file which exists in the

             source directory but not in the destination directory

             (Micrososoft's Robocopy call it a "lonely file").



      Note:  With /DA#<val>, /DB#<val> and /DO#<val>, the parameter <val> will

             be treated as the number of Days unless it is appended with a

             one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S which stand for Days, Hours,

             Minutes, or Seconds, respectively).  When <val> is given in

             the number of days, the exact time is midnight of the day.



             e.g., /DA#0 denotes files made some time today after midnight.

                   /DO#2 means all day the day before yesterday.

                   /DA#30m selects files made within the last 30 minutes.



        /DS  Copies only the files whose filetime is exactly the same.



        /DX  Copies only the files whose filetime is different in any way.



      Note:  All filetime comparisons are affected by the fuzzy range (/FF).



             /DA:<val> and /DB:<val> work as a pair if both are specified.



             e.g., /DA:1997-01-01 /DB:1997-12-31  files made in 1997

                   /DA:1997-04-01 /DB:1997-04-30  files made in April 1997

                   /DB:1997-03-31 /DA:1997-05-01  exclude files made in April

                   /DA:1997-01-01 /DB:1997-01-01  try the shorter /Do:1997-01-01



             Since the US and European conventions are not reconcilable,

             we recommend the ISO 8601 standard (YYYY-MM-DD) with a 4-digit

             year value followed by month and day.  If all values have two

             digits only, it is interpreted according to the system setting.

             A file date must be between 1970-01-01 and 2069-12-31.



             A partial date specifier is accepted for /DA:, /DB: and /DO:

             where yyyy-mm and yyyy denote the month and year respectively.

             E.g., /DO:2000-2 is equivalent to /DA:2000-2-1 /DB:2000-2-29,

             and /DB:1999 to /DB:1999-12-31, and /DA:2000 to /DA:2000-1-1.



      Note:  /DA, /DB, /DX, /DS, /Do, /DA:<date> and /DB:<date> are mutually

             exclusive (except /DA:<date> and /DB:<date> work as a pair).



      Note:  /DA /DB and /DD, if date is omitted, are the same as /BN and /Bo

             except they can be combined with another /B switch (e.g., /BI).



      Note:  /DA, /DB, /DX and /DS compare source and destination files using

             both date and time whereas /DA:<date> and /DA#<n> use date only.



     /DEBUG  Shows the command parameters and prompts you to start.



    /DEBUGX  Shows the command parameters and exits.



     /DL<n>  Limits processing of directory nesting to n levels.

             /DL0 removes the limit.  /DL works only when /S or /E is set.



         /E  Copies directories and subdirectories, including empty ones.

             Same as /S /E.



        /EC  Echoes the entire command line (after macro processing).



        /ED  Preserves the directory even if it becomes empty.



       /ED0  Deletes empty directories (default).



     /ED<n>  Preserves n levels of empty directories.



      Note:  The /EDxx switches are in effect only with file/directory removal

             operations (/Z, /RC, /RS, /RD, /RX, and /CLONE cases).



        /ER  Emulates XCOPY's exit code (for ERRORLEVEL check in batch files).



 /EX<xlist>  Specifies a text file which contains a list of xspecs (see below).



         /F  Displays full source and destination file names while copying.



 /Fo<fname>  Displays full source and file names and also saves into a file.



        /FA  Uses the Last-Access timestamp for Filetime comparison.



        /FC  Uses the Creation timestamp for Filetime comparison.



        /FF  Fuzzy Filetime (same as /FF2S --- matches within 2 sec).



       /FF0  Fuzzy Filetime cancelled (adjustment value set to +/- 0).



   /FF<val>  Fuzzy Filetime, adjust ref time +/- <val> seconds.



  /FF+<val>  Fuzzy Filetime, adjust ref time by adding <val> seconds.



  /FF-<val>  Fuzzy Filetime, adjust ref time by subtracting <val> seconds.



      Note:  With /FF<val>, /FF+<val> and /FF-<val>, the parameter <val> will

             be treated as the number of seconds unless it is appended with a

             one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S which stand for Days, Hours,

             Minutes, or Seconds, respectively).

             e.g., /FF     treats file times within +/- 2 sec as the same.

                   /FF-1H  treats files older by up to 1 hour as the same.

                   /FF+2/FF-4 (you may choose asymmetric slack values).



      Note:  The /FF switch affects all filetime comparisons such as /CLONE,

             /BI, /BU, /BS, /BX, /BO, /BN, /DA, /DB, /DS, /DX, /TS, and /TD.



      Note:  The FAT (DOS/Win9x) file system has a 2-second granularity in

             file time whereas NTFS, Unix and other file systems use finer

             time stamps.  The /FF switch is useful for incremental backup

             between volumes of different file systems.



       /FM0  Cancels the /FM<items> parameter previously set.



 /FM<items>  Specifies the output line format for /L and or /Fo output.



             <items> is a string of one or more of the following letters

                     which selects the combination and the output order.



                D   file date

                T   file time

                Z   file size in bytes

                A   file attributes: A(rchive),H(idden),S(system),R(eadonly)

                S   short name (8.3)

                L   long name with full directory path



             Note: When S and L are both missing, L is used by default.



             Note: /L/FM<items> can be combined into a /L<items> switch.





        /FR  Legacy switch; replaced by /FF-2.



        /FT  Legacy switch; replaced by /FF+2.



        /FL  Filetime in Local time (default)



        /FU  Filetime in UTC (Universal Coordinated Time - same as GMT).



        /FW  Uses the Last-Write timestamp for Filetime comparison (default).

             Note: /FW, /FA and /FC are mutually exclusive choices.

             Note: /FL and /FU are mutually exclusive choices.



      /G<n>  Sets DATMAN N-Group (redundant) write. (<n> : 0 - 7).

             e.g., /G1 writes the same data twice on DATMAN tape.



         /H  Copies hidden and/or system files also.



        /H0  Excludes hidden and/or system files (default).



        /Ho  Copies hidden and/or system files only.



      /HELP  Shows the switches in detailed (print this output).



   /HELP /X  Shows Partial Help (switches starting with letter X).



     /HELPA  Shows the /HELP listing in alphabetical order.



     /HELPE  Lists the Exit codes (ERRORLEVEL values) returned by XXCOPY.



     /HOSTS  Displays the names of remote hosts accessed by XXCOPY.



         /I  If destination does not exist and copying more than one file,

             assumes that destination must be a directory (no prompting).

             Note: when the destination specifier ends with a backslash,

             it declares as a directory which implicitly sets the /I switch.



        /IA  Continues if destination is absent (terminates if exists).



  /IA<item>  Continues if the specified item (file/directory) is absent.



        /IP  Continues if destination is present (terminates if absent).



  /IP<item>  Continues if the specified item (file/directory) is present.



/ILD<label>  Continues if the destination volume label matches as specified.



/ILS<label>  Continues if the source volume label matches as specified.



  /IN<tmpl>  Includes an alternate filename template (tmpl).

             You may specify as many alternate filename patterns as you want.

             The template must be for the "Lastname" of the source specifier

             (no backslash in the template, but wildcard characters are OK).



   /INSTALL  Installs the XXCOPY software package on your computer.



   /INSTALL:<dir>   Installs XXCOPY in a user-specified directory.



         /J  Forces DATMAN catalog (journal) flush.



        /J0  Suppresses DATMAN's automatic catalog (journal) flush.



        /J1  Flushes DATMAN catalog when needed (default).



        /J2  Flushes DATMAN catalog unconditionally at the end.



         /K  Keeps the source attributes including read-only (same as /KS).



        /K0  Keeps the source attributes except read-only (default)



        /KD  Keeps the attributes of destination (overwritten) file.



        /KN  Sets the destination attributes to normal (only /A).



        /KS  Keeps the source attributes including the read-only bit.



         /L  Same as /LLZ which performs the list operation (no file copy).



  /L<items>  Customizes the format for List operation (no file copy).

             <items> is a string of one or more of the following letters

                     which selects the combination and the output order.



                D   file date

                T   file time

                Z   file size in bytes

                A   file attributes: A(rchive),H(idden),S(system),R(eadonly).

                S   short name (8.3)

                L   long name with full directory path



             Note: When S and L are both missing, L is used by default.



   /LICENSE  Displays the XXCOPY license status on your computer.



     /LTREE  Lists directory tree (without copy or making directories).

             Note: with /LTREE, the /DA/DB/DO parameters apply to dir time.



         /M  Copies only files with the archive attribute set.

             Turns off the archive attribute.



   /MD<dir>  Makes directory before other actions (even with /L)

             Tip: make a date-encoded directory with a macro reference.

                  e.g.,  /MDc:\Bkup/$DATE$ (even good for log files).



         /N  Uses the short (8.3) name for name matching, and creation.



        /NP  Uses precise name matching (ignores match in alias).



        /N0  Disables /N and /NP (default, uses longname when applicable).



       /NC0  Disables /NCL, /NCU, or /NCX (accepts letters of both cases).



       /NCL  Uses Lowercase-only name when a new file is created.



       /NCU  Uses Uppercase-only name when a new file is created.



       /NCX  Uses Uppercase-only name when a new short-name file is created.



        /ND  Uses the old (DOS) Wildcard treatments for filename matching.



        /NW  Uses the new (Win32) Wildcard treatments for filename matching.



        /NI  Becomes nice to other tasks by idling (1000 msec) between actions.



     /NI<n>  Same as /NI.  Specifies n msec as the idle time (0 to disable it).



        /NL  Renames longname to match the source (No copy operations).



        /NS  Renames shortname to match the source (No copy operations).



        /NX  Preserves the shortname when the file is copied.



       /NX0  Disables the /NX (shortname preservation) feature.



             Note: If src and dst are both local drive, the shortname will be

                   preserved (/NX) by default, but if either src or dst is

                   specified by a UNC (starts with \\), /NX0 is default.



        /o0  Cancels the /oN or /oA switch specified earlier.



 /oA<fname>  Appends to a logfile, reporting errors. (does not overwrite log).



 /oN<fname>  Outputs a new logfile, reporting errors (make a new log) file.



     /oD<n>  Deleted file list (by a /Z or /ZY switch).



     /oE<n>  Error summary with the system error code



     /oF<n>  File list (files which were successfully operated on).



     /oI<n>  Include-item (alternate file template) list. 



     /oP<n>  Parameter (command switch detailed) list.



     /oS<n>  Skipped-file list (with the reason why skipped).



     /oX<n>  Exclude-item list.



       The sufix value <n> for /oD /oE /oF /oI /oP /oS /oX works as follows: 

             0: No output

             1: Screen only

             2: Log file only

             3: Screen and Log file both



      Note:  It is advised that the log file created by /oA or /oN to be

             free from the names of successfully copied files that would

             overshadow relatively infrequent lines of error and warning.

             Instead, use the /Fo switch to create a separate file for a

             list of successfully copied files.    



         /P  Prompts you before creating each destination file.



        /PB  Shows Progress bar for the job (default file progress >= 1M).



     /PB<n>  Shows Progress bar for the job and another Progress bar for a

             single-file progress with file length greater than <n>, which is

             specified in bytes (or with a suffix, K, M or G) (default: 1M).



        /PC  Prompts you before creating new files.



       /PC0  Suppresses warning on file-creation.



        /PD  Prompts you before starting each directory with options for...

             Y (Yes), N (No), A (All), R (Remaining dirs), S (This & subdirs).



       /PD0  Suppresses the prompt before a destructive processing of directory.



        /PN  Prompts when on excessive failures on /NX operations.



       /PN0  Suppresses prompts on excessive failures of /NX operatoins.



        /Po  Prompts you before overwriting existing files (default).



       /Po0  Suppresses warning on file-overwrite (Legacy /Y).



        /PZ  Prompts you for confirmation of the dst (for /CLONE /Z /ZY).



       /PZ0  Suppresses prompts for directory confirmation on /CLONE /Z /ZY.



         /Q  Same as /Q1.  Does not display files which are skipped.



        /Q0  Displays all filenames.



        /Q1  Does not display files which are skipped.



        /Q2  Does not display directories which are excluded.



        /Q3  Does not display file and directory names while copying.



        /QF  Quits when the quota for the file count has been reached.



       /QBL  Quits before the byte count exceeds the limit (same as /QB).



       /QBT  Quits when the total byte count reaches the trigger point.



       /QSL  Quits before the space dips below the limit (same as /QS).



       /QST  Quits when the remaining space reaches the trigger point.



         /R  Allows overwrite/delete of read-only files.



        /R0  Cancels overwrite/delete of read-only files.



        /RC  Removes files in src after a successful copy (equivalent to move).



       /RCP  Prompts on source-file-remove after successful copy (default).



       /RCY  Suppresses prompts after a successful source-file-remove.



        /RD  Removes files in dst which qualify to be overwritten (no copying).



     /RMDIR  Removes a directory.  Same as /RS/S/H/R/PD0/ED0.



        /RS  Removes files in src which qualify (no copying).



        /RX  Removes files in dst which are absent in src (no copying).



      Note:  Whereas /Y and /-Y modify prompting for the copy action

             of /RC (Remove after Copy) switch, the suffix 'P' or 'Y' controls

             the prompt for the file remove action after copy.



      Note:  The suffix 'P' or 'Y' can also be added to any of /RS, /RD,

             or /RX switches which will insert or suppress respective prompt.

             For these remove-without-copy switches, the /Y and /-Y switches

             also control the prompt for the remove action.



      Note:  /RX can be thought of a /Z operation without copying files.";

             In general, the /RS/BB combination (by swapping src and dst)";

             provides more file-selection controls than the /RX switch.";



      Note:  /PD and /PD0 control additional prompt on each directory.



         /S  Copies directories and subdirectories except empty ones.



        /SC  Same as /SC3 (copies security info).



       /SC0  Cancels the /SC or /SF switch (no security info copied).



       /SC1  Copies security info (Permissions only) when a file is copied.



       /SC2  Copies security info (Auditing only)    when a file is copied.



       /SC3  Copies security info (both Perm, Audit) when a file is copied.



        /SF  Same as /SF3 (fixes up security info)



       /SF0  Cancels the /SC or /SF switch (equivalent to /SC0).



       /SF1  Fixes up security info (Permissions only) (no file copy).



       /SF2  Fixes up security info (Auditing only)    (no file copy).



       /SF3  Fixes up security info (both Perm, Audit) (no file copy).



      Note:  /SC and /SF work only when src and dst are both NTFS.



        /SG  Same as /SGN (see variations in handling duplicates below).



       /SGF  Gathers files into one-level directory (unsorted First file 1st).



       /SGN  Gathers files into one-level directory (sorted, Newest file 1st).



       /SGo  Gathers files into one-level directory (sorted, Oldest file 1st).



      /SGFo  Gathers files into one-level directory (First  only).



      /SGNo  Gathers files into one-level directory (Newest only).



      /SGoo  Gathers files into one-level directory (Oldest only).



       /SG0  Cancels file-gather switches (/SG...).



        /SL  Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Left   (see below).



        /SR  Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Right  (see below).



        /SX  Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Middle (see below).



       /SLR  Rebuilds flattened directory (path to the left).



       /SRR  Rebuilds flattened directory (path to the right).



       /SXR  Rebuilds flattened directory (path in the middle).



      /S<d>  Sets the directory delimiter character for /SL, /SX and /SR,

             where <d> is any legal non-alphabetic, non-blank character.

             The default delimiter is back-apostrophe (`).

             /SL, /SX, and /SR are the same as /S except the output files

             will be saved as a flat directory without adding levels of

             subdirectories.  The source subdirectory name will become a

             part of the target filename.  /SL and /SR add the subdir name

             to the left or right of the name respectively.

             /SX inserts the subdirectory name in the middle.



        /SP  Spans the copy job over multiple destination (new volume).



/SZ:<n>-<m> Copies a file whose size is between n bytes and m bytes



   /SZ:<n>-  Copies a file whose size is equal to or greater than n bytes



   /SZ:-<m>  Copies a file whose size is equal to or less than m bytes



    /SZ:<n>  Copies a file whose size is exactly n bytes



/SZ!<n>-<m>  Copies a file whose size is NOT between n bytes and m bytes



   /SZ!<n>-  Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to or greater than n bytes



   /SZ!-<m>  Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to or less than m bytes



    /SZ!<n>  Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to n bytes



      /SZ:-  Disables size-based selection (/SZ!- also works).



      Note:  The size values <n> and <m> are entered in bytes unless appended

             with a suffix letter (K, M, or G which stand for metric kilo

             (x1000), mega (x1000000), or giga (x1000000000), respectively).



     /SZ<n>  Legacy switch; replaced by /TR<n>.



         /T  Creates directory structure, but does not copy files.  It copies

             all directories including empty ones (implicitly sets /E).



       /TTA  Touches (modifies) timestamp of Last Access of src.



      /TTA0  Preserves timestamp of Last Access of src (default).



       /TCA  Copies the timestamp of Last Access fm src to dst.



      /TCA0  Uses current time for dst Last Access (default).



       /TCC  Copies the timestamp of Create Time fm src to dst.



      /TCC0  Uses current time for dst Create time (default).



       /TCW  Copies the Last Write time fm src to dst (default).



      /TCW0  Uses current time for dst Last Write time.



     /TD+<n> Adds an offset to the time of the destination file.



     /TD-<n> Subtracts an offset time from the dst file for comparison.



     /TS+<n> Adds an offset to the time of source (and the copied ) file.



     /TS-<n> Subtracts an offset time from source (and the copied) file.



            The offset value <n> is treated as the number of Hours

            unless it is appended with a one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S

            which stand for Days, Hours, Minutes, or Seconds respectively).



       /TM0  Cancels the time offset in days set by /TM+ or /TM-.



    /TM+<n>  Adds an offset (Dy) to the current time of macro reference.



    /TM-<n>  Subtracts an offset (Dy) to the current time of macro reference.



      Note:  The offset value <n> for /TM+ and /TM- is specified in days

             unless it is appended with a one-letter suffix (D, H, M, or S

             which stand for Days, Hours, Minutes, or Seconds respectively).



     /TR<n>  Truncates the new file to (copies the first) n bytes.



      Note:  The /TR<n> switch replaces the legacy /SZ<n> switch.



         /U  Updates the files that already exist in destination.



 /UNINSTALL  Uninstalls XXCOPY from your computer.



         /V  Verifies after copy; default (same as /V1).



        /V0  Disables verify switch (canceling /V, /V1, or /V2).



        /V1  Verifies after copy (quick test --- file size match).



        /V2  Verifies after copy byte-by-byte check (DATMAN 2-pass).



        /VE  Displays only error cases of DATMAN 2-pass verify (/V2)



         /W  Same as /WS.



        /WD  Prompts with a warning for copying a non-directory src (default).



       /WD0  Suppresses warning for copying a non-directory source.



        /WE  Prompts you to press a key at the end of copying.



     /WE<n>  Waits at the end of the operation for a specified period (n sec).



        /WS  Prompts you to press a key at the start of copying.



     /WS<n>  Waits at the start of operation for a specified period (n sec).



        /WV  Prompts with a warning for an untested OS environment (default).



       /WV0  Suppresses warning for an untested OS environment.



   /X<xspec> Adds an exclusion specifier (xspec) (see below for exclusion).



     <xspec> Exclusion item for /X and the file contents specified by /EX.



             . The text file may contain an arbitrary number of xspecs which

               are separated by space, tab, or newline characters.



             . An xspec with embedded spaces must be surrounded by a pair

               of double-quote characters(").



             . An xspec cannot span from one line to another.



             . Two consecutive colons (::) or slashes (//) start a comment

               field which ends at the end of the line.



             . You may specify more than 1 exclusion file.  In such a

               case all of the exclusion files will be processed.



             Exclusion specifier (xspec) syntax (consists of up to 3 parts):



               syntax to exclude files:

        

                   [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ] [ ftemplate ]



               syntax to exclue directires:

               

                   [ dir_spec\ ] [ *\ ] [ dtemplate ]





               dir_spec   is always followed by a backslash (\).  It specifies

                          a directory (or directories with wildcard) which

                          are relative to the source directory unless it

                          starts with a \.  A wildcard specifier is allowed

                          only in the last element of dir_spec.



               *\         This part, if present, specifies that the exclusion

                          applies to all subdirectories under dir_spec.



               ftemplate  File_template, must not contain backslash (\).

                          It may contain wildcard characters (* and/or ?).



               dtemplate  Directory_template, the template must be terminated

                          by one of the following four endings (three types)



                            dirname\*\*   full directory

                            dirname\      full directory (same as dirname\*\*)

                            dirname\*     partial directory, files only

                            dirname\?\*   partial directory, subdirs only



                          The dirname part may have wildcards (* and/or ?).



             Any of the three parts can be omitted.

             There are 11 classes in xspecs as follows.



                                D dir_spec\ftmpl       H dir_spec\*\ftmpl

               A dir_spec\*     E dir_spec\dtmpl\*     I dir_spec\*\dtmpl\*

               B dir_spec\?\*   F dir_spec\dtmpl\?\*   J dir_spec\*\dtmpl\?\*

               C dir_spec\*\*   G dir_spec\dtmpl\*\*   K dir_spec\*\dtmpl\*\*



             If dir_spec is omitted, the file_template applies to all subdirs.

             XXCOPY optimizes the exclusion parameter by eliminating

             some redundant specifiers.

             Use "/W/oX" with xspec to test the syntax.



         /Y  Overwrites existing files without prompt (same as /Po0) (see /BB).



        /-Y  Prompts you before overwriting existing files (same as /Po).



        /Y0  Same as above (also /Po or /-Y).



        /YY  Suppresses ALL prompts unconditionally (good in a batch script).



         /Z  Deletes extra files or subdirectories in destination.



        /ZY  Same as /Z except there is no confirmation prompt.



        /ZE  Disables the use of all Environment Variables for XXCOPY.



        /ZS  Disables the sign-on message and statistics output.



        /ZX  Disables the use of the Environment Variable XXCOPYX.



       /ZX0  Enables the XXCOPYX settings.  Good for /CLONE and /RMDIR.

             The shortcut /CLONE and /RMDIR contain /ZE as a component.

             e.g., /CLONE/ZX0 allows the use of XXCOPYX settings.



    /$xxxx$  Predefined macros for current date and time which may appear

             anywhere in the command argument and other XXCOPY parameters.

             Examples below are for the current time, Dec 25, 2002 13:15:30.



    /$DATE$  Expands to month and date (equivalent to /$MMDD$) --> "1225".



    /$TIME$  Expands to hour and minutes (equiv. /$HHNN$) --> "1315".



  /$YYMMDD$  Expands to 2-digit year month day --> "021225".



 /$YYYY-MM$  Expands to 4-digit year month --> "2002-12".



  /$HHNNSS$  Expands to hour minutes second --> "131530".



  /$MON-DD$  Expands to month day --> "DEC-25".



     /$WWW$  Expands to day of the week --> "WED".



       /$W$  Expands to ordinal number of day of the week --> "3".



/$II-IWK-K$  Expands to the ISO 8601 year-week --> "02-W52-3".



    /$HOST$  Expands to the name of the host (current) computer





             Punctuation with ( . , - _ ' ! # % & @ ~ { } ` T ) may be used.





    /%xxxx%  Environment variable (E-Var) reference in command files

             (/CF and /EX).  Like the macro reference counterpart,

             the string value which correspoinds to an E-Var can be

             brought in the command line text using the /%xxxx% syntax.

             Note that this syntax should be used only inside the

             external file text for XXCOPY (/CF and /EX) which cannot

             be processed by the OS's command processor.  That is, in

             the regular command line, the E-Var reference is already

             supported (without a leading slash as the prefix).

             



===============================================================================



Summary   XXCOPY switches that check two directories:      -------

                                                          /  src  \

     Files are classified into four groups;               |    ---+---

    ---------------------------------------------         | A / B |   \

     A    files in src which do not exist in dst          |   |   |   |

     B    files in src which also   exist in dst          \   | C / D |

     C    files in dst which also   exist in src           ---+---    |

     D    files in dst which do not exist in src              \  dst  /

                                                               -------

 /BB   all files in A       (none in B)

 /BI   all files in A plus  files in B that are different in filetime or size

 /BX   all files in A plus  files in B that are different in filetime

 /BZX  all files in A plus  files in B that are different in size

 /BZL  all files in A plus  files in B that are larger

 /BZS  all files in A plus  files in B that are smaller

 /BZE  all files in A plus  files in B that are the same size

 /BN   all files in A plus  files in B that have newer filetime

 /Bo   all files in A plus  files in B that have older filetime

 /BE   all files in A plus  files in B that have exactly the same time and size

 /BS       (none in A)      files in B that have exactly the same time and size

 /U        (none in A)  all files in B (subject to other switches)

 /U/BI     (none in A)      files in B that are different in filetime or size



 Note:  all the variations in the backup switches (/Bx) include the files in A

        with the exception of /BS to be consistent with the spirit of BACKUP.

        As shown in the example (/U/BI), adding /U eliminates the files in A.



 /RS    files in A and/or B that satisfy other specified switches (for remove).

 /RC    same as /RS (for remove-after-copy).

 /RD        (none in D)     files in C that would be overwritten (for remove).

 /RX                    all files in D (for remove).



 Note:  /BS for copy usually accomplishes nothing but is useful as /RS/BS.






© Copyright 2003
Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY
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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #27




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Command Reference Functional Classification

Date:    2003-05-01  Revised for ver 2.84.2

====================================================================



Introduction:



    This is the third technical bulletin featuring XXCOPY's switches.

    With nearly 200 distinct command switches (and growing), a mere

    alphabetical listing hardly helps new users who are looking for

    a particular functionality in XXCOPY.  The more power that is

    added with each new switch seems to be offset by the extra burden

    in locating the needed feature, thus possibly making the program

    harder to use.  It is this irony that prompted me to try it again.



    The emphasis in this article is not the details, but the

    relationships of one another.  The bigger picture in this article

    hopefully helps you retain what you read in here.  Therefore, the

    description of each switch is limited to a terse single-line

    format.  For a more complete description, you should look up the

    alphabetic listing XXTB #26.





Taxonomy of XXCOPY command line components



    The XXCOPY command switches can be grouped into several large

    groups.  They are further divided into sub-categories by the

    nature of the action they perform.  The following table should

    serve you as a quick reference card.





      Group                                Examples

  ------------------------------------------------------------------------



   1. Action selectors



      1.1        Copy (default)            /COPY

      1.2        Move (copy-and-delete)    /RC

      1.3        Remove                    /RS  /RD  /RX   /RMDIR

      1.4        Modify-Attributes         /AA  /AZ  /ANxx /ARxx /ASxx

      1.5        SFN/LFN adjustment        /NL  /NS

      1.6        Installation and license  /INSTALL  /LICENSE

     (1.7)      (List/Find                 /L  )        see 3.1



   2. File Selectors



      2.1        Source Specifier (not a switch)



          2.1.1     Volume

          2.1.2     Base Directory

          2.1.3     Directory template with wildcards

          2.1.4     Filename  template with wildcards



      2.2        By the characteristics of the source file



          2.2.1     by Alternate Filename  /IN  (name pattern)

          2.2.2     by Exclusion           /X   (dir/name patterns) /EX

          2.2.3     by File Date           /DA: /DA# /DB: /DB# /Do:

          2.2.4     by File Size           /SZ: /SZ!

          2.2.5     by File Attributes     /H   /A   /M  /AT /AX



      2.3        By comparison with the file in destination



          2.3.1     by Presence/Absence    /BB  /U

          2.3.2     by File Date           /BN  /Bo  /BX  /DA /DB /DS /DX

          2.3.3     by File Size           /BZE /BZS /BZL /BLX

          2.3.4     by Combination         /BI  /BE  /BS  /BU  /CLONE



   3. Action Modifiers



      3.1   Console Output                 /EC /ZS /Q  /F  /L

      3.2   Screen and Log output control  /oDx/oEx/oFx/oIx/oPx/oSx/oXx

      3.3   Log File and List File         /oA /oN /Fo /FM

      3.4   Subdirectories                 /S  /E  /T  /ED /DL

      3.5   File Gathering                 /SG /SGF/SGN/SGo

      3.6   Directory Flattening           /SL /SR /SX /SLR/SRR/SXR

      3.7   File Name Treatments           /NX /NX0/N  /NP /ND /NW

      3.8   File Name Case Control         /NC0/NCL/NCU/NCX

      3.9   File Time Treatments           /FA /FC /FL /FU /FW /FF

      3.10  Timestamp Control              /TTA/TCA/TCC/TCW

      3.11  Time Zone Adjustments          /TD /TS

      3.12  File Attributes                /AC /R  /K  /KD /KN /KS

      3.13  Limiting the Size in Copying   /TR

      3.14  File Removal                   /Z  /ZY /RC /RS /RD /RX

      3.15  Quota on File Operation        /QF /QBL/QBT/QSL/QST

      3.16  Verify After Copy              /V  /V0 /V1 /V2 /VE

      3.17  Cyclic Copy Handling           /CC /CC0 /CCY

      3.18  Security Information           /SC /SF

      3.19  Checking Remaining Space       /CK /CK0

      3.20  Prompt Control                 /YY/I/W/WS/WE/P/PC/PN/Po/Y/PD/PZ/WD/WV/ZY/RxY/CCY

      3.21  Progress Bar                   /PB

      3.22  List Tree                      /LTREE

      3.23  Error Handling                 /C  /CB /CBQ/CR /CE

      3.24  Check Condition                    /IA /IP /ILS /ILD

      3.25  Debug and Test                 /DEBUG /DEBUGX

      3.26  Cache Control                  /CA

      3.27  Miscellaneous                  /ER /NI /SP /MD

      3.28  Help                           /?  /HELP /HELPA /HELPE

      3.29  DATMAN-Specific Features       /J  /0 /1 /G 



   4  Command Entries

   

      4.1   Environment Variables          XXCOPY  XXCOPYX  COPYCMD

      4.2   Environment Variable Control   /ZE /ZX /ZX0

      4.3   Command File                   /CF

      4.4   Macro Reference                /$xxxx$

      4.5   Environment Variable           /%xxxx%

      4.6   Offset for Macro Time Values   /TM0/TM+/TM-







  ------------------------------------------------------------------------





Notation:



    In this article, minor variations which are designated by

    additional suffix letters are collectively denoted by one or

    more lowercase x (such as Lxxx).  Literal character X in the

    command switch is shown in uppercase X.



    With only a few rare exceptions, XXCOPY's command switches

    are case-insensitive.  In order to help you distinguish the

    letter O (Old) from the digit 0 (zero), the lowercase o is

    used in this article for the switch alphabet which is more

    distinct than the uppercase counterpart in most fonts.





=================================================================





1. Action Selector Group:



      Once upon a time, XXCOPY was just a file copy utility.

      Now, it is a multi-function file management tool.  The

      switches in this group specify what is the primary goal

      of the current job.



   1.1   Copy (default)



         /COPY     Copies files/directories (default).

                   This switch exists mostly for a figurative reason.

                   Since it is the default mode of operation, most

                   users do not type this switch.  Even our command

                   line examples do not show this.



   1.2   Move (copy-and-delete)



         /RCx      This is a variation of the Remove command group.

                   This function performs a regular copy operation

                   which is followed by a file remove operation if

                   the copying step is successful.  The net effect

                   of this operation is equivalent of moving the

                   file from the source to the destination.



   1.3   Remove



                   This group has three variations of file remove

                   operation depending on the location of the files.



         /RSx      Removes files/directories from the source.

         /RDx      Removes files which would be overwritten.

         /RXx      Removes files that are not in the source.

         /RMDIR    Similar to the DELTREE utility. Same as /RS/S/H/R/PD0.



   1.4   Modify-Attributes



         /AA       Sets the Archive bit.

         /AZ       Clears the Archive bit.

         /ANxxx    Sets the whole file attributes with a new value.

         /ASxxx    Sets the selected file attribute bits.

         /ARxxx    Resets the selected file attribute bits.



   1.5   SFN/LFN adjustment



         /NL       Attaches a long filename to the files in destination.

         /NS       Attaches a short filename to the file in destination.



   1.6   Installation and license



         /INSTALL    Installs XXCOPY on a new computer (also for update).

         /UNINSTALL  Uninstalls XXCOPY from a computer.

         /LICENSE    Displays the license status.

         /HOSTS      Displays the list of remote hosts accessed by XXCOPY.



  (1.7)  List/Find



                   The List/Find function is implemented as an Action

                   modifier to any operation in the Action Selector group.

                   When an /L switch is added to the command line,

                   the action will not be carried out except that the

                   result of file selection process will be shown using

                   the customized output format.  This function does not

                   really belong here, but to the action modifiers

                   (Section 3.1).  See XXTB #26 for detail.



           /L<items>     Lists the file without any file action.





2. File Selector Group:



   The switches in this group determines what files are to be operated

   upon by the current action specified by the parameter in the

   Action Selector Group.



   The source specifier (2.1) and the /IN switch collectively determine

   the set of files to be included in the operation.  You may specify

   as many /IN switches for more patterns as you like.



   The remaining switches in the group all work in the principle of

   elimination.  When you specify more such switches, the more files

   get eliminated from the set.  You can consider each switch in this

   category as a filter.  XXCOPY offers a very wide range of filtering

   mechanism to narrow down the choice for a particular operation.



   2.1   Source Specifier (not a switch)



             [ volume ] [ base_dir ] [ dir_pattern ] [ file_pattern ]



      2.1.1  Volume              Usually a drive letter (UNC allowed)

      2.1.2  Base Directory      The constant part without wildcard

      2.1.3  Directory Template  Wildcards (* and ?), multiple-level

      2.1.4  Filename  Template  Wildcards (* and ?), filename pattern



             This parameter in conjunction with the /IN switch

             determines the entire inclusive scope of the directories

             and files that will be subject to the file operation.



             See XXTB #28 for detail.



   2.2   By the characteristics of the source file



           The switches in this group are concerned with the

           characteristics of the files in the source (as opposed

           to the switches in Group 2.3 which compare between the

           files in the source and those in the destination).



      2.2.1  by Alternate Filename



             /IN<tmpl>   Includes an alternate filename template (tmpl).



             This is the only one in the entire XXCOPY command switch

             whose effect is applied inclusively.  That is, if you add

             another /IN switch, it will add new set of files in addition

             to the previous set of files for the operation.



      2.2.2  by Exclusion



             /X<xspec>   Adds an exclusion specifier (xspec).

             /EX<list>   Specifies a text file with a list of xspecs.



             See XXTB #05 for detail.



      2.2.3  by File Date



             The various /DAx switches are mutually exclusive one another.

             The various /DBx switches are also mutually exclusive one another.

             You may specify a /DAx and a /DBx at the same time which will

             work together to bracket a range in time line to select files.

             The /Do switch can be considered as a combination of /DAx and /DBx

             with the same date specifier which determine a single file date

             which qualifies the files for operation.



             /D:<date>   Same as /DA:<date>.

             /DA#<n>     Copies files that were changed on or after n days ago.

             /DA:.       Copies files that were changed today or later.

             /DA:<date>  Copies files that were changed on or after the specified date.

             /DA:<time>  Copies files that were changed on or after the date and time.

             /DB#<n>     Copies files that were changed on or before n days ago.

             /DB:.       Copies files that were changed yesterday or earlier.

             /DB:<date>  Copies files that were changed on or before the specified date.

             /DB:<time>  Copies files that were changed on or before the date and time.

             /Do#<n>     Copies files that were changed on the day of n days ago.

             /Do:.       Copies files that were changed today only.

             /Do:<date>  Copies files that were changed on the specified date.



      2.2.4  by File Size



             The file size qualifier switches sets the low limit or high

             limit or both to select files.  Only the last such switch will

             prevail if multiple switches from this group are specified.



             /SZ:<n>-<m> Copies a file whose size is between n bytes and m bytes.

             /SZ:<n>-    Copies a file whose size is equal to or greater than n bytes.

             /SZ:-<m>    Copies a file whose size is equal to or less than m bytes.

             /SZ:<n>     Copies a file whose size is exactly n bytes.

             /SZ!<n>-<m> Copies a file whose size is NOT between n bytes and m bytes.

             /SZ!<n>-    Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to or greater than n bytes.

             /SZ!-<m>    Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to or less than m bytes.

             /SZ!<n>     Copies a file whose size is NOT equal to n bytes.

             /SZ:-       Disables size-based selection (/SZ!- also works).



      2.2.5  by File Attributes



             The /ATxxxx and /AXxxxx switches let you specify any

             combination of file selection using the file attributes

             as the key.  The popular switches, /H and /A are

             two most common ones.



             /H         Copies hidden and/or system files also.

             /H0        Excludes hidden and/or system files (default).  (same as /AXH/AXS)

             /Ho        Copies hidden and/or system files only.         (same as /ATHS)

             /A         Copies only files with the archive attribute set.    (same as /ATA)

             /M         Copies only files with the archive attribute set.    (similar to /ATA)

             /AT<mask>  Selects files by the attribute bits (AHSR).

             /AX<mask>  Excludes files with the specified attribute bits (AHSR).

             /A0        Ignores the archive attribute bit and does not change it.





   2.3   By comparison with the file in destination



           The switches in this group select files based on the

           comparison between the files in the source and those in

           the destination.  They are often used for periodic backup

           and directory synchronization purposes. These switches

           were originally created as variations of directory backup.

           They are also convenient for selecting files for deletion.



      2.3.1  by Presence/Absence



             The /BB and /U switches are the two switches which select

             files by the pure presence or absence as the criteria.

             Other switches in the this group (Group 2.3) are also

             affected by the file in the destination, but for a

             particular characteristics for comparison's sake.



             /BB  Selects files that are present in source but not in destination.

             /U   Selects files that are present in both source and destination.



      2.3.2  by File Date



             The files in the source and in the destination are

             compared by their date (the Last-written date by

             default --- see /FC for more info).



             /BN  Backs up newer files only      (includes brand new files).

             /Bo  Backs up older files only      (includes brand new files).

             /BX  Backs up different-date files  (includes brand new files).

             /D   Same as /DA.

             /DA  Copies newer files and brand new files.

             /DB  Copies older files and brand new files.

             /DS  Copies same date/time files only.

             /DX  Copies different-date files only.



             /DA and /BN are basically the same.  Similarly,

             /DB and /Bo are basically the same.  Why does XXCOPY

             provide the redundant sets of switches?  This is

             something to do with the mutual exclusivity of switches.

             The Backup-related switches (/Bxx) are mutually exclusive

             and cannot have two ways to run a backup operation.  For

             example, if you use /BZ (see below), you may not use the

             /BN switch at the same time (then you can use /DA).

             Similarly, when you use a /DA# switch, you cannot use

             the /DA switch (then, you can use /BN).



      2.3.5  by File Size



             You may use the relative file size as the file

             selection criteria.  The switches listed below are

             mutually exclusive.



             /BZ   Same as /BZX

             /BZE  Backs up equal-size  files  (includes brand new files).

             /BZS  Backs up smaller-size files (includes brand new files).

             /BZL  Backs up larger-size files  (includes brand new files).

             /BZX  Backs up different-size files  (includes brand new files).



      2.3.6  by Combination



             We advocate the use of the combination of file size

             and file time as the file selection criteria for

             incremental backup job (/BI).  We think this scheme is

             more reliable than the use of the Archive bit (which may

             be inadvertently altered by another application).



             /BI     Backs up incrementally, different (by time/size) files only.

             /BE     Selects exactly the same files and brand new files in src.

             /BS     Selects exactly the same files (this is useful with /RS).

             /BU     Standard Backup switch (same as /R/I/BI/Q/C/H/E/V/Y)

             /CLONE  Duplicates a directory (volume).  Same as /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY/ZE



3. Action Modifier Group:



   The switches that have been discussed above are very systematically

   designed.  Indeed, many of them are quite inevitable features for

   a complete file management tool such as XXCOPY.  On the other hand,

   the action modifiers listed in this group are not so systematic.

   They are a result of evolutionary process where we responded to user

   requests.  The nature of the switches in this broad group is that the

   presence of the switch alters the behavior of the XXCOPY operation

   one way or another.  Since the backward compatibility is important

   to long time users, the switch letter assignments are not optimum

   for mnemonic purposes at times.  The main reason why they are listed

   together in this group is that they are not part of the file-selection

   mechanism.



   Fortunately, the switches listed here are mostly optional and

   you can operate XXCOPY without the full knowledge of them.

   You may take time to digest the list over a long period of time,

   or you may simply forget most of these and come back later.



   Some of the parameters that follow the command switch are not

   always shown in this listing.  The alphabetic listing has full

   explanation of the parameters XXTB #26.





   3.1   Console Output



      /EC       Echoes the entire command line (after macro processing).

      /ZS       Disables the sign-on message and statistics output.

      /Q        Same as /Q1.  Does not display files which are skipped.

      /Q0       Displays all filenames.

      /Q1       Does not display files which are skipped.

      /Q2       Does not display directories which are excluded.

      /Q3       Does not display file and directory names while copying.

      /Q3       Does not display file and directory names while copying.

      /F        Displays full source and destination filenames while copying.

      /L<items> Lists the files which would be affected (no other actions).

                See 3.1x (/FM<items>) for specifications of items.

      /oFn      See the following section (also for /oDn/oEn/oIn/oPn/oSn/oXn).



   3.2  Screen and Log File output control



      /oDn    Deleted-file list (by a /Z or /ZY switch).

      /oEn    Error summary with the system error code.

      /oFn    File list (files that are successfully operated on).

      /oIn    Include-item list.

      /oPn    Parameter (command switch detailed list).

      /oSn    Skipped-file list (with the reason for skip).

      /oXn    Exclude-item list.



              The suffix (n) will have the following effects:

              0: no output

              1: Screen only

              2: Log file only

              3: Screen and Log file both  



   3.3  Log File and List File



      /oA<fname>  Appends to a logfile, reporting errors. (does not overwrite log).

      /oN<fname>  Outputs a new logfile, reporting errors (make a new log) file.

      /Fo<fname>  Displays full source and filenames and also saves into a file.

      /FM<items>  Specifies the output line format (also applies to /L format).

                            

                  For items, use one or more of the followings.



                     D   file date

                     T   file time

                     Z   file size in bytes

                     A   file attributes (A, H, S, R)

                     S   short name (8.3)

                     L   long name with full directory path



   3.4   Subdirectories



      /S      Copies directories and subdirectories except empty ones.

      /E      Copies directories and subdirectories, including empty ones.

      /T      Creates directory structure, but does not copy files.

      /ED     Preserves an empty directory on /Z, /RC, /RS, /RD, /RX cases.

      /ED0    Deletes empty directories (default).

      /ED<n>  Preserves n levels of empty subdirectories.

      /DL<n>  Limits processing of directories to n levels.



   3.5   File Gathering



      /SG     Same as /SGN (see variations in handling duplicates below).

      /SGF    Gathers files into one-level directory (unsorted First file 1st).

      /SGN    Gathers files into one-level directory (sorted, Newest file 1st).

      /SGo    Gathers files into one-level directory (sorted, Oldest file 1st).

      /SGFo   Gathers files into one-level directory (First  only).

      /SGNo   Gathers files into one-level directory (Newest only).

      /SGoo   Gathers files into one-level directory (Oldest only).



   3.6   Directory Flattening



      /SL     Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Left   (see below).

      /SR     Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Right  (see below).

      /SX     Flattens subdirectories, add-name-Middle (see below).

      /SLR    Rebuilds flattened directory (path to the left).

      /SRR    Rebuilds flattened directory (path to the right).

      /SXR    Rebuilds flattened directory (path in the middle).



   3.7   File Name Treatments



      /NX     Preserves the shortname when the file is copied (default).

      /NX0    Disables the /NX switch (good for remote volume, DirectCD, etc.).

      /N      Uses the short (8.3) name for name matching, and creation.

      /N0     Uses the longname for name matching, and creation (default).

      /NP     Uses precise name matching (ignores the match in alias).

      /NP0    Uses loose name matching (either longname or alias -- default).

      /ND     Uses the old (DOS) wildcard treatment (default in XXCOPY16).

      /NW     Uses the new (Win32) wildcard treatment (default in XXCOPY).



   3.8   File Name Case Control



      /NC0    Disables /NCL, /NCU, or /NCX (accepts letters of both cases).

      /NCL    Uses Lowercase-only name when a new file is created.

      /NCU    Uses Uppercase-only name when a new file is created.

      /NCX    Uses Uppercase-only name when a new shortname-file is created.



   3.9   File Time Treatments



      /FA     Uses the Last-Access timestamp for Filetime comparison.

      /FC     Uses the Creation timestamp for Filetime comparison.

      /FL     Filetime in Local time (default).

      /FU     Filetime in UTC (Universal Coordinated Time - same as GMT).

      /FW     Uses the Last-Write time for Filetime comparison (default).

      /FF     Fuzzy Filetime, ignores +/- 2 seconds in Filetime difference.

      /FF<n>  Fuzzy Filetime, same as /FF+<n>/FF-<n>.

      /FF+<n> Allows difference up to plus n seconds for matching filetime.

      /FF-<n> Allows difference up to minus n seconds for matching filetime.

      /FR     Legacy switch (replaced by /FF+2).

      /FT     Legacy switch (replaced by /FF-2).



   3.8   Timestamp Control



      /TTA    Touches (modifies) timestamp of Last Access of src.

      /TTA0   Preserves timestamp of Last Access of src (default).

      /TCA    Copies the timestamp of Last Access from src to dst.

      /TCC    Copies the timestamp of Create Time from src to dst.

      /TCW    Copies the timestamp of Last Write from src to dst (default).

      /TCA0   Uses current time for dst Last Access (default).

      /TCC0   Uses current time for dst Create Time (default).

      /TCW0   Uses current time for dst Last Write.



   3.9   Time Zone Adjustments



      /TD+<n> Adds an offset to the time of the destination file.

      /TD-<n> Subtracts an offset time from the dst file for comparison.

      /TS+<n> Adds an offset to the time of source (and the copied) file.

      /TS-<n> Subtracts an offset time from source (and the copied) file.



   3.12  File Attributes



      /AC     Clears the archive bit of the source after it is copied.

      /R      Allows overwrite or delete of read-only files.

      /R0     Cancels overwrite/delete of read-only files.

      /K      Keeps the source attributes including read-only (same as /KS).

      /KD     Keeps the attributes of destination (overwritten) file.

      /KN     Sets the destination attributes to normal (only /A).

      /KS     Keeps the src attributes including the read-only bit.



   3.13  Limiting the File Size in Copying.



      /TR<n>  Truncates the newly copied files (first n bytes are copied).

      /SZ<n>  Legacy switch (replaced by /TR).



   3.14  File Removal



      /Z      Deletes extra files or subdirectories in destination.

      /ZY     Same as /Z except there is no confirmation prompt.

      /RC     Removes files in src after a successful copy (equivalent to move).

      /RS     Removes files in src (see Section 1.2.2 of Action section).

      /RD     Removes files in src (see Section 1.2.3 of Action section).

      /RX     Removes files in src (see Section 1.2.4 of Action section).



   3.15  Quota (counting) on File Operation



      /QF<n>  Quits when the quota for the file count has been reached.

      /QBL<n> Quits before the byte count exceeds the limit.

      /QBT<n> Quits when the total byte count reaches the trigger point.

      /QSL<n> Quits before the remaining space dips below the limit.

      /QST<n> Quits when the remaining space reaches the trigger point.



   3.16  Verify After Copy



      /V      Verifies after copy; default (same as /V1).

      /V0     Disables verify switch (canceling /V, /V1, /V2, or /V3)

      /V1     Verifies after copy (quick test --- file size match).

      /V2     Verifies after copy byte-by-byte check (DATMAN 2-pass).

      /VE     Displays only error cases of DATMAN 2-pass verify (/V2).



   3.17  Cyclic Copy Handling



      /CC     Prompts you when a cyclic copy is attempted.

      /CC0    Disallows cyclic copy.

      /CCY    Allows a cyclic copy by excluding destination (default).



   3.18  Security Information (NTFS only)



      /SC     Same as /SC3 (copies security info).

      /SC0    Cancels the /SC or /SF switch (no security info copied).

      /SC1    Copies security info (Permissions only) when a file is copied.

      /SC2    Copies security info (Auditing only)    when a file is copied.

      /SC3    Copies security info (both Perm, Audit) when a file is copied.

      /SF     Same as /SF3 (fixes up security info)

      /SF0    Cancels the /SC or /SF switch (equivalent to /SC0).

      /SF1    Fixes up security info (Permissions only) (no file copy).

      /SF2    Fixes up security info (Auditing only)    (no file copy).

      /SF3    Fixes up security info (both Perm, Audit) (no file copy).



   3.19  Checking Remaining Space



      /CK     Checks remaining space before copy (default).

      /CK0    Disables the pre-check of remaining space before copy.



   3.20  Prompt Control



      /YY     Suppresses ALL prompts unconditionally (good in batch file).

      /I      Suppresses the prompt before creating the destination directory.

      /I0     Prompts you before creating the destination directory if absent.

      /W      Same as /WE (Prompts you before proceeding).

      /WS     Prompts you to press a key at the start of copying.

      /WE     Prompts you to press a key at the end of copying.

      /W0     Cancels the /W, /WS, or /WE switch.



      /P      Prompts you before creating each destination file.

      /P0     Cancels the /P specified earlier.

      /PC     Prompts you before creating a new files.

      /PC0    Creates a new file without prompting.

      /Po     Prompts you before overwriting an existing file (same as /Y0).

      /Po0    Overwrites an existing file without prompting (same as /Y).

      /Y      Overwrites existing files without prompting (same as /Po0).

      /Y0     Cancels the /Y switch. (same as /Po).

      /-Y     Cancels the /Y switch  (XCOPY compatible syntax).



      /PD     Prompts you on a directory (default on destructive operations).

      /PD0    Suppresses the warning generated by the /PD setting.

      /PZ     Prompts for confirmation of dst directory on /Z /ZY /CLONE.

      /PZ0    Suppresses prompt for directory confirmation on /CLONE /Z /ZY.

      /PN     Prompts when on excessive failures on /NX operations.

      /PN0    Suppresses prompts on excessive failures of /NX operations.

      /WD     Warns you when a root-level directory is missing (default).

      /WD0    Suppresses the warning generated by the /WD setting.

      /WV     Warns you when one of the system DLL file is newer than XXCOPY (default).

      /WV0    Suppresses the warning for a newer system DLL with /WV setting.



      /ZY     /Z  action without the warning on file delete.

      /RSY    /RS action without the warning on file delete.

      /RCY    /RC action without the warning on file delete.

      /RDY    /RD action without the warning on file delete.

      /RXY    /RX action without the warning on file delete.

      /CCY    /CC action without the warning on cyclic copy.



   3.21  Progress Bar

   

      /PB     Shows Progress bar for the job (default file progress >= 1M).

      /PB<n>  Shows Progress bar with file progress if size >= n bytes.



   3.22  List Tree



      /LTREE  Lists directory tree (without copy or making directories).

              Note: with /LTREE, the /DA/DB/DO parameters apply on dir time.



   3.23  Error Handling



      /C      Continues copying even if errors occur (default).

      /C0     Terminates upon the first occurrence of a fatal error.

      /CB     Continues batch file if XXCOPY ended OK last time.

      /CBQ    Same as /CB except suppresses console output to end immediately.

      /CR<n>  Sets the retry period (n seconds, default = 3) on failed copy.

      /CR0    Disables the retry attempt of a filed copy.

      /CE     Same as /CBQ/EC (most useful in batch file with @echo off).



   3.24  Check Condition



      /IA     Continues if destination is absent (terminates if exists).

      /IA<file> Continues if the specified file or dir is absent (terminates if exists).

      /IP     Continues if destination is present (terminates if absent).

      /IP<file> Continues if the specified file or dir is present (terminates if absent).



   3.25  Debug and Test



      /DEBUG  Shows the command parameters and prompts you to start.

      /DEBUGX Exits immediately after showing the command parameters.



   3.26  Cache Control



      /CA   Enables all cache.  Same as /CA7 (default).

      /CA0  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = OFF

      /CA1  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = ON

      /CA2  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = OFF

      /CA3  Cache control:  src-rd = OFF  dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = ON

      /CA4  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = OFF

      /CA5  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = OFF  dst-rd = ON

      /CA6  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = OFF

      /CA7  Cache control:  src-rd = ON   dst-wr = ON   dst-rd = ON



   3.27  Miscellaneous



      /ER      Emulates XCOPY's exit code (for ERRORLEVEL check in batch files).

      /NI      Becomes nice to other tasks by idling (1000 msec) between actions.

      /NI<n>   Same as /NI.  Specifies n msec as the idle time (0 to disable it).

      /SP      Spans the copy job over multiple destination (new volume).

      /MD<dir> Make Directory (convenient to create a directory for log files).



   3.28  Help



      /?       Shows a summary of the switches on one page (without a switch).

      .../?    Shows only relevant switches when other switches are present.

      /HELP    Shows the switches in detail (print this output).

      /HELPA   Shows the /HELP listing in alphabetical order.

      /HELP /x Shows a portion of /HELPA for switches starting with letter x.

      /HELPE   Lists the Exit codes (ERRORLEVEL values) returned by XXCOPY.



   3.29  DATMAN-Specific Features



      /J<n>   Forces DATMAN catalog (journal) flush.

      /0      Disables DATMAN One-pass copy (not recommended, but allowed).

      /1      DATMAN One-pass copy (when copying from DATMAN tape, default).

      /G<n>   Sets DATMAN N-Group (redundant) write. (<n> : 0 - 7).





4. Command Entries



   4.1   Environment Variables:



      XXCOPY   Specifies command line (any switches except src or dst).

      XXCOPYX  Specifies exclusion specifiers (without the /X prefix)

      COPYCMD  /Y /-Y can be accepted (XCOPY compatible)



   4.2   Environment Variable Control



      /ZE     Disables the use of all Environment Variables for XXCOPY.

      /ZX     Disables the use of the Environment Variable XXCOPYX.

      /ZX0    Enables use of the Environment Variable XXCOPYX.



   4.3   Command File



      /CF     Specifies a text file which contains command line text.



   4.4   Macro Reference (XXTB #24) --- examples shown below

   

      /$DATE$    Expands to month and date (equivalent to /$MMDD$) --> "1225".

      /$TIME$    Expands to hour and minutes (equiv. /$HHNN$) --> "1315".

      /$YYMMDD$  Expands to 2-digit year month day --> "021225".

      /$YYYY-MM$ Expands to 4-digit year month --> "2002-12".

      /$HHNNSS$  Expands to hour minutes second --> "131530".

      /$MON-DD$  Expands to month day --> "DEC-25".

      /$Y$       Expands to last digit of the current year --> "2".

      /$WWW$     Expands to day of the week --> "WED".

      /$W$       Expands to ordinal number of day of week (0-6) --> "3".

      /$IIII$    Expands to ISO 8601 Year value for Week number --> "2002".

      /$II$    Expands to ISO 8601 Year value for Week number --> "02".

      /$WK$    Expands to ISO 8601 Week number --> "W52".

      /$K$       Expands to ISO 8601 Day-of-the-Week number (1-7) --> "3".



      Note: The above examples are for 2002-12-25 13:15:30 (Wednesday).

            Punctuation with ( . , - _ ' ! # % & @ ~ { } ` T ) may be used. 



   4.5   Environment Variable

         // keep a common set of exclusion items in one place.

   

      /%xxxx%  Environment Variable reference in command files (/CF /EX).



   4.6   Offset for Macro Time Values



      /TM0     Cancels the time offset (in days) set by /TM+ or /TM-.

      /TM+<n>  Adds an offset (Dy) to the current time of macro reference.

      /TM-<n>  Subtracts an offset (Dy) to the current time of macro reference.




© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #28




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The Wild-Wild-Source: the source spec with wildcards

Date:    2001-01-28

====================================================================



XXCOPY Command Parameter Syntax:



  XXCOPY   source  [ destination ]  [ switches... ]



  We have shown XXCOPY's basic command line syntax at numerous

  occasions.  In this article, the topic is focused on the first

  item, the source specifier (any of the switch arguments can be

  placed anywhere including at the position left to the source).





Source Specifier (XCOPY-compatible standard):



  In another article, XXTB #25, the standard source

  specifier that is compatible with Microsoft's XCOPY is discussed.

  The standard source specifier is made of the following three parts.



      [ volume_spec ] [ directory ] [ file_pattern ]



  The other article discussed the case where the directory specifier

  contains no wildcard character because Microsoft's XCOPY will treat

  them literally (the * and ? has no special power as wildcard).



  On the other hand, wildcard characters in the source specifier are

  handled more appropriately by XXCOPY which is the subject of this

  article.





The Wild-Wild-Source Specifier (XXCOPY-extended feature):



  This is one of the most distinguishing feature of XXCOPY from most

  other file management utilities.  The source directory specifier

  can be further separated in two sub-parts (compare with the standard,

  three-part source specifier).



   [ volume_spec ] [ base_dir ] [ directory_pattern ] [ file_pattern ]



  The [ directory ] component in the standard specifier is now broken

  up to [ base_dir ] and [ directory_pattern ].  The "constant" part

  of the directory specifier which has no wildcard will be classfied

  as the base_dir.  The remaining part that include a wildcard will

  be classified as the directory_pattern.  Any of the four parts can

  be omitted. But, of course at least one must be present as the

  source specifier.



  For example



      XCOPY   C:\Windows\sys*\*.dll   D:\dst\   /S



  According to the standard three-part scheme, it breaks up like



      volume_spec:          C:

      directory:            \Windows\sys*\

      file_pattern:         *.dll



  Of course, with Microsoft's XCOPY, you get nothing by this command.

  XCOPY looks for a directory, C:\Window\sys*\ which does not exist if

  interpreted literally (XCOPY does just that) and find no matching

  files (*.DLL).



  With XXCOPY's wild-wild-source (four-part scheme) feature, it works as.



      XCOPY   C:\Windows\sys*\*.dll   D:\dst\   /S



      volume_spec:          C:

      base_dir:             \Windows\

      directory_pattern:    sys*\

      file_pattern:         *.dll



      The command line effectively combines the action previously done

      with multiple lines like



      XXCOPY  C:\windows\system\*.dll    d:\dst\system\  /S

      XXCOPY  C:\windows\system32\*.dll  d:\dst\system\  /S

      ...





The Multi-level Subdirectory Specifier:



  In various examples, you may have seen a source specifier like



      XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\?cache*\*\*.jpg  \dst\



  Yes, XXCOPY's unique Wild-Wild-Source feature allows you to use

  wildcards liberally pretty much anywhere in the source specifier.

  That includes the new \*\ notation where a single asterisk forms

  a sole level of directory.  You can go really wild with this

  feature of having as many wildcards anywhere, any level, any

  number...  It makes XXCOPY a very wild beast indeed.



  The \*\ sequence is a new notation which we came up with XXCOPY

  in order to encode the multi-level directory name matching.

  Actually, the same concept has been present in Microsoft's XCOPY

  in the form of the /S switch which specifies that a filename

  pattern be applied to multiple-level subdirectories.  For example,



     XCOPY   C:\Windows\*.jpg  \dst\  /S

     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*.jpg  \dst\  /S



  The /S switch is a very basic switch and most XCOPY/XXCOPY users

  are familiar with this concept.  It includes not only the first

  level directory, but also includes all subdirectories.



       C:\Windows\mywife.jpg             // first-level directory

       C:\Windows\cache\mother1.jpg      // another-level

       C:\Windows\cache\deep\son.jpg     // third-level

      ...



  * * * *  OK, Microsoft's XCOPY runs out of gas here. * * * *



  The rest of the discussion applies only to the XXCOPY utility.

  Using the new \*\ notation, the /S switch can be substituted as



     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\*.jpg  \dst\



     In this command line, the \*\ sequence immediately before the

     filename template (*.jpg) makes the files to be applied to all

     subdirectories beyond the path (C:\Windows\).  Therefore, the

     *.jpg pattern applies to any subdirectories which is how the

     /S switch works.



  Next, I will show you even a better example of \*\ sequence which

  illustrates a case which cannot be specified by the traditional /S

  switch.



     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\cache\*.jpg  \dst\



     In this case, the subdirectory cache may appear at any level

     of subdirectory (including the first level).  Somewhat similar

     to the spirit of the /S switch, but it does NOT allow the

     last name part (*.jpg) to be matched in any other directory

     level than the one immediately inside the cache\ directory.

     Note the difference carefully:  the \*\ sequence does not

     appear between \cache\ and *.jpg.



  Therefore,the following three cases are all different one another.



     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\*.jpg           \dst\

     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\cache\*.jpg     \dst\

     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\cache\*\*.jpg   \dst\



     The first line is equivalent to the familiar /S switch where

     file pattern *.jpg applies to any level below C:\Windows\.



     In the case of the second line, \*\ modifies the multi-level

     matching of only the directory pattern, \cache\ (it just happens

     that it contains no wildcard charcter, but it may be allowed).

     But, the filename pattern, *.jpg applied only to the immediate

     directory of whichever \cache\ directory.



     The third case is the most universal case of all: the \*\

     sequence appears in both before the directory pattern, \cache\,

     and before the filename pattern, *.jpg.



     Here are some variations of the multi-level directory specifier:



        \*\         // zero or more levels of subdirectory

        \?*\        // exactly one level of subdirectory of any name

        \*\?*\      // one or more levels of subdirectory



     There are no particular limit that is set by XXCOPY.  You may

     use as many wildcars you want in the source specifier.  Of

     course, there is a practical limit in the whole length of the

     source specifier (260 character in all for a full pathname in

     Windows).





Just for old-timer's finger habit:



  For backward compatibility mostly to accommodate old timers' finger

  habit, Microsoft allows *.* to denote any file (or directory) name

  which may not necessarily has the dot character in it.  To honor

  the same tradition (and to make it fully XCOPY-compatible), XXCOPY

  accepts *.* as equivalent to the simpler (and preferred) single-

  asterisk, *.  To be symmetrical, the multi-level subdirectory

  matching sequence \*\ may be substitued by \*.*\.  Similarly,

  \*\*\ (or even \*\*\*\*) is a redundant (but permissible) expression

  which will be treated as equivant to \*\,





What is the "Base Directory":



  We call the "constant" part of the source directory in an XXCOPY

  operation the Base Directory.  There is always only one Base

  Directory in XXCOPY command.  In the traditional XCOPY-compatible

  (without wildcard) source directory specifier, the pathname up to

  the last name (the file_pattern) was the Base Directory.  With

  wildcard specifiers in the source specifier, the Base Directory

  refers to the first part of the source specifier which does not

  contain any wildcard character.  This is why there is always only

  one Base Directory.



  The distinction of the Base Directory from the directory_pattern is

  significant not for the name's sake.  But, it is the directory

  level which is the bas directory to which a relative path is

  referenced.  The Base Directory is used in both the formation of

  the destination directory and the referece point for an exclusion

  (/X) directory.



  For example, using the same command line showen earlier:



     XXCOPY   C:\Windows\*\*cache*\*.jpg   D:\dst\  /I



  In the destination directory, you will find files like...



     C:\Windows\abc\mycache\xrated.jpg --> D:\dst\abc\mycache\xrated.jpg

     C:\Windows\a\b\cachex\xxx_pic.jpg --> D:\dst\a\b\cachex\xxx_pic.jpg

     C:\Windows\cache\pta_oked.jpg     --> D:\dst\cache\pta_oked.jpg



     (The /I switch let a new directory to be created if missing).



  The Base Directory in this case is the



      C:\Windows\



  which is the longest source directory path which does not contain

  a wildcard.  So, if you have a relative referece in an exclusion

  switch, the path will will be relative to the Base directory.



  For instance,



     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\*cache*\*.jpg   D:\dst\  /Xcache*\



     Here, the exclusion specifier (/Xcache*\) gives the pattern for

     the directories to be excluded as "cache*\" which is relative to

     the Base Directory.  that is C:\Windows\cache*\.  And the line



     XXCOPY  C:\Windows\*\*cache*\*.jpg  D:\dst\  /XC:\Windows\cache*\



     In the above example, the following file would be caught by the

     exclusion specifier.



     C:\Windows\cache\pta_oked.jpg





Does the Wild-Wild-Source scheme apply to the exclude swich?



  Unfortunately, the answer is NO.  The exclusion specifier is

  not implemted as flexibly as that of the source directory

  specifier.  It is mostly the for the sake of reasonable issue.

  If the exclusion specifiers are given a total freedom in terms of

  the placement of wildcard characters just like the source

  specifier, unless we come up with a very clever algorithm,

  the combinatorial explosion will be so severe, the operation

  will be intorelably slow it will not be useful --- that is

  our official excuse at least.  On the other hand, the current

  set of exclusion feature is chosen in such a way that the

  overall XXCOPY performance will not severely compromized even

  by a very large number of exclusion specifiers.   Currently,

  the use of wildcard in an excluded item is limited to the

  last name (either file or directory) portion of the specifier.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #29




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The Windows 98 Startup Disk

Date:    2001-02-08

====================================================================



This article discusses the use of the Windows 98 startup floppy disk

and an alternative boot disk to handle troubles in booting up the

Windows 98 system.  Most of the discussion here apply equally to

the Windows 95 and Windows ME operating systems (OS) but there are

minor differences from one OS to another.



The Windows Startup Disk:



    If you do not have the Startup Disk for your Windows 98 (or you

    have misplaced it since you made it when you installed Windows 9x

    on your system), this is the time to make one.



    It is conveniently done from Control Panel.



      Control_Panel > Add/Remove Programs >Startup Disk



    A surprising number of users don't have the startup disk handy and

    even those who have it have never used it, or do not know what it

    is for and how useful it is.  If you have done it recently, you may

    remember that the Windows 9x installation steps always provide the

    option of creating such a diskette --- but never explains how to

    use it.





What's on the Startup Disk?



    The diskette is also called Emergency Boot Disk (EBD) is a replica

    of the contents of the directory at C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EBD.

    (If you are not a techwiz, just skip the file list)



    IO.SYS           ; System boot file.

    MSDOS.SYS        ; Boot option information (paths, multiboot, and so on).

    DRVSPACE.BIN     ; Microsoft DriveSpace compression driver.

    CONFIG.SYS       ; Loads the device drivers.

    HIMEM.SYS        ; Extended (XMS) Memory Manager.

    COMMAND.COM      ; Command interpreter.

    AUTOEXEC.BAT     ; A batch file which runs when you boot it.

    ASPI2DOS.SYS     ; Real-mode Adaptec CD-ROM driver.

    ASPI4DOS.SYS     ; Real-mode Adaptec CD-ROM driver.

    ASPI8DOS.SYS     ; Real-mode Adaptec CD-ROM driver.

    ASPI8U2DOS.SYS   ; Real-mode Adaptec CD-ROM driver.

    ASPICD.SYS       ; Real-mode Adaptec CD-ROM driver.

    BTCDROM.SYS      ; Mylex/BusLogic CD-ROM driver.

    BTDOSM.SYS       ; Mylex/BusLogic CD-ROM driver.

    FLASHPT.SYS      ; Mylex/BusLogic CD-ROM driver.

    OAKCDROM.SYS     ; Generic device driver for ATAPI CD-ROM drives.

    SETRAMD.BAT      ; Searches for first available drive to be a Ramdrive.

    RAMDRIVE.SYS     ; Creates a Ramdrive during startup.

    FINDRAMD.EXE     ; Utility to find the RAM drive during startup.

    EXTRACT.EXE      ; File to expand the Ebd.cab file.

    FDISK.EXE        ; Disk partition tool.

    SYS.COM          ; System transfer tool.

    EBD.SYS          ; Disket identifier file (Windows 98 startup disk)

    MODE.COM         ; Lets you change console parameters

    README.TXT       ; Document file

    EDB.CAB          ; Cabinet (compressed) file containing the following

      ATTRIB.EXE     ; Add or remove file attributes.

      CHKDSK.EXE     ; Simpler and smaller disk status tool.

      DEBUG.EXE      ; Debug utility.

      EDIT.COM       ; Real-mode emergency text editor.

      EXT.EXE        ; File extract utility.

      FORMAT.COM     ; Disk format tool.

      HELP.BAT       ; Launches the readme.txt for the startup disk.

      HELP.TXT       ; Help text file.

      MSCDEX.EXE     ; Microsoft CD-ROM file extension for MS-DOS.

      RESTART.COM    ; Restart your computer.

      SCANDISK.EXE   ; Disk status tool.

      SCANDISK.INI   ; Disk status tool configuration file.

      SYS.COM        ; system transfer tool.

      UNINSTAL.EXE   ; Removes Win 98 and restores the previous state.





    The floppy disk is essentially a bare bones DOS 7.x system disk

    with various disk initialization tools, such as



      FDISK.EXE       FORMAT.COM      SYS.COM



    These tools allow you to initialize the hard disk prior to the

    Win 98 installation.  But, in order to read the Win 98 Installation

    CD-ROM for the setup procedure, you need the capability of

    accessing the CD-ROM which often needs SCSI device drivers.



      ASPI2DOS.SYS    ASPI4DOS.SYS    ASPI8DOS.SYS

      ASPI8U2DOS.SYS  ASPICD.SYS      BTCDROM.SYS

      BTDOSM.SYS      FLASHPT.SYS     OAKCDROM.SYS



    Surprisingly, there is no software in Startup Disk which allows

    you to start Windows 98.  The tools are good mostly to re-install

    the Windows 98 operating system from the CD-ROM.  Although the

    Win 98 re-installation procedure would not normally delete user

    files on the hard disk, it is a very time-consuming process.



    It should be pointed out that on many occasions, there are steps

    you can take that are much quicker to make the system disk capable

    of rebooting into Win 98 system without a complete re-installation

    of the OS.  But, the Startup Disk will not allow you to do so.





The Master Boot Record (MBR):



    Every now and then, a Windows 9x system becomes unbootable for

    various reasons.  The most common cause is probably the contents

    of the master boot record (MBR) of the boot drive (the first

    disk drive that is enabled) are not configured properly.  FDISK

    is the official tool to manipulate the contents of the MBR in

    Microsoft's OSes.



    The most well known "undocumented" feature (even Microsoft's page

    documents it) is to refresh the MBR by the following command.



        FDISK  /MBR



    This command runs very quickly without fanfare: it does not

    even tell you whether or not the operation was successful.



    Also, it is a good idea to run FDISK (without arguments)

    and examine the first disk to make sure the first partition

    is a Primary DOS Partition and it is set as Active Partition.

    It is unfortuante that FDISK allows you to make only the

    Primary DOS parition of the first disk drive an Active partition.

    So, even if your BIOS configuration menu has a feature to allow

    you to set the disk volume other than C: as the boot volume,

    it does not do you any good as long as you use FDISK because

    it refuses to make any other partition active.





An Alternative Boot Disk:



    From time to time, for various reasons, the Windows 98 system disk

    gets slightly corrupted and becomes not bootable.  It take only one

    crucial file to make the system fail to boot successfully into

    the Windows 98 environment.  Anyway, it is very useful to have

    a bootable system diskette which allows you to not only boot into

    a DOS environment, but also reach all the way to the Windows 98

    environment even on a volume which cannot otherwise boot itself

    to the Win98 world.  Such a capability is sorely missing from the

    standard Win98 Startup Disk (a.k.a. EBD).



    Note: This technique works with Win98, but NOT on Win ME.





How to make the Alternative Boot Disk:



    Perform the following sequence to prepare the boot diskette

    from a command prompt (in DOS or in a DOS Box).



      FORMAT   A:  /U /S

      XXCOPY16 C:\MSDOS.SYS     A:\  /H/R/Y

      XXCOPY16 C:\CONFIG.SYS    A:\  /H

      ECHO     C:\AUTOEXEC.BAT >A:\AUTOEXEC.BAT



    Here, in this example, XXCOPY16 is used because it can be run

    either in the 16-bit or in the 32- bit environment.  But, you

    may use XXCOPY (the 32-bit version) in a DOX Box of Win9x.

    If XXCOPY/XXCOPY16 is not available, you need to perform extra

    steps (ATTRIB to manipulate the attribute bits first, and copy

    the file accordingly).  The forth line here is a quick way to

    make a one-line text file on A:.  Of course, you may add other

    utilities to the diskette such as FDISK.EXE, FORMAT.COM, SYS.COM

    for your convenience.



    If you are not familiar with XXCOPY16, it is available in the

    XXCOPY Freeware package.





Using the Alternative Boot Disk:



    This diskette allows you to boot into Win9x where the system

    disk at C: is not capable of booting itself.  This is usually

    a result of the partition that is assigned to C: is not an

    "Active" DOS Primary partition.





Additional note:



    This technique can be extended to a customized "multi-boot"

    scheme based on floppy disks.  For instance, I have a Japanese

    version of Win98SE which is installed on Drive E:.  That is,

    when the particular version was installed, it was deliberately

    installed to E: so that E:\WINDOWS is the official windows

    system directory for that environment.  According to Microsoft's

    official "rule", only one kind of Win9x OS can exist on a system,

    (the dual-boot is possible with WinNT/2000/XP but not with another

    Win9x or ME), when I need to boot into the Japanese version of

    Win98, I use a specially made diskette which has its own unique

    MSDOS.SYS file which declares that the E: drive is the boot drive.



    Of course, you may acquire a specialized boot control software

    such as the System Commander that allows even more flexible

    booting option among many OSes.  But, the alternative boot disk

    allows you to test the system and see which of the key files

    are causing a boot sequence problem.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #30




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Feature comparison: XXCOPY vs ROBOCOPY

Date:    2002-12-03   (Revised)

====================================================================





Introduction:



  Since we receive a large number of inquiries about XXCOPY's relative

  strength and weakness against ROBOCOPY, the administrator's tool

  bundled with Microsoft's Windows NT/2000/XP Reseource Kit, this article

  was created to contrast the two utilities.



  Apparently, ROBOCOPY (which stands for Robust Copy) and XXCOPY both

  come from Microsoft's XCOPY utility as the basis for the overall

  approach which of course comes from COMMAND.COM's built-in COPY

  command.  As its name implies, XXCOPY adheres to XCOPY's general

  behavior very closely.  This makes XCOPY user's initial experience

  with XXCOPY quite painless.  In general, XXCOPY is much closer to

  XCOPY than ROBOCOPY is to XCOPY.  Howerver, as the following chart

  shows, the two utilities have remarkable similarities.  Except for

  minor implementation differences, the designers of ROBOCOPY seem

  to have the same general mindset as XXCOPY's designer to the file

  management problems.





Common features:



 Let us start with a list of common features (with sometimes different

 switch letter)  which are nearly equivalent in the two programs.





 Robocopy       XXCOPY      Comments

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 srcdir        srcspec      XXCOPY Allows wildcards anywhere any number

 dstdir        dstdir       Destination specifier

 file          ----         Part of srcspec to be XCOPY compatible

 file...       /IN<file>    /IN allows additional filename patterns



 /S            /S           Copy subdirectories

 /E            /E           copy subdirectories even if its empty

 /LEV:<n>      /DL<n>       Limit the number of directory levels



 /MOV          /RC          Delete from source after copying

 /MOVE         /RC/E        Delete from source after copying



 /PURGE        /Z           Delete dst files/dirs that no longer exist in src

 /MIR          /CLONE       Mirror a directory tree



 /A+:<mask>    ----         Add the given Attributes to copied files.

 /A-:<mask>    ----         Remove the given Attributes from copied files.



 ----          /KS/KD/KN    Keep the src attributes/dst attrib/sets new

 ----          /AC          Clear src archive bit



 /CREATE       /CLONE/TR0   Create directory tree + 0-length files only.

 /FAT          /N           Create destination files using 8.3 names.



 /A            /A           Copy only files with the Archive attribute set

 /M            /M           Like /A, but remove A-bit from source files.



 /IA:<mask>    /AT<mask>    Include only files with some of the Attrib set.

 /XA:<mask>    /AX<mask>    Exclude files with any of the given Attributes set.



 /XF           /X<file>     Exclude Files matching given names/paths/wildcards.

 /XD           /X<dir\>     Exclude Directories matching given names/paths.



 /XC           /BS          Exclude changed files (backup only same files)

 /XN           /BO          Exclude newer files   (backup only older files)

 /XO           /BN          Exclude older files   (backup only newer files)

 /XX           /Z           Exclude extra files

 /XL           /U           EXclude Lonely files/dirs (update only existing ones).

 /IS           /BI0         Include Same files (copy even if they may be same).



 /MAX:<n>      /SZ:-<n>     Exclude files bigger than n bytes.

 /MIN:<n>      /SZ:<n>-     Exclude files smaller than n bytes.



 /MAXAGE:<n>   /DA#<n>      Exclude files older than n days/date.

 /MINAGE:<n>   /DB#<n>      Exclude files newer than n days/date.

 /LOG:<file>   /ON<file>    Output status to LOG file (overwrite existing log).

 /LOG+:<file>  /OA<file>    Output status to LOG file (append to existing log).



 /L            /L           List only (no copy, timestamp, or delete action)

 /NP           /PB0         Enable/Disable progress display



 /R:<n>        -----        Number of retries on failed copies

 /W:<n>        -----        Wait time between retries: default is 30 seconds.

 ----          /CR<n>       In XXCOPY the retry period is specified in seconds.





 /SEC          /SC          Copyies Security information.

 /SECFIX       /SF          Fixes up security information without copy.



 /X            ----         Report all extra files, not just those selected.

 /V            ----         Produce Verbose output, showing skipped files.

 ----          /Q<n>        Control various quiet (verboseness) levels

----------------------------------------------------------------------------



  Note:  The comments above are mostly for ROBOCOPY user's

         convenience.  The terminology in the comment column is

         that of ROBOCOPY's.  For example, ROBOCOPY' manual refers

         to the files that is present in the source but not in the

         destination as a "Lonely" file.  Also, the way ROBOCOPY

         classifies files is almost always by comparing the source

         against destination.  Although many XXCOPY's switches in

         the backup group (starts with /B ) are in the category,

         XXCOPY does not always take the viewpoint (bias) in the

         file-selection process.  That is, whereas ROBOCOPY is

         apparently designed with the backup and archiving operation

         as its primary purpose, XXCOPY's functionality is wider in

         scope with more non-backup related file management operations

         (e.g., more selection in file-removal, file-gathering, etc.)







Features found only in ROBOCOPY:





 ROBOCOPY

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

 /Z                Copy file in restartable mode for quick retry later

 /TIMFIX           Fix timestamps on existing destination files.

 /REG              Save /R:n and /W:n in the Registry as default

 /TBD              Wait for sharenames To Be Defined (retry error 67).

 /ETA              Show Estimated Time of Arrival of copied files.



-----------------------------------------------------------------------------





Features found only in XXCOPY:





 XXCOPY

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

 WildWildSrc       Wildcards anywhere any number in the source

 /X*\dir*\         Exclusion dir may be in any level and with wildcards

 /EX<file>         Exclusion specifiers supplied in a text file.

 /CF               Command file which removes the size limit of command line.

 /RS/RD/RX         Delete file/directory (not just a copy utility)

 /DA#/DB#          File age specifier in Days, Hours, Minutes, or Seconds.

 /CCY              handle a cyclic copy to proceed.

 /SP               Span backup into multiple volume (for floppy, CD-RW)

 /SX               Flatten a directory tree

 /SG               Gather files into a directory

 /Lxxx             List (/L) with a customized display format

 /BZL/BZS/BZX/BZS  Backup if size is larger/smaller/different/same

 /NX               Preserve short filename

 /NL               Restore long filename after a SFN-only copy

 /NS               Restore short filename

 /NW/ND            Select filename-matching algorithm (Win32 vs DOS)

 /NP               Precise filename matching (no alias-matching)

 /FL/FU            Use Filetime in LocalTime/UTC-time

 /FW/FA/FC         Use Filetime in Last-Write, Last-Access, Create

 /FF               Fuzzy Filetime with adjustable margin in time comparison

 /TR<n>            Copy first n bytes to the destination file

 /ED/ED0           Delete/leave an empty directory when deleting

 /CK/CK0           Enable/disable remaining-space check before copy

 /IA/IP            Terminate if destination is absent/present

 /CB/CQ            Continue batch (batch enhancer feature)

 /NI<n>            Be nice to other tasks (add idle to ease CPU demand)

 /ER               Report exit code in XCOPY-compatible mode

 /V2               Verify a file-copy on a byte-by-byte comparison basis.

 /SZ!<n>-<m>       Exclude range <n>-<m>  which ROBOCOPY can't do

 /TS+/TS-/TD+/TD-  Time comparison with offset (inter-timezone synchronization)

 /WS/WE/P/PD/PW/YY Control for user prompts on various occasions

 /PC               Prompt on create (in addition to prompt on overwrite)

 /PB               Progress Bar for the entire job

 /PB<n>            Progress Bar for file with adjustable cutoff size.

 /MD               Make Directory (mkdir) for log file, etc. within XXCOPY

 /oX               Output the list of exclusion items after optimization

 /xxxx/?           Smart help with a focused list of relevant switches

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------



Intangible differences:



 1.  ROBOCOPY provides more detailed statistics than XXCOPY.



 2.  ROBOCOPY provides percentage display on each file (but good for only

     a few very large files).  XXCOPY has progress bars for the entire

     job as well as single file copy with variable cutoff limit (shows

     progress only for large files).



 3.  When you abort ROBOCOPY, it abruptly ends the whole job without

     any display of statictics thus far completed.



     When you abort XXCOPY, it first waits for the completion of the

     file copy in progress and provides statistics.



 4.  Robocopy runs only under Windows NT/2000/XP, not in Win95/98/ME.



     XXCOPY runs under any Microsoft OS (Win 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP) and

     even has a real-mode (DOS) version XXCOPY16.EXE with essentially

     the same set of switches (compiled from a common set of source

     files).



 5.  XXCOPY provides voluminous documentation with many examples in

     the web site.  The XXCOPY technical bulletin articles are

     10 times the size (> 450,000 characters) of the ROBOCOPY

     documentation (41,000 characters)..



 6.  XXCOPY's licensed customers receives competent and prompt tech

     support.



 7.  XXCOPY has a discussion group where users can exchange ideas

     and ask questions.

     





Quick Tips for Robocopy users:



   Since the roots of both ROBOCOPY and XXCOPY are apparently, the same,

   (Microsoft's XCOPY), the two programs have relatively similar feels.

   But, even the small difference is sufficient to confuse the first time

   XXCOPY users who have mostly forgotten how XCOPY worked.  Here's a

   summary of the most confusing aspects.

  

   The way the two programs accept the filename ("lastname") patterns is

   quite different.  The following three command lines are essentially

   the same.

  

      robocopy  c:\mydir     *.doc     *.xls    *.mp3  d:\dest  /s

      xxcopy    c:\mydir\ /in*.doc  /in*.xls /in*.mp3  d:\dest\ /s

      xxcopy    c:\mydir\*.doc      /in*.xls /in*.mp3  d:\dest\ /s

   

   XXCOPY uses the /IN switch to list multiple filename (lastname)

   templates.  But, most often, experienced users who is familiar

   with XCOPY prefer to use a combined "source specifier" when

   there is only one filename template.



      robocopy  c:\mydir *.doc     d:\dest  /s

      xxcopy    c:\mydir\*.doc     d:\dest  /s

        

   The rest of the differences are the name of command switches that

   are mostly a difference in mapping of the switch alphabets.  The

   comparison charts above is a good starting point.  To locate a

   specific XXCOPY command switch, XXTB #27 is probably the best page.

   



Summing up...



                          ROBOCOPY      XXCOPY

   ----------------------------------------------

    Common features         39           39

    Unique features          5*          38

   ----------------------------------------------

    Total                   44           77



   * Most of the ROBOCOPY features which are unique to ROBOCOPY

     are idiosyncratic, or otherwise, of relatively minor import.

     The only unique feature of any substance is ROBOCOPY's /TIMFIX

     operation which XXCOPY does not support as of this writing

     (September, 2001).






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #31




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY's Exit Code (for ERRORLEVEL checking)

Date:    2001-06-18

====================================================================



Introduction:



  Upon the completion of execution, Windows (and DOS) programs return

  a 16-bit value (8-bit value in DOS) to the parent process.  XXCOPY

  (and XXCOPY16) is of no exception.  The value is usually referred

  to as Exit code which is also widely known as the ERRORLEVEL value

  in batch file programming.  Due to the DOS compatibility, the batch

  program can examine only the low order 8-bit value (0 - 255) for

  testing.  The exit code provides a mechanism to evaluate the result

  of the program execution which can be incorporated in a conditional

  branch operation (for IF ERRORLEVEL n GOTO ...).



  For related topics on batch file technique, see, XXTB #19.





XXCOPY's standard exit codes:



     Exit Code  Comment (in default mode with /ER0)

   ---------------------------------------------------------

         0     No error, Successful operation

        1-32   DATMAN software package error code

        33     Aborted by user

        34     Illegal command parameter

        35     Invalid DOS version

        36     The current directory is invalid

        37     Resident DATMAN wrong version

        38     Cannot create the destination directory

        40     Some fatal error has occurred

        41     Invalid source specifier

        42     Invalid destination specifier

        43     Invalid exclusion item specifier

        44     Disk Full

        45     Share violation error

        46     Conditional termination

        47     Path name exceeds the file system's limit

        48     Cannot overwrite read-only file

       100     No files were found to copy

      101-254  # errors in file copy (1-154, biased by 100)

        255    # errors exceeding 154 files







XCOPY-compatible exit codes:



    Exit Code  Comment (in XCOPY-compatible mode with /ER)

   ---------------------------------------------------------

         0     No error, Successful operation

         1     No files were found to copy

         2     Aborted by user

         4     Disk Full, command syntax error, etc.

         5     Disk write error.





The Built-in Exit Code Help:



   The error code tables shown above are also available as a

   built-in Help text by running the following switch.



      XXCOPY /HELPE






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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #32




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: A better boot diskette for Win9x/ME

Date:    2001-08-18

====================================================================



Introduction:



  One thing really annoying with Windows ME is that the "Start UP"

  diskette which WinME creates as part of the initial installation

  (the so-called Emergency Boot Disk, or EBD) is quite useless.



  It does not allow you to enter the windows ME environment at all.

  All it gives you is a pseudo DOS environment with/without the

  support of the CD-ROM drive (Oh, yes, it gives you a Help menu).



  It seems that when something goes wrong with the few key files

  in the root directory and/or the master boot record (MBR), the

  only option you have is to re-install the whole Windows ME.

  This is also true even with our favorate environment, Win98SE.



  There are times when you are installing another OS (sucha s

  Windows 2000 as a dual boot system and something goes wrong

  with the set up, or a virus attack.  The complicated steps in

  the boot up process, especially with a dual-boot system, if any

  of the many files are even slightly corrupted, you can't enter

  Windows 9X or ME.  With this regard, Windows ME was one step

  backward from Win 9x where at least you have a DOS environment

  where you can fix things and enter the Windows environment.





Enter the Quick Boot Diskette:



  Anyway, here's a technique that works quite well to enter the

  Windows 9x/ME world without using any file in the root directory

  of the C: drive.  The disketter you prepare with this technique

  is useful even for a dual-boot system (e.g., 98SE and XP) as

  long as the disk was installed with a Windows 9x/ME system. 



  It seems too simple to be true.



  Assume that you are running a healthy Win9x/ME system.

  Here's how to create the "Windows Quick Boot" diskette:



    1. Open a DOS Box inside Win9x/ME (or its DOS counterpart).

    2. FORMAT A:

    3. XXCOPY16  C:\IO.SYS    A:\   /H

    4. XXCOPY16  C:\MSDOS.SYS A:\   /H



  Note: if you don't have XXCOPY16, use the standard ATTIRB

  and COPY command to copy the hidden files.  The two files

  listed above are essential.  Optionally, you may copy the

  following files if they are present in the root directory

  (but not mandatory)



    5. XXCOPY16  C:\CONFIG.SYS A:\

    6. XXCOPY16  C:\AUTOEXEC.BAT A:\



  That is it!!! 



  The diskette is a bootable diskette which does not rely on any

  file in the root directory of the C: drive.



  If you are not familiar with XXCOPY16, it is available in the

  XXCOPY Freeware package.





The MSDOS.SYS file:



  Of course, the contents of the MSDOS.SYS file should be carefully

  controlled.  The following text shows a typical MSDOS.SYS fie. 

  (Note: the Windows 9x/ME system directory is assumed to be name

  as C:\WINDOWS.  If it is different, make adjustments as needed.)



    ----------------------------------------------------------



     [Paths]

     WinDir=C:\WINDOWS

     WinBootDir=C:\WINDOWS

     HostWinBootDrv=C



     [Options]

     AutoScan=0

     BootDelay=0

     BootMulti=0

     BootGUI=1

     BootMenu=0

     BootMenuDefault=1

     BootMenuDelay=4

     DoubleBuffer=1

     Logo=0

     DblSpace=0

     DrvSpace=0

     DisableLog=1

     WinVer=4.90.3000

     ;

     ;The following lines are required for compatibility...

     ;Do not remove them (MSDOS.SYS needs to be >1024 bytes).

     ;xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

     ; ...



    -----------------------------------------------------------



  The most important thing with the MSDOS.SYS file is that

  the copy in the diskette should have the following line in

  the [Options] section of the file.

         

      DisableLog=1



  If the line reads "DisableLog=0", then, the log file (BOOTLOG.TXT)

  will be created on the diskette which makes the boot up procedure

  painfully slow.  (In Win ME, the log file will be created only

  when you choose Safe Mode or manually select Logged mode.  Still,

  for the floppy based operation, you don't want the log file.)  



  Note:  If your windows directory is not "C:\WINDOWS",

	 make adjustments as needed.

 

	 Here, some non-default settings are chosen:

       

	 AutoScan=0   (1 to carry out ScanDisk)

	 Logo=0       (1 to hide the screen by the log image)

	 DisableLog=1 (0 to generate BOOTLOG.TXT)

	 DblSpace=0   (1 to load DBLSPACE.BIN automatically)

	 DrvSpace=0   (1 to load DRVSPACE.BIN automatically)



     The WinVer value should reflect the version of Windows:



	 WinVer=4.00.0950      // Windows 95            

	 WinVer=4.00.1111      // Windows 95 OSR2       

	 WinVer=4.10.1998      // Windows 98            

	 WinVer=4.10.2222      // Windows 98 SE         

	 WinVer=4.90.3000      // Windows ME            





In case of trouble:



  1.  With WinME, the Quick boot diskette should go right into

      the Windows screen without letting you to stay in DOS.

      This procedure does not use any of the files in the root

      directory of the system disk (C:).

      

      On the other hand, with Win9x (Non-ME), the boot menu gives

      you the familiar option to stay at the command prompt.



  2.  If your system is too corrupted to come back alive using

      the Quick-restart diskette, you should use the Windows

      Emergency Recovery diskette that you made in the installation

      step.



  3.  Run FDISK to make sure that the Master boot record (MBR)

      has the proper master boot code.

  

         FDISK /MBR      (it runs in non-interactive mode).   



      Then, run FDISK in interactive mode (without an argument)

      and from the FDISK menu, make sure that the Primary DOS

      Partition is active.



  4.  Run the SYS command to refresh the boot sector (the first

      sector of the active partition) has proper boot program.

  

         SYS C:



      This program initializes the boot sector of C: drive and

      also copies the IO.SYS, MSDOS.SYS and DRVSPACE.BIN files.



      Caution: If your system is configured as dual-boot with

      Windows NT/2000/XP, this procedure will make it Win9x-only

      system (However, after making it Win9X-only boot first,

      you may run the FIXBOOT command inside the Recovery Console,

      to make it dual-boot again).



  5.  If you suspect that the system registry settings (especially

      for essential device drivers) are badly configured, you

      may reestore the key files from the system backup directory.

      First, see how many backup sets have been captured.

      

        DIR  C:\WINDOWS\SYSBCKUP\*.CAB

     

      Here's an example of what you see:

   

        RB000    CAB     1,888,538  05-21-01  5:36a rb000.cab

        RB003    CAB     1,889,721  05-22-01  7:38a rb003.cab

        RBBAD    CAB     1,834,739  01-26-01  3:28p rbbad.cab

        RB002    CAB     1,892,943  05-20-01 12:45p rb002.cab

  

      Note that the file number and the file dates are not in

      a particular order.  Yesterday's copy is usually good.

      Don't pick the one with RBBAD.CAB which is a bad one!

      Once you decide which of the .CAB files to restore



      You may increase the number of backup sets stored in the

      SYSBCKUP directory by editing the C:\WINDOWS\SCANREG.INI

      file (e.g., specify MaxBackupCopies=10 for ten sets). 



   6. Once you decide which backup set to restore, run:

  

        EXTRACT C:\WINDOWS\SYSBCKUP\RB002.CAB /L C:\WINDOWS /E /Y



      Here, the RB002.CAB was chosen as an example. The directory

      name following the /L switch specifies the location of the

      the extracted files.  The /E switch extracts all files.

      The /Y switch suppresses the overwrite prompts. 



      In the case of Windows ME, the following files are expected

      to be restored:



           C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.DAT

           C:\WINDOWS\USER.DAT

           C:\WINDOWS\CLASSES.DAT

           C:\WINDOWS\WIN.INI

           C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.INI



   7. After the FDISK, SYS and EXTRACT procedures described above,

      you can try again with the Quick Boot diskette to reboot.

      Also, note that the files that are on the Quick Boot diskette

      were originally from the root directory of the system disk (C:).

      Therefore, you may restore them by copying the files back to

      the root directory if need:



          XXCOPY16 A:\*.*   C:\  /H /R /Y





Tip:



  Although the Quick Boot diskette needs only a handful of files,

  if you add the few utility programs into the diskette, it will

  make the diskette useful in case of trouble.



      IO.SYS        ; essential for boot up

      MSDOS.SYS     ; needed to boot up into the GUI environment

      CONFIG.SYS    ; optional for boot up

      AUTOEXEC.BAT  ; optional for boot up



      FDISK.EXE     ; to make the hard disk bootable

      SYS.COM       ; to make the hard disk bootable

      FORMAT.COM    ; to start over

      XXCOPY16.EXE  ; good idea

      XXCOPY.EXE    ; if you have room





Epilog:



  I have tested the technique described in this article using

  a computer with Win98, Win98SE and WinME.  I believe the same

  technique should work on Win95 and Win95-OSR2.



  Let me know if you encounter problems with the techniques

  described in this article. 



     Kan Yabumoto  



  For a similar technique in creating a better boot diskette for

  WinNT/2000/XP, see XXTB #33.




© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #33




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: A better boot diskette for WinNT/2000/XP

Date:    2003-03-05 (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction:



  The previous article, XXTB #32 shows a technique to create a

  quick boot disk which is convenient to start up a Win9x/ME system

  when it fails to enter the Windows environment because any of the

  master boot record (MBR), the boot sector, or the essential files

  in the root directory is missing or damaged.



  This article presents a similar technique for a Windows NT/2000/XP

  system which fails to boot up into the Windows environment.

  Again, the cause of the problem is typically in the MBR, the

  boot sector and/or a few key files in the root directory.



  When you install a Win9x/ME system on a Windows NT/2000/XP system,

  the capability of dual-boot is sometimes lost.  The standard

  procedure for such an occasion is to use the Emergency Repair Disk

  (ERD).  But it requires an in-depth understanding of the operating

  system environment.  It is not for everybody.  Besides, it is just

  too slow.





Enter the Quick Boot Diskette:



  Here's a simple procedure to create a Quick Boot diskette for

  WinNT/2000/XP.  It allows you to start up the Windows NT/2000/XP

  system with a minimum hassle in case of bootup trouble.



  Assume that you are running a healthy WinNT/2000/XP system.

  Here's how to create the "Windows Quick Boot" diskette:



    1. Open a DOS Box (Start > Run... > cmd).

    2. FORMAT A:

    3. XXCOPY16  C:\NTLDR          A:\   /H

    4. XXCOPY16  C:\NTDETECT.COM   A:\   /H

    5. XXCOPY16  C:\BOOT.INI       A:\



  Note: if you don't have XXCOPY16, use the standard ATTRIB

  and COPY command to copy the hidden files.  XXCOPY16 is a 16-bit

  version of the XXCOPY freeware utility that is available at

   http://www.xxcopy.com.



  The three files listed above (NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI)

  are all essential.  Optionally, you may copy the following files

  if they are present in the root directory   (needed only when you

  need to boot into Win9x/ME as a dual-boot system)



    6. XXCOPY16  C:\BOOTSECT.DOS   A:\   /H

    7. XXCOPY16  C:\IO.SYS         A:\   /H

    8. XXCOPY16  C:\MSDOS.SYS      A:\   /H

    9. XXCOPY16  C:\CONFIG.SYS     A:\   /H

   10. XXCOPY16  C:\AUTOEXEC.BAT   A:\   /H



  If you have a Recovery Console entry in the menu, add the

  following two files.



   11. XXCOPY16  C:\CMDCONS\NTDETECT.COM  A:\CMDCONS\   /H

   12. XXCOPY16  C:\CMDCONS\BOOTSECT.DAT  A:\CMDCONS\   /H



  If you use a SCSI disk, you also need the SCSI driver

  

   13. XXCOPY16  C:\NTBOOTDD.SYS   A:\   /H





  That is it!!! 



  If you are not familiar with XXCOPY16, it is available in the

  XXCOPY Freeware package.



  The diskette is a bootable diskette which does not rely on any

  file in the root directory of the C: drive.



     ---------------------------------------------------------------

      Caution:  The FORMAT command in the Windows NT/2000/XP

                looks deceptively similar to the one which comes

                with a DOS/Win9x/ME system.  But, the boot

                sectors of the two types of diskette are different

                each other.

              

		The boot code of a DOS/Win9x/ME diskette loads

		and executes the IO.SYS file whereas that of a

		WinNT/2000/XP diskette is tied to the NTLDR file.



                If you use a pre-formatted diskette, you must

                initialize the diskette using the FORMAT command

                run in the NT/2000/XP environment as described

                above (don't have the absense of the /S switch

                in the FORMAT command fool you).  You must not

                skip the FORMAT step in this procedure.

     ---------------------------------------------------------------





     ---------------------------------------------------------------

      Note:     The BOOTSECT.DOS and \CMDCONS\BOOTSECT.DAT are

                specific to the particlar hard disk's drive

                dimension and cannot be shared with other drive.

                This dependency makes the WinXP Quick Boot Diskette

                specific to the drive.  If you have nearly identical

                disk drives on a different machine, you may use one

                Win9X Quick Boot Diskette on multiple machines as

                long as the BOOT.INI configurations are made

                sharable.

     ---------------------------------------------------------------

                



Customization:



  The initial bootup menu reflects the contents of the BOOT.INI

  file which you can edit by NotePad.  The following pages in

  Microsoft's web sites explains technical details of BOOT.INI.

  

     Contents of the boot.ini file

     Parameters for the boot.ini file  
will show you how to edit the file in order to customize the boot up procedure which is different from the disk-based bootup configuration. The version differentiation: If you have studied my previous article, XXTB #32, you will find many parallels in the DOS family (DOS/Win9x/ME) boot procedure and the NT family (WinNT/2000/XP) boot procedure. Unfortunately, this scheme does not work with XP. The MBR is universal whether it is for DOS, Win9x, WinNT, or even for Linux. On the other hand, once the boot up partition is selected the corresponding boot sector (the first sector of the partition) supplies a specific boot code which is either for the DOS family (DOS/Win9x/ME) or the NT family. In the DOS family, the first file loaded will be C:\IO.SYS which is Windows-version specific. That is, when a particular IO.SYS is loaded, it accepts only the proper version of Windows and fails to boot up with any other version. The next file looked at is C:\MSDOS.SYS which supplies the location of the Windows system directory. So, once the IO.SYS is loaded, you cannot choose Windows versions --- this is why it is difficult to have multiple-versions of DOS family OS to be loaded. On the other hand, in the NT family, the first file loaded will be NTLDR which is not version-specific. Therefore, you may select which version within the NT family to load (WinNT4 or Win2000). But if you mix NT versions, make sure that you use the NTLDR module which came from the newer version. That is, Win2000's NTLDR is good for NT4 but NT4's NTLDR cannot load Win2000. About the Recovery Console: The bare DOS environment is often useful in accessing files in partitions formatted in FAT. On the other hand, files in an NTFS partition cannot be accessed from DOS. When you have problem in an NTFS volume, the standard method to repair the disk is to load the Recovery Console. Even if you have a FAT-based system disk for an NT/2000/XP system, fixing the MBR and the boot sector needs the Recovery Console. After all, the Emergency Repair Disk (ERD) is useful only when you establish the Recovery Console (or the Emergency Repair Session). It is strongly advised that you should go through the Recovery Console at least once while your WinNT/2000/XP system is in good health. There are three ways to enter the Recovery Console: 1. Use the set of Setup Diskettes (4 floppies). This method is painfully slow. But, simplest to operate. 2. Use the original install CD-ROM and run /I386/WINNT.EXE (from DOS), or /I386/WINNT32.EXE (from Windows). If the Install CD is a bootable CD and your BIOS supports booting from the CD, this is faster. Even if your system cannot boot from the CD, if you have a Win9x Emergency Disk, it lets you configure a DOS environment with CD access so that you can launch the WINNT.EXE or WINNT32.EXE. Note, entering the Recovery Console uses the same setup procedure which is also used for a fresh WinNT/2000/XP install. Be assured that you will be given a menu to enter the Recovery Console instead of re-installing the whole OS from scratch. 3. Use the files in the C:\CMDCONS (hidden) directory which can be set up on your hard disk (while you have a healthy Win2000). As one of the boot options in the menu which are shown from entries in BOOT.INI, you can simply select the Recovery Console option at the boot up time. This is the quickest method of all. (We have tested this technique only with Win2000 --- but not with NT4.) We recommend the 3rd option as the most convenient method. Basically, all of the three alternatives use exactly the same set of files --- the difference is where these files are loaded from. In the third case, it consumes about 7 MB of disk space which is not much, today. Even in rare instances where your system fails to go far enough to show you the boot menu, you can use the Quick Boot Diskette to load the files in the C:\CMDCONS directory. Here's how to set up the C:\CMDCONS files. 1. Inside Windows 2000, run the following console command from the Install CD (assume it is accessed at D:) D:\I386\WINNT32.EXE /cmdcons This will create the C:\CMDCONS (hidden) directory and saves all the files which are neccessary for the Recovery Console. It also modifies the BOOT.INI file with an appropriate entry for the Recovery Console option. 2. Edit the BOOT.INI file in your Quick Boot Diskette by looking at the newly modified C:\BOOT.INI file on your hard disk. The line should look like the following: C:\CMDCONS\BOOTSECT.DAT="MS Win2000 Recovery Console" /cmdcons Note: In the above discussion, the system volume was assumed to be C:\ which can be another drive letter. Once you are in the Recovery Console, it is like the DOS world (many familiar commands such as DIR, MKDIR, CHDIR, COPY, are there). The long filename is also supported. You can even invoke a batch file (using a different syntax). Troubleshooting: If your system cannot boot up using the Quick Boot Diskette made by this technique, you still need to run the Emergency Repair Disk which is outside the scope of this article. The following Microsoft article may be a good starting point: "Description of the Windows 2000 Recovery Console". Let me know if you encounter problems with the techniques described in this article. Kan Yabumoto

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #34




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The differences between XXCOPY Pro and Freeware

Date:    2001-10-09

====================================================================



This article explains how XXCOPY Professional Edition (XXCOPY-PRO)

differs from the XXCOPY Freeware which are available for free.



Currently practically all XXCOPY-Pro features are available

in the XXCOPY Freeware version except that in some circumstances,

the Freeware version displays a message which requires a user

response.  





1. Accessing remote computers (networked computers), beyond the

   number of computers for which your license allows.



     XXCOPY version               // Host count (# of computers) 

    --------------------------------------------------------------

     XXCOPY Freeware              // 1 (the local computers only)

     XXCOPY-PRO (TestDrive)       // 100 = 99 networked computers

     XXCOPY-PRO (for N computers) // N =  (N-1) networked computers



2. Macro references



     /$DATE$    // Current Date (same as /$MMDD$)

     /$TIME$    // Current Time

     /$YYMMDD$  // Any combination of YYYY, MM, DD, HH, NN, SS

     /$xxxxxx$  // And many more

     /%xxxxxx%  // Reference to environment variable from /CF



3. Security related features (available in NT/2000/XP platforms)



     /SC        // Copy security info when a file is copied

     /SF        // Fixup security info, without copying file



4. Non-default log output



     /oP        // Parameter

     /oP        // Parameter (command switch detailed) list.

     /oI        // Include-item (alternate file template) list.

     /oX        // Exclude-item list.

     /oF        // File list (files which were successfully operated on).

     /oS        // Skipped-file list (with the reason why skipped).

     /oD        // Deleted-file list (by a /Z or /ZY switch).

     /oE        // Error summary with the system error code



5. Miscellaneous advanced features



     /FD        // Inter-timezone (adjust the destination timestamp)

     /FS        // Inter-timezone (adjust the source timestamp)



6. Warning on an untested OS environment



     XXCOPY Freeware        // Always a warning is displayed

     XXCOPY-PRO (TestDrive) // The OS-version warning may be suppressed



7.  Other occasions



     XXCOPY Freeware  // You may see occasional user prompts

     XXCOPY-PRO       // Practically all prompts can be suppressed.





The above list is a description of difference between the two

XXCOPY packages as of this writing (v.2.60.0 for the official

release version and v.2.71.0 for beta test version).



In the future, more differences may occur as we implement more

features which are primarily for the XXCOPY Professional Edition.





We guarantee that the XXCOPY-PRO version with a proper license will

function indefinitely under the current operating environment.



Of course, XXCOPY Freeware comes with no warranty of any kind.




© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #35




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: How XXCOPY-Pro manages the site license.

Date:    2002-05-05

====================================================================



The major design feature that differentiates XXCOPY-Pro from its

Freeware package is its behavior in a network environment.



In order to uniformly apply the site-licensing terms to all users,

XXCOPY-Pro implements its rudimentary counting procedure which

keeps track of the number of computers (the computers on the

network which may be called server, workstation, terminal, or

whaterver) that are accessed by XXCOPY.  The record is kept inside

the XXCOPY entry of the system registry.



This article explains how the XXCOPY-Pro keeps track of the

number of unique computers it encounters using an exmple of

administering a site license for ten computers. 





1.  Installation



    When you acquire a site licence for 10 computers, you will

    receive a special license file (XXCOPY.LIC) which is custom-

    made for you.  The license file is typically delivered to

    you as a small zipped file which is attached to an Email.

    To properly install XXCOPY-Pro, place the unzip XXCOPY.LIC

    file in the same directory as the XXCOPY.EXE file

    (separately downloaded from Pixelab's server).

 

    The first section of the license file is a text which is

    terminated with a Ctrl-Z (End-of-File) marker.  It is

    suitable for direct priting.  You can examine the contents

    of a license file by simply running the following command

    line at the console:



        type xxcopy.lic



    And you will get a print out like the following:



    XXCOPY License

    Serial Number: 67-8901-2345      License Code: 98-7654-3210

    License Granted to:         Pixelab, Inc. of Naperville, IL

    The maximum number of installations at this site:  Ten (10)



    To install, execute the following command line:



        xxcopy  /install



    To display the current license status:



        xxcopy  /license





2.  Record in the System Registry



    XXCOPY then creates an entry in the system registry and

    sets up a table for 10 computer names to be stored

    (likewise, a site license for 50 computers creates a

    table good for 50 entries).  The first slot in the table

    always keeps the name of your computer (the network name

    for "My Computer").



    XXCOPY keeps track of all remote computer names (UNCs)

    it encounters.  The name of the most recently accessed

    computer will always be placed to the second position in

    the table immediately below the host computer.  If your

    XXCOPY usages are always with the same set of computers,

    the entries in the table will remain the same (but the

    order of the entries reflects the recency of the access).





3.  Listing the name of remote host



    You may make a list of the remote hosts that were accessed

    by XXCOPY by the following command line:

    

        xxcopy /hosts





4.  What if you exceeds the limit?



    As long as XXCOPY's network access is within the limit of

    the site license, everything will be fine.  Now, when you

    access a machine whose name is not in the table and the

    table is full?   This happens from time to time.  It is

    not always a violation of the license terms.  We expect

    that computer names are changed from time to time.  When

    an employee leaves a company, his computer is often

    renamed.  Or, equipements always come and go anyway.



    So, when an 11th computer is accessed by XXCOPY, it will

    display the following user prompt:



      \\MyServer, a server (networked computer) volume is being

      accessed.  The server is not in the list of 10 computers

      that you are authorized to access using XXCOPY.  In order

      to avoid this warning message in the future, you should

      upgrade the license so that more server names (at least

      11 computers) can be maintained.



      Do you wish to add the server name in the list now (Y/N)?



    If you answer Y(es), the new computer name will be recorded

    (at the second spot immediately below the host computer's

    entry) in the table.  That will push away the computer name

    in the bottom of the list (the least recently accessed one).

    On your next access to the remote computer by XXCOPY, you

    will not see the user prompt again.



    On the other hand, you may answer N(o) to the prompt.  In

    that case, the name of the new computer will not be saved

    in the list --- no changes in the table takes place.

    But, when you access the same machine the next time, you

    will have to see the same prompt once again.  If you get

    tired of this, it is probably time to upgrade your site-

    license with a larger limit.




© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #36




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Norton Ghost and XXCOPY

Date:    2002-03-01

====================================================================



This technical bulletin is based on the article that I wrote for

BootLIST.Com (www.bootdisk.com/bootlist/005.htm) in February, 2002.





  ====== To be revised ======





************************************

  What is XXCOPY really all about?

************************************





By Kan Yabumoto    <tech@xxcopy.com>      2002-02-07

                   ©2002 Copyright  Kan Yabumoto





Hello, Everyone.  My name is Kan Yabumoto.  I'm the author

of the XXCOPY software.  It is a great honor to be invited

to this new exciting newsletter for an article.  The subject

is of course, XXCOPY.  Its home page is



    http://www.xxcopy.com



Rather than boring you all to the death by parading the

myriad of features in XXCOPY, I would like to pick a few

topics and give you my side of the story.



I've been using a lot of software products just like you,

and I seldom come into contact with the author of the program.

So, let me make myself available to you and discuss the

product's history, the primary goal, and the near-term and

long-term road map of XXCOPY development.  Also, I would like

to brag about a feature in XXCOPY that I'm most proud of.



After all, XXCOPY is just a file-copy utility.  In order for

XXCOPY to stand out from the crowd in the competition,  it has

to offer to the user something unique.  We wanted to make

XXCOPY irresistible to those who give it a try.



Many of you must have come to know XXCOPY for a particular

purpose.  I hope you found it useful for what you had in mind.

But, chances are, you are still wondering why XXCOPY is so

often talked about in various newsgroups lately.



From my point of view, many favorable comments about XXCOPY

by others are often picking just one of the many virtues of

XXCOPY.  By observing the newsgroups at the sideline, I

often find myself frustrated by the fact people talk about

the relatively "minor" features of the tool.  The real

power of XXCOPY seems to be largely untapped by most users.



So, here I am, trying to de-mystify the tool and set the

record straight.  What is XXCOPY all about?





1. Brief history of XXCOPY



  XXCOPY debuted in the Internet as a freeware in November,

  1999.  But its predecessor, DCOPY (and DCOPY32) was born

  around 1994.  It has been a bundled utility program in

  our DATMAN package (DATMAN makes a tape drive behave like

  a disk.  Visit http://www.datman.com for details).  Its

  modest goal was to circumvent the problem of Microsoft's

  XCOPY which often got stuck in a script (batch file) when

  files are transferred to a NetWare file server for backup.



  The file-sharing problem in a multi-tasking and networking

  environment has always been a common headache. The problem

  will be with us forever.  When a file is exclusively opened

  by one program, the next program which attempts to access

  it has no choice but to let the first program be done with it.

  The trouble with Microsoft's XCOPY was that it gave the

  user the infamous "R(etry) or A(bort)" choice --- you either

  try it again which usually gets you nowhere, or abort the

  whole backup operation.  But worst of all, the situation

  makes the batch script sit there idle (Microsoft later

  added the much-needed third, F(ail) option in the prompt

  along with the /C switch to prevent a failed copy from

  ruining the rest of the backup operation).  DCOPY had that

  capability long before Microsoft corrected its XCOPY.



  We always listen to the users.  Later, we found ourselves

  adding many more backup-related features to DCOPY.  But,

  after many more switches were added, one key principle

  remains the same: the latest XXCOPY's command line syntax

  is still compatible with Microsoft's XCOPY.



  When we released XXCOPY to the general public in late 1999,

  our motivation was to provide something for free in the

  Internet to attract more traffic to our main DATMAN.COM

  web site.  We gave it the new name, XXCOPY which correctly

  characterizes the nature of the product; the behavior stays

  very close to that of XCOPY.  This makes the user's first

  experience with XXCOPY relatively painless, provided that

  he already knows Microsoft's XCOPY fairly well.



2. XXCOPY for cloning the Win9x system disk.



  Soon after the XXCOPY freeware version became more widely

  circulated, a few people discovered its usefulness in

  duplicating the Windows 9x system disk.  I'm not sure

  exactly who mentioned this usage first.  At various

  newsgroups, XXCOPY was recommended to others for disk

  cloning purposes.  At that time, many people were using

  Microsoft's XCOPY for this.  We still see plenty of

  users run the following command for this purpose.



    XCOPY  C:\  D:\  /h /e /k /r /y



  Being compatible with XCOPY, XXCOPY can be run using

  exactly the same combination of switches



    XXCOPY C:\  D:\  /h /e /k /r /y



  But, I was recommending an improved variation,



    XXCOPY C:\  D:\  /ks /h /e /r /q /y /bi /zy



  In order to help memorize this long combination, I

  came up with the following mnemonic for it;

  "Kiss Her Quick, Yes, But I'm busy."  But, it requires

  photographic memory.  So, I devised a shortcut switch

  in XXCOPY that is a direct substitution of the longer

  combination. That is how the /CLONE switch came to life.



  Now, the command is much easier to remember.



    XXCOPY C:\  D:\  /CLONE



  Of course, we could have advocated a batch file to achieve

  the similar goal.  But, this shortest form as a built-in

  switch was an instant success.  Then, I wrote a special

  manual with step-by-step instructions for this operation.



    http://www.xxcopy.com/clone



  If you help others by mentioning the /CLONE switch for

  duplicating the Win9x system disk, I hope you also add

  this pointer in your advice so that the new user will not

  have to wonder "What's next?"  after he runs the /CLONE

  operation and still does not have a bootable disk.

  The MBR, the boot sectors, etc. must be properly

  initialized in order to have a bootable system disk.



  Now, you know why we did not develop XXCOPY for disk clone

  operations.  Nor was the very /CLONE operation specifically

  designed for cloning!  It is simply a natural consequence

  of making a versatile tool for many purposes.  The /CLONE

  switch remains a mere convenience feature in XXCOPY to

  ease the typing and memorizing.



3. Ghost, DriveImage and XXCOPY



  The /CLONE switch made XXCOPY a free alternative to

  Norton Ghost and PowerQuest's DriveImage.  I have great

  respect for both of these products.  In newsgroups, we find

  so many people asking the same question over and over

  again.  Here's a typical thread:



  Q: I just bought a 20GB hard disk and I want to replace my

     Win98 system disk with the new one.  Tell me how?



  A: Most hard disks come with a utility to do just that.

     Otherwise, buy Ghost or DriveImage, or try freeware XXCOPY.



  Some people adamantly suggest Norton Ghost.  Not only do they

  recommend it for the one-time system cloning operation, they

  also advocate the use of Ghost for daily/weekly backup.  That

  is fine.  But, many say they chose XXCOPY and they are happy

  with it.  After all, when you buy a $90 disk, would you spend

  an additional $50 just for this one-time operation?



    ---------------------------------------------------------

     I hear the Ghost software that one bought two years ago

     cannot do well in cloning the XP disk.  Thus, the $50

     price tag is not a one-time investment for a good tool,

     but rather a recurring expense like an annual

     subscription.  I suspect many Ghost advocates are a

     professional system integrator or consultant who buy

     Ghost as his tool for everyday work.  But they must

     not forget that they are talking to one-time users.

    ---------------------------------------------------------



  XXCOPY works great for this purpose.  It works better

  than the XCOPY method by not taking chances with the short

  filename (SFN) (see http://www.xxcopy.com/xxcopy03.htm

  for detail).  XXCOPY preserves the SFN when files are copied

  using the long filename (LFN), whereas most other programs

  (including Microsoft's tools) neglect this aspect.



  XXCOPY's /CLONE command can be used for subsequent daily

  backup without any change (by leaving the old disk in D:

  as a backup drive after the disk swap).  The incremental

  backup will run much faster than Ghost or DriveImage for

  this purpose.  Moreover, in a relatively rare instance of

  either of the disks (original or the newly cloned one)

  having a bad sector, a disk imaging software such as Ghost

  usually cannot handle the bad sector unless the two drives

  have bad sectors in exactly the same positions.



  It is quite amazing that both approaches work.  It's like

  traveling from New York to New Delhi, via Hawaii or via

  Europe.  We fly to totally opposite directions at first.

  In the middle, we are thousands of miles apart.  Yet, we

  arrive at the same goal.



  Am I saying XXCOPY is better than Ghost or DriveImage?  No.

  I say it is just plain silly to compare apples and oranges.

  But, since it continues to be a hot issue, let me briefly

  give my advice to the disk cloning issue once and for all.



  My answer to the Win9x/ME disk clone question:

  -------------------------------------------------------------

   Try XXCOPY Freeware first (be sure to read the XXTB #10).

   If it fails, use Ghost or DriveImage that fits your budget.

 -------------------------------------------------------------



  Honestly, I shouldn't waste my energy on this small issue.

  XXCOPY has never been designed for and will never be made

  for disk imaging.  It happens to work great when one

  wants to make a bootable system disk for Win9x/ME.



  As of this writing, we do not have a similar recipe for

  making a bootable WinNT/2K/XP disk using only XXCOPY.



4. XXCOPY - More Than A One-Trick-Pony.



  When you have done your first /CLONE job with XXCOPY

  and you are happy with it, XXCOPY is not finished yet.

  It has just demonstrated its versatility in one of the

  many things that it is capable of.  Let me emphasize it:



    XXCOPY is not a one-trick-pony, not just for /CLONE.



  When you run XXCOPY /HELP for the first time to obtain the

  help text, the sheer volume will probably overwhelm you.

  The good news is, you need not learn them all at once.

  Take time.  Learn one feature at a time and use it

  repeatedly and explore some more.



  Here is a non-exhaustive list of what those switches do.



   a. select files by filetime, size, attributes, etc.



   b. specify exclusion pattern (files and directories)

      specify inclusion pattern (filename patterns only)



   c. create log file and name-list file.



   d. modify behaviors of all the above and much more...



  In essence, the great majority of file management activities

  you want to carry out are probably supported by XXCOPY already.

  But you need to find out which switch to use and that can be

  difficult.  My favorite reference page for that is:



    http://www.xxcopy.com/xxcopy27.htm



  This page deliberately avoids the alphabetical order; instead,

  the listing is ordered by the functionality of the switches.

  It is even more useful as an overview of all the available

  switches using the functional classification in mastering the

  galaxy of XXCOPY command switches.  I highly recommend it.



  Let me conclude this section with some more examples:



   xxcopy \src\ \dst\ /da#10      // files modified within 10 days

   xxcopy \src\ \dst\ /da:2002-2  // files modified after Feb 2002.

   xxcopy \src\ \dst\ /sz:-100m   // files up to 100 MB long

   xxcopy \src\ \dst\ /ats        // files with system attribute

   xxcopy \src\ \dst\ /x*.tmp     // exclude files that end by .TMP



  Rather than showing all of the 200+ switches, I let your

  educated guess extend this short list to what kind of cases

  the other 200+ switches might do for you.



5. The feature in XXCOPY that I'm most proud of.



  If there is a defining feature in XXCOPY, this is it. 

  The feature called "Wild-Wildcard" is the crown jewel of

  the program.  It opens up new ways to look at the files

  and directories.  Forgive my complacency here, but I want

  you to feel my enthusiasm for it and learn the feature.



  From the user's point of view, the Wild-wildcard feature

  allows you to place as many wildcard characters and at

  any position in the source specifier.  It's quite elegant.



  Programming this feature was a little hard.  Then, handling

  the exclusion items with wildcards made it more difficult.

  Now, to implement all this with a great execution efficiency,

  was the most challenging experience in the entire project.

  But, inventing this type of unique and powerful feature

  brings joy to the programming profession.



  Here's an example of that.



    xxcopy c:\micro*\*\cache*\*\*.jpg  d:\myimages\



  If you know what "*" does to a filespec at the end of a

  fully spelled-out path, you can reasonably guess what it

  does when it appears in the middle of a multi-level pathspec.



  If you are confused and prefer not to know it, that is fine.

  You can use XXCOPY without knowing anything about this feature.

  On the other hand, if you are intrigued by it, let me briefly

  explain.  It's a liberal application of wildcards ( * and ?).



  One way to look at this is to view the feature as an extension

  of the /S switch.  See the difference of the following lines:



    xxcopy c:\mydir\myfile.*      // one directory level

    xxcopy c:\mydir\myfile.* /s   // multi-level subdirectories



  Most XCOPY users are quite familiar with the /S switch that

  allows the file pattern (myfile.*) to appear anywhere inside

  the subdirectories under the c:\mydir\ directory.  The

  file may appear immediately inside the c:\mydir\ directory

  or it may be in second, third or any level of subdirectory.



  Now, we introduce a new notation to denote the effect of /S:



    xxcopy c:\mydir\myfile.*   /s   // multi-level subdirs

    xxcopy c:\mydir\*\myfile.*      // equivalent to the above



  When it has the single-star (..\*\..) sequence, it signifies

  that the item(s) at the right hand side can be at any level of

  subdirectory.  The two command lines behave exactly the same.



  Once we agree upon how the sequence works when it is placed

  immediately left to the filename pattern, we can shift the

  occurrence of the single-star sequence to any other place.

  In short, this notation lets you apply the mechanics of /S on

  the subdirectory level other than the lowest (rightmost) level.



    xxcopy c:\mydir\*\xyz\myfile.*  // the /S switch can't do this



  Another innovation in the wild-wildcard feature is to allow

  wildcards (both * and ?) to appear for any number of times.



    xxcopy c:\*\*dir\*\xyz?\*\myfile.*    // can really go wild.



  So, let us wrap up this section with one more example:



    xxcopy c:\abc\*\xyz\*.jpg



  The xyz subdirectory can be anywhere under c:\abc;



    c:\abc\xyz\john.jpg

    c:\abc\def\xyz\paul.jpg

    c:\abc\def\ghi\xyz\john.jpg



  All the above are selected with c:\abc\*\xyz\*.jpg



6. A One-Liner Batch File for You.



  Who in their right mind need to go wild with the Wild-Wildcard?



  You seldom need to go very wild in filespec.  But, the ultimate

  flexibility in XXCOPY becomes very handy when you look for

  something in your disk.  Since you don't want to remember

  the XXCOPY switches that work best for file searches, a batch

  file really makes your life easier.



  Here is my favorite batch file:



    where.bat

   -----------------------------------------------------

    xxcopy /lzdl/s/h %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9

   -----------------------------------------------------



   It is a file-finder script.  It often works best with a

   pathname that starts with the root (but need not to).

   With this batch file, I sometimes go quite wild.

   You may add any "adjective" using the xxcopy switches



    examples:



    where \windows\*\cache*\   // list all in cache dirs

    where \*\temp*\  /sz:0     // zero-byte files in temp dirs

    where \          /da#10m   // made in the past 10 min

    where \mydir\ \ref\   /u   // files common in both dirs

 

   This simple batch script exemplifies the flexibility of

   XXCOPY by allowing many ways to select files.  For instance,

   the fourth example above shows off some nifty combination.



7. XXCOPY Road Map, Near-term and long term.



  Lately, I started to realize a disturbing fact in XXCOPY's

  user community.  I enjoy relating my experience in early

  days of CP/M, MS-DOS and so on with XXCOPY users who reminisce

  their stories with me.  But I suspect that the average age

  of the XXCOPY users is higher than that of the whole computer

  professionals (I'm afraid the same is true to BootDisk.Com)!



  We often hear from people at IT departments' supervising

  positions saying their young system administrators prefer

  clicking the mouse button a few thousand times to taking the

  time and edit a five-line batch file.  Sadly, it may be true.



  If we continue the command line-only design, XXCOPY will

  repeat the demise of the dinosaurs.  We have no illusion.

  So, Graphical User Interface (GUI) is the future of XXCOPY.



  In the near term, a simplistic GUI-based program will satisfy

  novice users' need for XXCOPY.  Since it will omit most

  advanced features, this product can be finished first.



  We also want to introduce a GUI application which helps the

  user find the right switches for file management operations.

  Since it presents nearly all XXCOPY switches in a well-

  organized fashion, it takes longer to develop; hence, it

  will be released at a later date.



  In the past, we have been contacted by a few individuals

  who wanted to develop a GUI-based front end program which

  runs side by side with the XXCOPY program.  We welcome

  initiatives from interested parties who might work with us

  for a loose, non-exclusive partnership.



8. Conclusion for now.



  In conclusion, I try to make XXCOPY a worthwhile program

  for nearly everybody who is eager to learn its rich set of

  file management operations.  My publicly stated goal for

  this program is:  One day, XXCOPY will be called



    The Undisputed King of the File Management Utilities.



  Lastly, I hope this will not be my last time in this

  newsletter.  If you have questions, please send me your

  comments to bootdisk@xxcopy.com.  I will respond to you in

  my next appearance here (whatever name you use in the

  Email (but not your Email address) will appear in it).



  Alternatively, you may post your question to the XXCOPY

  discussion group, or join the group and/or subscribe the

  Email delivery of the messages.



  To post your message, send Email to: xxcopy@yahoogroups.com

  To subscribe the messages: xxcopy-subscribe@yahoogroups.com



  It is a Yahoo-sponsored group (with some ads), and a great

  place to meet other XXCOPY users who are quite eager to

  help newbies with their experience.  I will also post my

  message there when a clarification is needed.  It is also

  the place where announcements about XXCOPY are made.  For

  example, a new XXCOPY beta version is always announced in

  the discussion group, first.  You can post your suggestion

  for a new feature there.  It's like a Usenet newsgroup

  specialized in XXCOPY except responses usually arrive much

  more quickly.  The archived messages (> 1500) are a gold mine

  to retrieve past messages using the keyword search.



  So, please join the "XXCOPY Revolution".



Kan Yabumoto

Naperville, Illinois.






© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #37




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Format Specifications of Command File in XXCOPY

Date:    2003-10-30 (revised)

====================================================================



Introduction:



  XXCOPY provides a mechanism to allow the user to specify the

  invocation command using text files.  Currently, there are two

  cases of accepting the command input from a text file.

  

    /CF<cfile>   // command file for regular command text     

    /EX<xfile>   // exclusion file; lists exclusion items



   -----------------------------------------------------------

     The only difference between the two types of text file

     is that the command file (by /CF) contains the command

     text that consists of ordinary XXCOPY command arguments

     and switches whereas the exclusion file (by /EX) holds

     a list of exclusion items (file and directory specifiers)

     without the "/X" command-prefix on each exclusion item.

     Other than this difference, the two types of file follow

     the same set of rules in their format.

   -----------------------------------------------------------



  The purpose of XXCOPY's command file is to allow the user

  to compose a command text that may exceed the limit of the

  command line length.



  Since the command line syntax of the original XCOPY (and

  earlier versions of XXCOPY) had to cope with the limit in

  the overall length of the command line, the command switches

  were designed to be short, hence often cryptic.  As a

  consequence, the readability suffered.



  Once we are free from the limit in text length, we can use

  the freedom to our advantage.  Of course, the command file

  still accepts the same command text that you would enter

  directly to the command line.  You may think of the command

  file as an "include" file that supplies a stream of text to

  the command line.



  E.g.,  XXCOPY   /CF:myfile.xcf



         This invocation is equivalent to running the XXCOPY

         program by typing the contents of the myfile.xcf

         file directly at the command line.



  You may add switches before or after the /CF switch. In

  addition, you may use two or more /CF switches in one line.

  All of them are evaluated from left to right.



  E.g.,  XXCOPY   /Q  /CF:myfile.xcf  /WE





Examples Speak Tons:



  For those who are in a hurry and rely on intuition by looking

  at a few examples, let me show a few of them with ample comments.

  If you read all the comments in the examples, most of the

  key features are explained.  But for air-tight definitions

  of the format rules, you must read the lengthy (and boring)

  details that follow.





  Let me start with a short one.



    script1.xcf

    -----------------------------------------------------------

     "C:\My Programs\" c:\backup\  /CLONE     // daily backup

    -----------------------------------------------------------



    This is a one-line script.  The line is just like an

    ordinary XXCOPY command line except the it does not

    contain the "XXCOPY" word itself at the beginning.

    Again, to run this script,

    

        XXCOPY  /CF:c:\bin\script1.xcf



    Note: the comment is allowed even in the real command line

    --- this becomes handy in a batch file.



    

  Here comes a little more realistic example.



    script2.xcf

    -----------------------------------------------------------

     // This script should be run once a day.

      

     "C:\My Programs\"           // the source specifier

     c:\backup\myprog\           // the destination dir

     /CLONE                      // save the latest

     /Z0                         // don't remove extra files

     /oN:c:\bin\script1.log      // create a log file

     /WE                         // wait for a key at the end 

    -----------------------------------------------------------



     My first recommendation is to place only one command item

     per line and to add a comment on each line.





  Finally, let me give you a classy example.  The text in it

  is meant to explain the various features of the command file.



    script3.xcf

    -----------------------------------------------------------

     /*****************************************************

     *                                                    *

     *  script3.xcf    created 2002-05-05                 *

     *                                                    *

     *  This XXCOPY script carries out a daily            *

     *  incremental backup operation from C: to E:        *

     *  The E: drive may be made bootable as C:.          *

     *                                                    *

     *  Invocation:  xxcopy  /cf:c:\backup\script3.xcf    *

     *                                                    *

     *   Log file:    c:\backup\script3.log               *

     *                                                    *

     *   Note: A command filename may have any extension. *

     *         We use .XCF (for Xxcopy Command File).     *

     *                                                    *

     *****************************************************/

     C:\            // source (the whole system disk)

     E:\            // destination  (mirror disk)



     /clone                      // my favorite switch     

     /PZ0                        // prompt killer (for /Z)

     /ON:c:\backup\script3.log   // create a log file

     /Fo:c:\backup\script3.lst   // save file list

     /FM:dtzl                    // list file format control



     //  list of exclusions  ------------------------------

     /X:*.tmp                    // no temp files

     /X:\Windows\*\cache*\       // cache files of any kind

     /X:\*\cookies\              // cookies are junk food

     /X:"c:\My documents\my pictures\2002-May// string split

         \Susie's birthday\*.jpg"            // into 2 lines



          /* 

             A // sequence preceded by a non-blank character

             allows you to logically connect two lines.

             (This is a traditional C-like comment.)

          */ 



      /EX:c:\backup\exclude.lst  // you may use /EX inside

      /CF:c:\backup\another.xcf  // nestable (up to 8 levels)



     :: An in-line comment may start by // or :: which ends

     // at the end of the line.

    -----------------------------------------------------------



    Note to experienced programmers:

 

       The Command File format is modeled after modern

       programming languages like C.  A few exceptions: 



         1. A comment does not behave as a blank.

         2. A comment may be inside a quoted string.

         3. It has a peculiar line-continuation mechanism.





Command File Basic Rules (also applies to Exclusion File):



  The XXCOPY command file is an ordinary plain text file that

  can be created/edited by any text editor (e.g., Notepad).



  Currently, only a 8-bit characters are supported.  I.e.,

  Unicode text is not supported, yet.



  You may add any number of lines in the command file.



  Each line is terminated by a CR (Carriage Return),

  a LF (Linefeed), or a CR-LF sequence.  We call them

  line-break, collectively.

  

  A TAB character can be used interchangeably with a space

  (also called blank).  In this document, we use the word

  blank which may actually be a TAB.  (A TAB character is

  not allowed in a file or directory name.)



  A line-break is usually treated as a blank.

  

  There is a provision to make two (or more) lines behave

  like a continuous line using the Line Continuation Mechanism

  (see below).



  All the usual XXCOPY command line syntax applies to the

  command file text.



   ------------------------------------------------------------

    The XXCOPY command line contains two kinds of arguments:



    1. Command switches (also called options) that always start

       with a slash (/) character (one exception to this

       rule is a macro reference that has the /$xxxx$ sequence

       which may appear as a non-switch argument.



    2. Non-switch arguments that do not start with a slash (/).

       The first non-switch argument is always the source

       specifier and the second (optional) non-switch argument

       is always the destination directory specifier.



    The two types of arguments can be ordered in any way

    except that the source specifier always comes before the

    destination specifier.



    Command switches are evaluated by the order they appear.



    Some related switches are affected by the evaluation order.

   --------------------------------------------------------------





Comments:



  You are encourage to add abundant comments to clarify the

  the meaning and the intent of the command switches.

  Comments are strictly for people and ignored by XXCOPY.



  Two styles of comments are supported:



  1.  In-line comment           // like this one



        An in-line comment starts at either // or :: and

        extends until the end of line.  It can start anywhere

        in the line including at the beginning of the line.



  2.  Bracketed comment         /* like this */



        A bracketed comment begins at /* and ends at */ which

        may straddle over two or more lines.





  Precedence of comments:



    The two styles are of equal precedence.  That is, when

    an in-line comment is specified, a /* sequence specified

    to the right hand side of the in-line comment header

    (// or ::) within the same line is completely ignored.



    Similarly, once a bracketed comment field is started by

    a /* sequence, either // or :: within the bracketed

    comment field has no effect until the terminator, */ is

    encountered.



  Not a substitute for a blank:



    Unlike most programming languages which treat a comment

    field as a blank, XXCOPY does not treat either an

    in-line comment or a bracketed comment as a blank.

    That is, a bracketed comment field that begins at /* and

    ends at */ may even be placed within a path specifier

    (this bad habit is strongly discouraged, nevertheless,

    it is syntactically acceptable). 



  Comments within a quoted string:



    The comments and line-continuation mechanisms are totally

    independent of whether or not they appear within a quoted

    string (surrounded by a pair of double-quotes, ").



  No carry-over of a comment:



    An open bracketed comment which is started by /* but not

    terminated by */ within the command file will be implicitly

    terminated so that a runaway comment (a syntax error) will

    not be carried over to outside of the file.





Line Continuation Mechanism:



  Since Windows' long filename (LFN) may have as many as

  256 characters, the whole string may not be visible in

  a window of a text editor if it is entered as one long

  string.  XXCOPY's command file format allows you to break

  up a long string into multiple lines to facilitate the

  handling and help improve the readability while treating

  it logically as a single string.



  There are two ways to logically connects adjacent lines.

  Both of them take advantage of the way XXCOPY treats the

  comment field (the In-line comment and the Bracketed comment

  as discussed above).  Let me explain the use of Bracketed

  comment first which is probably easier to use.



    Bracketed comment to connect adjacent lines:



      Since a bracketed comment will be removed by XXCOPY

      as the first step in processing a command text, it provies

      a simple way to connect two lines.  All the characters

      between the /* sequence and the */ sequence (including

      the beginning and ending two characters) will be completely

      reremoved from the text.  

      

      Example: 



          "C:\Documents and Settings\Default User\/*  comment

             */Application Data\"



        In this example, the above two lines are the same as

         

          "C:\Documents and Settings\Default User\Application Data\"



      

      Unlike in common programming languages such as C, the

      bracketted comment will not be substituted by a space

      character.  Therefore, the absence of any space character

      before and after the comment field will result in the

      combined string without space. as shown above.  You may

      also break the line after a space.  The following example

      is another example to split the same path name above.



          "C:\Documents and Settings\Default /* glue comment

              */User\Application Data\"      // regular comment



      Note that the exact number of the space character is

      preserved by this technique.



      Needless to say, you may connect an arbitrary number of

      lines into one logical string.



      Example: 



            "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual /*

          */Studio .NET\Vc7\VCWizards\Classwiz/*

          */\MFC\Simple\Templates\1033/*

          */\doc.cpp"





    In-line comment to connect adjacent lines:

 

      A line whose in-line comment field (that starts with //

      or ::) is immediately preceded by any character other than 

      a blank will be logically connected to the first non-blank

      character in the next line.





      Example: 

  

	  /ON:c:\my_directory\and_this_path_name_is//  comment

	     \connected_like_this\logfile.txt



	  In this example, the in-line comment that begins at //

	  is placed without any blank.  Any leading blank

	  (space or tab) character in the next line will be

	  discarded.  In the above example, the second line that

	  starts at the backslash connects to the previous line

	  immediately before the comment-marker (//).

 

      Example: 



	  "C:\Program Files\Micro::

	  soft Internet\Inter//       add comment if you want

	  net Mail\cookies.txt"



	  Here, a filename is broken up into three lines and

	  was not split at a clean boundary of a directory name.

	  Note that the line-continuation may connect lines 

	  even within a quoted string.



      Note:

  

	  You may add blanks at the beginning of the continuing

	  line that follow the line continuation sequence to

	  improve readability (the leading blanks are ignored).



	  It is recommended that a filename string be split at

	  a non-blank character.  If you are forced to split a

	  filename before or after a space character, you may

	  do so by use of the bracketed comment (/* .. */).

	  The following two pairs of lines are equivalent.



	  E.g.,  "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Internet\Internet//

		 /* before a space */ Mail\cookies.txt"



		"C:\Program Files\Microsoft /* after a space */::

		 Internet\Internet Mail\cookies.txt"



          But, then, it is probably simpler to use the bracketed

          comment to beging with.



	  E.g.,  "C:\Program Files\Microsoft /*

	         */ Internet\Internet Mail\cookies.txt"



  The choice between the bracketed comment scheme and the in-line

  comment scheme as the mechanims for line-connection is totally

  up to the user.  Some people just do not like the way the

  continuing line looks which typically starts with a funny

  sequence (*/).  The in-line comment method allows you to start

  the continueing line with your characters.

 

  Either of the methods does not force you to start the

  continuing text at the first colume even though it will

  be perfectly legal.





Colon after a command switch:



  With the command file feature, the old syntax of making

  the command as short as possible is no longer a virtue.

  Now, readability has precedence over compactness.



  Any XXCOPY command switch that accepts a parameter may use

  a colon to separate the command letter(s) from its parameter

  except in cases where a non-alphanumeric character is a

  syntactic element of the switch.



     /ONmyfile.log    /IN*.tmp    /FMdtl     /Q2

     /ON:myfile.log   /IN:*.tmp   /FM:dtl    /Q:2



  Here are the exceptional cases where a colon cannot be added:

  

     /DA#4   /SZ!5-10   /TD+5



  Note: the colon as a separator between the switch letter(s)

        and its parameter is strictly optional and is not a

        required element in the XXCOPY command.



        Of course, there are a few cases where a colon is a

        required character that distinguishes between like

        variations (e.g., /DA:2002 and /DA#2000).





Nesting:



  Since the text in a command file can contain any valid XXCOPY

  command arguments and switches, it is natural to allow a /CF

  switch within a command file.  It is called Nesting.

  

  To avoid a possible recursive inclusion (which would result in

  an infinite loop), XXCOPY sets the maximum nesting levels to 8.



  Nesting a command file (/CF) or using a exclusion file (/EX)

  usually add a complexity to the command organization.  But if

  used judiciously, the technique may factor common sets of

  command switches and exclusion items.  

  

  On the other hand, a single /CF file organization (without

  embedded /CF or /EX) is most straightforward.  It also allows

  viewing the entire XXCOPY in one self-sufficient file.

 


© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #80




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: A minimum WinXP Install (work in progress)

Date:    2003-03-23

====================================================================



In many occasions, it is very convenient to have a Windows XP

system with a minimum set of functionality.  



It is sometimes convenient to have a second set of Win XP

system installed on the same drive as what Microsoft calls 

"Parallel Install".  Although Microsoft discourages to use

the same volume for parallel install, there are also advantages

of doing so.  For one thing, the volume already has common

directories such as "\Program Files\" in place which are

readily available.  This is one of the situation that

knowing the minimum XP file set helps reducing the unnecessary

storage space.





  ------------------------------------------------------------

   When you use the same volume for second "Parallel Install",

   you need to take certain precaution in order to avoid

   possible collision of files that inadvertently "breaks"

   the working (main) Windows XP system.  So, don't try it

   at home --- not just yet.   Another technical bulletin

   with a full coverage on the subject is in order.

  ------------------------------------------------------------







The following is a list of files for the minimum XP.



C:\windows\

C:\windows\fonts\*.ttf   *.fon

C:\windows\resources\themes\luna\luna.msstyles

C:\windows\winsxs\manifests\*.manifest

C:\windows\winsxs\winsxs\*\comctl32.dll

C:\windows\system32\config\*.*

C:\windows\system32\drivers\*.sys

C:\windows\system32\*.dll     (less than half is all you need)





Here's what you don't need (You can safely delete)



  C:\windows\apppatch\

  C:\windows\inf\

  C:\windows\system\        (surprise!!!)

  C:\windows\msagent\

  C:\windows\help\

  C:\windows\ime\           (depending on the language)

  C:\windows\srchasst\

  C:\windows\mui\

  C:\windows\temp\

  C:\windows\debug\

  C:\windows\tasks\

  C:\windows\registration\

  C:\windows\pchealth\

  C:\windows\installer\

  C:\Windows\system32\catroot\

  C:\Windows\system32\catroot2\

  C:\Windows\system32\wbem\

  C:\Windows\system32\dllclache\

  C:\Windows\system32\setup\

  C:\Windows\system32\npp\

  C:\Windows\system32\spool\

  C:\Windows\system32\inetsrv\

  C:\Windows\system32\ime\

  C:\Windows\system32\com\

  C:\Windows\system32\1033\

  C:\Windows\system32\usmt\

  C:\Windows\system32\mui\

  C:\Windows\system32\oobe\

  C:\Windows\system32\xircom\

  C:\Windows\system32\restore\

  C:\Windows\system32\macromed\





Note that many of these directories will be created when

you boot up the system for the first time into the minimum XP

environment.  Typically the newly created directories remain

empty (you may delete them, but they will come back).





I haven't tried to find the minimum set for the font files

as well as most of the files listed as needed in here.  But,

the relatively small directories are not very relevant.

I'm concentrating on the total space occupied by unnecessary

files --- the goal for now is to reduce the storage requirement

more than the total number of files (but in a FAT volume),

many small files also contribute to a substantial waste.





So far, I have reduced the \Windows\ directory size from 650MB

down to 296 MB.  Still the largest section is by far the

C:\windows\system32\ directory which is a dumping ground for

any applications.  I have a hunch that once the essential

DLL files are identified, the total byte count will be less

than 200 MB.





Since this directory grows over time

(every time you add a new application, you may find lots of

files added into this directory), it is nice to know what

is the minimum requirement in this very important directory.



Here's a few tips to remove unnecessary files:





  *.nls     National Language support files.

            except for what aplly to your own language environment.



            In my (U.S. English) settings, I need only the

            following three:

                

            c_437.nls 

            c_1252.nls

            l_intl.nls

 

  kbd*.dll  Keyboard control library files.

            except for what applies to your own keyboard.



            In my (U.S. English) settings, I kept the following:



            kbdus.dll



	    The easiest way to find what is needed is to run the

	    following command:

	    

	    del c:\windows.alt\system32\kbd*.dll



	   (the one in use won't be deleted.)





  odbc*.dll   ODBC (Open Database Connectivity) related files



  

  avi*.dll    Vide Capture tools

 

 

Mmore study is needed to remove unnecessary files... 







If you know for sure a list of DLL files that are not needed,

please let me know.  Also, if you know certain files that

are needed in your system (especially for non-US environment,

please contact me.



Kan Yabumoto 

 


© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #81




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: A minimum Win98SE Install

Date:    2003-04-08

====================================================================



Introduction:



  In many occasions, it is convenient to have a Windows Win9X/ME

  system with a minimum set of functionality.  A typical Win98SE

  directory may grow to over 600 MB after years of use.  But, it

  can be trimmed to less than 40 MB for a mininum yet functional

  environment.  For example, when you migrate your Win9X system

  to XP, it may be useful at times to keep the minimum Win9X

  install as a dual-boot system which uses a modest disk space.

 

  There are some differences among various releases of the

  so-called "Win9X" (collectively referring to Windows 95, 95-OSR2,

  98, 98SE, ME).  Although Windows ME was the most recent release

  in the Win95 family, due to its restrictive nature (i.e., does

  not allow a smooth transition from the initial DOS stage to

  the Windows (GUI) environment. Therefore, we favor Win98SE as

  a relatively stable and easy-to-manage environment.  Since the

  variations within the Win9X family are relatively small, most of

  what you find in this article should apply to all Win9X versions.



    ----------------------------------------------------------------

     Before going into the details, let me clarify that what I

     refer to the "minimum" Windows environment is what I feel

     essential for common Windows system management, mostly file

     management operations.  That includes the ability to access

     the local area network, but not necessarily to the Internet.

     It supports fully functional "Windows" (GUI) operations with

     Explorer with mouse control.



     In short, the minimum configuration is my arbitrary choice.



      Supports                                  Removed

     ---------------------------------------   -------------------

      LAN access  External USB-Disk             Internet Explorer

      RegEdit     Scheduled Tasks               Outlook Express

      ScanDisk    Windows Explorer              Paint Brush

      DOS Box     Control Panel                 CD (music) Player 

      DeFragger   2xExplorer     (shareware)    Solitaire

      WinIpcfg    TotalCommander (shareware)    Sound Recorder

    ----------------------------------------------------------------





What to expect:



  The compactness of the Windows directory in the minimum Win9X

  system speaks a volume for its virtue.  The following chart

  was compiled from a system that I have been using and the

  directory size.  Most of us don't even remember what was the

  original size of the Windows directory when it was installed.

  So, I went back and reinstalled the Win98SE system as a clean

  install (a minimum configuration with network support).



  In the following chart, three size values are listed which

  are labeled, Initial (after a clean install), Before (the

  result of years of usage), and After (the end result of

  trimming non essential files), respectively.



   Directories                      Initial   Before    After

  ------------------------------------------------------------

   C:\windows\     (1st level only)   10 MB    22 MB     8 MB

   C:\windows\system\                 98 MB   180 MB    23 MB

   C:\windows\inf\                    12 MB    22 MB   < 1 MB

   C:\windows\java\                   11 MB    23 MB    -----

   C:\windows\sysbckup\                8 MB    18 MB    -----

   C:\windows\help\                    7 MB     9 MB    -----

   C:\windows\fonts\                   5 MB    11 MB     3 MB

   C:\windows\system32\                4 MB     4 MB     1 MB

   C:\windows\command\                 3 MB     5 MB     2 MB

   C:\windows\Start Menu\            < 1 MB   < 1 MB   < 1 MB

   C:\windows\All Users\             < 1 MB   < 1 MB   < 1 MB

   C:\windows\desktop\               < 1 MB   < 1 MB   < 1 MB

   C:\windows\(others)\               13 MB   206 MB    -----

  ------------------------------------------------------------

   Total space (size)                172 MB   500 MB    37 MB

   Total number of files              2,433    4,000      496





  When we look at the history of the Windows OS evolution from

  DOS, other than the rudimentary network support plus the GUI

  support, everything else really lies outside of the traditional

  sense of operating system.  The extra features are those which

  were once classified as applications (such as sound, image

  processing, and even video handling).  We should not lose the

  sight by Microsoft's marketing policy of bundling everything

  on earth as the so-called Windows.  Once these non essential

  parts are stripped away, Win 95 through ME should still be

  very similar.





How do we trim the excess?



  Unlike the good old DOS where just one set of files supported

  practically all IBM-compatible PCs, the Windows operating system

  is dependent on the specific combination of hardware components.

  With Windows, hardware-specific device drivers are often needed.

  This makes it unpractical to define a small set of files that can

  support most of the PCs.  The agonizingly long installation time

  for the Windows OS is spent mostly on hardware related operations.

  Therefore, the standard Windows OS contains a substantial amount

  of files that are not always needed in a particular environment.



  In order to achieve the ultimate minimum Win9X system for a

  computer,  we need to identify and eliminate what's not needed.

  And, that takes time.  The more you work, the more fat you can

  trim --- it all depends upon how much time  you want to invest.



  From a practical point of view, what most of us want is not

  necessaryly the absolute minimum configuration, but rather,

  a reasonable configuration which is nearly optimum.  After all,

  there are quite a few small files that just can't justify our

  attention.  For this article, I've written a set of XXCOPY

  command file scripts (.XCF files) which help you slash the Win9X

  directory size dramatically with a least amount of effort.

  Additional trimming of the directory size must be carried out

  by you.  To this end, I offer a few suggestions to follow.





The strategy in achieving your minimum Win9X environment.



  Since this process is a trial-and-error method, it is best

  that we keep the orininal full featured Widows directory

  intact and work on its duplicate.  It is inevitable that

  when files are removed from a working Windows environment,

  the system may become unstable, or even un-bootable.  The

  technique described here keeps this in mind and prepares a

  simple recovery method in the iterative process.  However,

  if you are a complete novice in the command line operation,

  this technique may not be for you.  If you are scared by

  this statement, you may observe what others have to say

  with this article in the XXCOPY discussion group.



  We will create a special boot diskette from which you can

  boot into either the original (MAX) Windows or the trimmed

  down (MIN) Windows from a simple menu option.  This approach

  enables us to work without disturbing the existing system

  boot setups on the hard disk.



  Let us call the special diskette, M9BSF disk which stands for

  "Minimum Win9X Boot Switch Floppy" (if only for no better name).

  The M9BFS disk used here is a variation of the Quick Boot Disk

  that was described in XXTB #32).



  When you create the M9BSF disk and restart your computer,

  you will see the following four choices in the startup menu:

  

     CURRENT    // reboot without switching

     ORIGINAL   // make the original (MAX) windows current and boot

     WIN_MINI   // make the minimum (MIN) windows current and boot

     DOS_PROMPT // stay in the DOS command prompt



   The switching between the original and the minimum Win9X

   environments is carried out by renaming the windows directories.



                              Original Mode   <--->  Minimum Mode

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

     Original Win directory   C:\WINDOWS\     <--->  C:\WINDOWS.MAX\

     Minimum Win directory    C:\WINDOWS.MIN\ <--->  C:\WINDOWS\

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    

    Note: Since WinME does not allow you to enter the Windows (GUI)

    environment directly from the initial DOS (7.1) stage, every

    time the windows directories are switched, an extra reboot is

    needed.  Windows 95, 98 and 98SE are much easier to work.





Procedure overview (See the next section for detail).



  1.  Download the minwin9x.zip file for set of script files.

      All necessary script files are pre-configured.



  2.  Prepare the M9BSF disk by formatting a system diskette

      and add a few files by running MKM9BSF.BAT.



  3.  Create the minimum Win9X directory by running MKMIN9X.BAT

      which selectively copies files from the Win9X directory.



  4.  Reboot the system using the M9BSF disk and switch to

      the new mimimum Win9x environment for the initial test.



  5.  Further remove non essential files from the minimum Win9X

      directory.  If needed, restore the orignal Win9X directory.





Step-by-step Instruction.



  1.  Boot up your computer into the Win9X (GUI) environment.



  2.  Download the following file,



        http://www.xxcopy.com/download/minwin9x.zip



        Unzip the downloded file, minwin9x.zip into the temporary directory

        (e.g., C:\MinWin9x that was created earlier as the working directory).

        You will find the following files:



         README.TXT    // a documemt file 

         WINSTATS.BAT  // show stats of the Windows directory

         MKM9BSF.BAT   // batch file to make the M9BSF disk

         MKMIN9X.BAT   // batch file to make the Minimum Windows directory

         MKMIN9X0.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 0)

         MKMIN9X1.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 1)

         MKMIN9X2.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 2)

         MKMIN9X3.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 3)

         MKMIN9X4.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 4)

         MKMIN9X5.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 5)

         MKMIN9X6.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 6)

         MKMIN9X7.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 7)

         MKMIN9X8.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 8)

         MKMIN9X9.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step 9)

         MKMIN9XA.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step A)

         MKMIN9XB.XCF  // xxcopy command file (Step B)



         M9XFILES.TXT  // list of refrence file set (by size)

         M9XFILEA.TXT  // list of refrence file set (by name)

         M9REFDIR.ZIP  // reference (skeleton) directory





  3.  Open a DOS Box ( Start > Run... [ command.com ] )

      In the remaining steps, I will provide the command line

      that you type at the DOS prompt.



  4.  Make the temporary directory that you created earlier current.



        run command:   CD  C:\MinWin9x



  5.  Format a blank diskette.



        run command:   FORMAT  A: /S



  6.  Run the MKM9BSF.BAT program in the current directory.

  

        run command:   MKM9BSF.BAT

        

        The batch file will create the following files:

  

           A:\MSDOS.SYS

           A:\CONFIG.SYS

           A:\AUTOEXEC.BAT



        These files are created on-the-fly based upon the name of

        the current Windows 9X directory (set by WINDIR setting).

        The diskette will be ready for the next reboot.



  7.  Run the MKMIN9X.BAT program in the current directory.

  

        run command:   MKMIN9X.BAT



      The batch file program will invoke a series of XXCOPY

      commands using the command files saved in this directory. 

      When the batch file is successfully executed, the new

      minimum Win9x directory will be created. 



  9.  Reboot the system using the M9BSF disk.

      Make sure that the BIOS is configured to start from

      the diskette (A:) if not set accordingly.

      

 10.  You will find the following boot menu:

 

        CURRENT    // reboot without switching

        ORIGINAL   // make the original (MAX) windows current and boot

        WIN_MINI   // make the minimum (MIN) windows current and boot

        DOS_PROMPT // stay in the DOS command prompt



 11.  Select the WIN_MINI option and enter the new minimum Win9X

      environment.  Should you find the new environment unstable,

      you may reboot the system using the M9BSF disk and select

      the ORIGINAL option to go back to the full Win9X environment.



 12.  Ultimately, it will be most convenient if you make changes

      in the XXCOPY command files (MKMIN9X?.XCF) and recreate

      the minimum Windows directory from scratch.  The XCF file

      set will serve as self-documenting scripts which can be

      used again, or become a basis for further refinements. 

 

      To obtain the statistics on the current Windows directory,

      run the WINSTATS.BAT script.



      Another useful document can be generated by the following

      XXCOPY command:

      

        xxcopy %windir%\ /LZL/S/H/NP/Q2





Refinement strategies:



  If you find, warning messages complaining a missing driver file,

  write the file name down and make necessary adjustments inside

  the Windows if you can.



  Alternatively, you may reboot and select the DOS_PROMPT option.

  At the clean DOS environment before entering Windows GUI, you may

  copy missing files from the original windows directory

  (C:\WINDOWS.MAX\).



  If you start this procedure from a Win9X system which has been

  in use for months, it is likely that the initial size of your

  minimum Windows directory may be 100 MB or more.  The first

  thing you need to do is to establish a stable Windows environment

  without encountering any warning/error message at the time of

  booting.  There are many approaches that you can take after the

  initial attempt to an optimally lean Windows directory.



  1. One of my suggestions to achieve the smallest Windows directory

     is to install a fresh Win9X directory using Microsoft's

     Install CD (choosing the minimum option).  The initial

     Windows directory size will be about 175 MB for Win98SE.

     By running the MKMIN9X.BAT program on the freshly installed

     Win9X directory, you should be able to further trim it down

     to less than 40 MB.  A fresh install of Win9X may take

     45-60 minutes.  But, it may well be quicker than any other

     method.



  2. Or, you may save some time if you study the reference files

     that are included in this package (also shown in XXTB #82.



       M9XFILES.TXT  // list of refrence file set (by size)

       M9XILESA.TXT  // list of refrence file set (by name)



     You should create a list of files in your Windows directory

     and go after large files.  The M9XFILES.TXT file will give

     you a convenient reference since it is sorted by the file

     size.  By going after the handful of largest files in

     the list, your early efforts should be rewarding.  But, as

     you go down the list of files, the return on investment in

     time will gradually decrease.



  3. Yet another method for consideration is to create a

     reference windows (skeleton) directory by unzipping the

     M9REFDIR.ZIP on your hard disk.  To conserve space, all

     the files in the reference directory are zero-byte files.



     You may use XXCOPY's advance feature to manipulate your

     Windows directory with the skeleton directory as a reference.

     

     For example the following 3-step procedure removes files

     that are 100 KB or more that are not found in the reference

     directory (the second step marks the selected files by

     Archive bit (A-bit) which will be used in the 3rd step).



       xxcopy  c:\windows\  /az/s         // clear the A-bit 

       xxcopy  c:\windows\  c:\m9refdir\  /aa/s/h/bb/sz:100k-

       xxcopy  c:\windows\  /rs/a/s/h/r   // remove files with A-bit



     Or, you may tag the files not in the reference directory

     by A-bit and use other tools such as TotalCommander to

     move files in-and-out of the directory for experiments.

     

       xxcopy  c:\windows\  /az/s         // clear the A-bit 

       xxcopy  c:\windows\  c:\m9refdir\  /aa/s/h/bb





Feedback:



  Due to the time constraints, the list of the files in my

  minimum Windows 98SE system is not the absolute minimum.

  If you find any of the files included in my list that is

  not essential to most computers, please let us know by

  posting message at the XXCOPY discussion group:



      http://groups.yahoo.com/group/xxcopy/



  Please do not send me Email asking technical questions

  regarding this procedure.  I encourage you to post your

  question in the discussion group.



  


© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY
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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #82




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: The list of files for a minimum Win98SE install

Date:    2003-04-08

====================================================================



  This is a supplement to XXTB #81

  with lists of files in the minimum Windows 98SE directory.



  The first part provides the list of files in the descending

  order of file size that is followed by the same list in the

  alphabetical order.  They are also provided in M9XFILES.TXT

  and M9XFILEA.TXT, respectively which are included in the

  minwin9x.zip file available for download.



       ----------------------------------------------------

        Some statistics about the system

  

        Total Windows directory size = 38 MB

  

        A handful of files that are considered to be

        non-essential are not listed.

  

         OS:  Windows 98 Second Edition (English)

         PC:  Home-built PC:

         MB:  Tyan Trinity (S1590) with AMD K6-II 350 MHz

       -----------------------------------------------------







  List of files in the minimum Win9X directory (by file size)



    2,158,624  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.DAT

    1,400,832  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHELL32.DLL

      946,448  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHDOCVW.DLL

      928,319  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32.VXD

      803,088  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BROWSEUI.DLL

      790,528  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLE32.DLL

      745,168  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SETUPX.DLL

      598,288  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLEAUT32.DLL

      577,808  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMCTL32.DLL

      549,664  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\USER.EXE

      504,080  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHDOC401.DLL

      491,792  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MLANG.DLL

      471,040  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KERNEL32.DLL

      459,024  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WININET.DLL

      446,736  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\URLMON.DLL

      438,272  C:\WINDOWS\WINREP.EXE

      409,600  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SETUPAPI.DLL

      387,072  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSDM.CPL

      385,024  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CRYPT32.DLL

      373,643  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COOL.DLL

      356,352  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHDOCLC.DLL

      356,134  C:\WINDOWS\NET.EXE

      345,584  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\GDI.EXE

      339,968  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RPCRT4.DLL

      322,824  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\TIMES.TTF

      297,660  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\COUR.TTF

      282,896  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHLWAPI.DLL

      276,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\INETCPL.CPL

      274,704  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WEBCHECK.DLL

      274,432  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSVCRT20.DLL

      273,020  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\ARIAL.TTF

      266,293  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSVCRT.DLL

      249,012  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\TAHOMA.TTF

      245,760  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSTASK.DLL

      221,280  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DESK.CPL

      217,088  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RASAPI32.DLL

      215,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DSKMAINT.DLL

      202,800  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DIBENG.DLL

      185,902  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32\IFSMGR.VXD

      180,224  C:\WINDOWS\EXPLORER.EXE

      176,128  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMDLG32.DLL

      174,996  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LOCALE.NLS

      167,936  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSLS31.DLL

      166,029  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NDIS.VXD

      165,502  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SCANREG.EXE

      165,437  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VREDIR.VXD

      165,424  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\PORTCLS.SYS

      155,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLEDLG.DLL

      155,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MPRSERV.DLL

      155,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\GDI32.DLL

      155,424  C:\WINDOWS\WINFILE.EXE

      155,136  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMMCTRL.DLL

      151,552  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSOSS.DLL

      147,456  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\USBUI.DLL

      143,818  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SCANDISK.EXE

      139,640  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VERDANA.TTF

      139,264  C:\WINDOWS\WSCRIPT.EXE

      138,752  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\JOY.CPL

      137,120  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\KMIXER.SYS

      136,032  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VERDANAB.TTF

      135,168  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CSCRIPT.EXE

      131,072  C:\WINDOWS\SIGVERIF.EXE

      129,080  C:\WINDOWS\LOGOW.SYS

      129,078  C:\WINDOWS\LOGOS.SYS

      127,040  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KRNL386.EXE

      126,704  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHELL.DLL

      125,495  C:\WINDOWS\EMM386.EXE

      122,936  C:\WINDOWS\MSOWS409.DLL

      122,912  C:\WINDOWS\HWINFO.DAT

      118,784  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSTASK.EXE

      118,784  C:\WINDOWS\REGEDIT.EXE

      118,752  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\WEBDINGS.TTF

      115,068  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\LUCON.TTF

      113,456  C:\WINDOWS\PROGMAN.EXE

      112,888  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VSERVER.VXD

      110,592  C:\WINDOWS\HWINFO.EXE

      108,528  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MMSYSTEM.DLL

      103,424  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MAIN.CPL

      103,424  C:\WINDOWS\EXTRAC32.EXE

      101,617  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VRTWD.386

       98,432  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\KS.SYS

       98,336  C:\WINDOWS\USER.DAT

       94,208  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSSHRUI.DLL

       93,890  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND.COM

       93,248  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MODEM.CPL

       93,242  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EXTRACT.EXE

       91,888  C:\WINDOWS\CHANNEL SCREEN SAVER.SCR

       90,869  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VNBT.386

       89,856  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SSERIFF.FON

       89,147  C:\WINDOWS\DOSREP.EXE

       88,544  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMMDLG.DLL

       86,016  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSWSOCK.DLL

       86,016  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ACTXPRXY.DLL

       86,016  C:\WINDOWS\SCANREGW.EXE

       84,416  C:\WINDOWS\MORICONS.DLL

       82,944  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLECLI.DLL

       82,832  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PIFMGR.DLL

       81,920  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSNP32.DLL

       81,744  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SERIFF.FON

       81,000  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\WINGDING.TTF

       80,928  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SYMBOLF.FON

       80,385  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VIP.386

       77,824  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSNET32.DLL

       77,824  C:\WINDOWS\CVTAPLOG.EXE

       76,704  C:\WINDOWS\DEFAULT.SF0

       73,728  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WS2_32.DLL

       73,728  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MYDOCS.DLL

       72,863  C:\WINDOWS\DEFAULT.SFC

       72,192  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\APPWIZ.CPL

       70,656  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\STICPL.CPL

       69,902  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EDIT.COM

       69,632  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\USER32.DLL

       69,570  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32\IOS.VXD

       69,464  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SYMBOL.TTF

       68,096  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WDMAUD.SYS

       66,279  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VDHCP.386

       65,895  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PCI.VXD

       65,536  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WINMM.DLL

       65,536  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ADVAPI32.DLL

       65,536  C:\WINDOWS\MSNMGSR1.EXE

       64,656  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SSERIFE.FON

       63,916  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FDISK.EXE

       62,224  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WINOA386.MOD

       61,440  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHD401LC.DLL

       61,440  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RNR20.DLL

       61,440  C:\WINDOWS\ASD.EXE

       60,928  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\INTL.CPL

       60,592  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\UPDATE.SYS

       60,257  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VTCP.386

       59,539  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\UNIMODEM.VXD

       59,184  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\AIC78XX.MPD

       59,133  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\CDFS.VXD

       58,870  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EGA.CPI

       57,952  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SERIFE.FON

       57,654  C:\WINDOWS\WIN98SE1.BMP

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\WUPDMGR.EXE

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\UPWIZUN.EXE

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WMICORE.DLL

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MPR.DLL

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\SETDEBUG.EXE

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\CLSPACK.EXE

       56,880  C:\WINDOWS\NETDDE.EXE

       56,352  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SYMBOLE.FON

       56,259  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DSOUND.VXD

       55,488  C:\WINDOWS\GRPCONV.EXE

       53,552  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSACM.DLL

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\WINIPCFG.EXE

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\NOTEPAD.EXE

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\IPCONFIG.EXE

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\INETMIB1.DLL

       52,656  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SWMIDI.SYS

       52,080  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VGA.DRV

       51,984  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\POWERCFG.CPL

       49,575  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FORMAT.COM

       49,152  C:\WINDOWS\TASKMAN.EXE

       49,152  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WMI.DLL

       47,104  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PASSWORD.CPL

       45,456  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SYSAUDIO.SYS

       45,379  C:\WINDOWS\SMARTDRV.EXE

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\VCMUI.EXE

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSAFD.DLL

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CFGMGR32.DLL

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BROWSELC.DLL

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BATMETER.DLL

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\MSNCREAT.EXE

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\FTP.EXE

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SULFNBK.EXE

       44,368  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\HIDPARSE.SYS

       44,320  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\DOSAPP.FON

       41,973  C:\WINDOWS\WININIT.EXE

       41,472  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\XCOPY32.MOD

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSOCK32.DLL

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SECUR32.DLL

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSPWL32.DLL

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\RG2CATDB.EXE

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\PIDSET.EXE

       40,272  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\USBAUDIO.SYS

       39,776  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\STREAM.SYS

       39,506  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VNETBIOS.VXD

       38,400  C:\WINDOWS\SCRIPT.DOC

       37,632  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHFOLDER.DLL

       37,523  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VPOWERD.VXD

       37,376  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TIMEDATE.CPL

       36,864  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LINKINFO.DLL

       36,864  C:\WINDOWS\HH.EXE

       36,112  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SBEMUL.SYS

       35,872  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VJOYD.VXD

       35,680  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\USBHUB.SYS

       35,572  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LPT.VXD

       34,676  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\UNICODE.NLS

       34,566  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBOARD.SYS

       34,543  C:\WINDOWS\NBTSTAT.EXE

       33,191  C:\WINDOWS\HIMEM.SYS

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSTRAY.EXE

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SVRAPI.DLL

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\SNMPAPI.DLL

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\ROUTE.EXE

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\NETSTAT.EXE

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\MM2ENT.EXE

       32,419  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\CDVSD.VXD

       32,240  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DDEML.DLL

       32,146  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MEM.EXE

       31,942  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBRD2.SYS

       31,744  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\COURF.FON

       31,680  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\CCPORT.SYS

       31,633  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBRD3.SYS

       30,742  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\COUNTRY.SYS

       30,448  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\UHCD.SYS

       30,389  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DDRAW.VXD

       30,193  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BIOS.VXD

       29,820  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RTL8139.SYS

       29,497  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\APIX.VXD

       29,271  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MODE.COM

       29,168  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSIDLE.DLL

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\TASKMON.EXE

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NETBIOS.DLL

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MPREXE.EXE

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\START.EXE

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\ARP.EXE

       28,096  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CHKDSK.EXE

       27,600  C:\WINDOWS\WINPOPUP.EXE

       27,299  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MOVE.EXE

       25,882  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SORT.EXE

       25,741  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\HSFLOP.PDR

       25,473  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MSCDEX.EXE

       25,106  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VGARTD.VXD

       24,791  C:\WINDOWS\WIN.COM

       24,626  C:\WINDOWS\CMD640X.SYS

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WS2HELP.DLL

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VERSION.DLL

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\POWRPROF.DLL

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LZ32.DLL

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\RUNDLL32.EXE

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\PING.EXE

       24,527  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\AFVXD.VXD

       24,406  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\ESDI_506.PDR

       24,352  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SMALLE.FON

       24,064  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLESVR.DLL

       24,064  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\M_CTRL.DLL

       23,744  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NDIS2SUP.VXD

       23,696  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LZEXPAND.DLL

       23,650  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\SCSIPORT.PDR

       23,520  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\HIDCLASS.SYS

       23,440  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSACM.DRV

       23,424  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\COURE.FON

       23,183  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSOCK2.VXD

       23,102  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PARALINK.VXD

       23,040  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WINSPOOL.DRV

       23,029  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\FILESEC.VXD

       21,975  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DISKCOPY.COM

       21,661  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSSP.VXD

       21,504  C:\WINDOWS\WINSOCK.DLL

       21,303  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DFS.VXD

       21,281  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ISAPNP.VXD

       20,901  C:\WINDOWS\CMD640X2.SYS

       20,653  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VUDP.386

       20,574  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FC.EXE

       20,554  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DEBUG.EXE

       20,480  C:\WINDOWS\TRACERT.EXE

       20,480  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NTDLL.DLL

       20,480  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NETAPI32.DLL

       20,334  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PTVCD.VXD

       20,228  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SERENUM.VXD

       19,927  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYB.COM

       19,632  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SMALLF.FON

       19,270  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\SCSI1HLP.VXD

       19,083  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DELTREE.EXE

       18,967  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SYS.COM

       18,939  C:\WINDOWS\SETVER.EXE

       18,912  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\USBD.SYS

       18,809  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\DISKTSD.VXD

       18,625  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SERIAL.VXD

       18,585  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSGAME.VXD

       18,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CSPMAN.DLL

       18,491  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\VOLTRACK.VXD

       18,296  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SERWAVE.VXD

       17,986  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SMARTVSD.VXD

       17,904  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SUBST.EXE

       17,655  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\IEXTRACT.EXE

       17,631  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VNETSUP.VXD

       17,412  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\MARLETT.TTF

       17,208  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LPTENUM.VXD

       17,175  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DISPLAY.SYS

       16,986  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DINPUT.VXD

       16,400  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSTHUNK.DLL

       16,384  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WMIEXE.EXE

       16,384  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IMM32.DLL

       15,809  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSMOUSE.VXD

       15,527  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSOCK.VXD

       15,495  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DOSKEY.COM

       15,252  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\ATTRIB.EXE

       14,848  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TELEPHON.CPL

       14,800  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WMIDRV.SYS

       14,696  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CONAGENT.EXE

       14,624  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VGAFULL.3GR

       14,448  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NETCPL.CPL

       14,032  C:\WINDOWS\NDDEAPI.DLL

       13,940  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MMDEVLDR.VXD

       13,884  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\CDTSD.VXD

       13,242  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\RMM.PDR

       13,014  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBRD4.SYS

       13,011  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NDISWAN.VXD

       12,838  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SW3DPRO2.VXD

       12,688  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KEYBOARD.DRV

       12,496  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VER.DLL

       12,472  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LOGGER.VXD

       12,327  C:\WINDOWS\IOS.INI

       12,288  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\8514OEM.FON

       12,112  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TOOLHELP.DLL

       12,101  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSANALOG.VXD

       11,920  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSGSRV32.EXE

       11,832  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SWGAMPAD.VXD

       11,830  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SW3DPRO.VXD

       11,311  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\ATAPCHNG.VXD

       11,306  C:\WINDOWS\CLOUD.GIF

       11,067  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\TORISAN3.VXD

       10,992  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSCLASS.DLL

       10,992  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\8514FIX.FON

       10,982  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\HWINFOD.VXD

       10,976  C:\WINDOWS\NDDENB.DLL

       10,720  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\FIOLOG.VXD

       10,471  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MORE.COM

       10,194  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\DISKVSD.VXD

        9,952  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\BIGMEM.DRV

        9,926  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\NECATAPI.VXD

        9,917  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSHTCP.VXD

        9,866  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CP_1252.NLS

        9,802  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SAGE.VXD

        9,792  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32\QEMMFIX.VXD

        9,719  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\ANSI.SYS

        9,600  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\8514SYS.FON

        9,324  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\LABEL.EXE

        8,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CP_437.NLS

        7,968  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\MODERN.FON

        7,885  C:\WINDOWS\NETDET.INI

        7,743  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ASPIENUM.VXD

        7,712  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MOUSE.DRV

        7,329  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SCANDISK.INI

        7,315  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\JAVASUP.VXD

        7,296  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGASYS.FON

        6,940  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\NLSFUNC.EXE

        6,658  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FIND.EXE

        6,653  C:\WINDOWS\WIN.INI

        6,550  C:\WINDOWS\JAUTOEXP.DAT

        6,417  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VFIXD.VXD

        6,208  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SETUP4.DLL

        6,007  C:\WINDOWS\SERVICES

        5,935  C:\WINDOWS\GENERIC.CPE

        5,872  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMM.DRV

        5,859  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VFD.VXD

        5,691  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VTDI.386

        5,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\QUARTZ.VXD

        5,664  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\REDBOOK.SYS

        5,376  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGAFIX.FON

        5,239  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CHOICE.COM

        5,232  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGA850.FON

        5,186  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WDMMDMLD.VXD

        5,168  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGAOEM.FON

        5,088  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\HIDVKD.SYS

        5,068  C:\WINDOWS\DELETEFI.INI

        4,960  C:\WINDOWS\RUNDLL.EXE

        4,896  C:\WINDOWS\SCANDSKW.EXE

        4,473  C:\WINDOWS\FYI.CPE

        4,357  C:\WINDOWS\CONFDENT.CPE

        4,345  C:\WINDOWS\URGENT.CPE

        4,064  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WDMFS.SYS

        3,878  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\XCOPY32.EXE

        3,878  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\XCOPY.EXE

        3,717  C:\WINDOWS\LMHOSTS.SAM

        3,708  C:\WINDOWS\IFSHLP.SYS

        3,648  C:\WINDOWS\WINVER.EXE

        3,600  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WMILIB.SYS

        3,296  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SWENUM.SYS

        3,216  C:\WINDOWS\HIDCI.DLL

        2,614  C:\WINDOWS\DBLBUFF.SYS

        2,416  C:\WINDOWS\WINHELP.EXE

        2,336  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSJSTICK.DRV

        2,288  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSTEM.DRV

        2,118  C:\WINDOWS\BUBBLES.BMP

        2,112  C:\WINDOWS\CONTROL.EXE

        2,047  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\BOOTDISK.BAT

        1,920  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\POWER.DRV

        1,813  C:\WINDOWS\WINLOGO.GIF

        1,619  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.INI

        1,603  C:\WINDOWS\HLPGLOBE.GIF

        1,518  C:\WINDOWS\1STBOOT.BMP

        1,492  C:\WINDOWS\HLPCD.GIF

        1,407  C:\WINDOWS\HLPBELL.GIF

        1,405  C:\WINDOWS\MSDFMAP.INI

        1,249  C:\WINDOWS\HLPSTEP3.GIF

        1,185  C:\WINDOWS\HLPLOGO.GIF

        1,184  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MMTASK.TSK

        1,154  C:\WINDOWS\HLPSTEP2.GIF

        1,107  C:\WINDOWS\HLPSTEP1.GIF

        1,105  C:\WINDOWS\ASPI2HLP.SYS

          967  C:\WINDOWS\DESKTOP\CONSOLE.PIF

          897  C:\WINDOWS\SCHEDLOG.TXT

          865  C:\WINDOWS\DOSREP.INI

          833  C:\WINDOWS\CONTROL.INI

          800  C:\WINDOWS\PROTOCOL

          787  C:\WINDOWS\SCANREG.INI

          736  C:\WINDOWS\HOSTS.SAM

          688  C:\WINDOWS\KANYABUM.PWL

          590  C:\WINDOWS\STRAW MAT.BMP

          582  C:\WINDOWS\CARVED STONE.BMP

          578  C:\WINDOWS\TILES.BMP

          578  C:\WINDOWS\PINSTRIPE.BMP

          407  C:\WINDOWS\NETWORKS

          398  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KBDUS.KBD

          380  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\SYSTEM TOOLS\SCHEDULED TASKS.LNK

          303  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\WINDOWS EXPLORER.LNK

          284  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\SYSTEM TOOLS\SCANDISK.LNK

          278  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\SYSTEM TOOLS\DISK DEFRAGMENTER.LNK

          278  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\NOTEPAD.LNK

          248  C:\WINDOWS\CONTENT.GIF

          198  C:\WINDOWS\TRIANGLES.BMP

          194  C:\WINDOWS\BLUE RIVETS.BMP

          190  C:\WINDOWS\WAVES.BMP

          190  C:\WINDOWS\CIRCLES.BMP

          182  C:\WINDOWS\BLACK THATCH.BMP

          138  C:\WINDOWS\CTPNP.CFG

          120  C:\WINDOWS\PROTOCOL.INI

           86  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.CB







  List of files in the minimum Win9X directory (alphabetic order)





        1,518  C:\WINDOWS\1STBOOT.BMP

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\ARP.EXE

       61,440  C:\WINDOWS\ASD.EXE

        1,105  C:\WINDOWS\ASPI2HLP.SYS

          182  C:\WINDOWS\BLACK THATCH.BMP

          194  C:\WINDOWS\BLUE RIVETS.BMP

        2,118  C:\WINDOWS\BUBBLES.BMP

          582  C:\WINDOWS\CARVED STONE.BMP

       91,888  C:\WINDOWS\CHANNEL SCREEN SAVER.SCR

          190  C:\WINDOWS\CIRCLES.BMP

       11,306  C:\WINDOWS\CLOUD.GIF

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\CLSPACK.EXE

       24,626  C:\WINDOWS\CMD640X.SYS

       20,901  C:\WINDOWS\CMD640X2.SYS

       93,890  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND.COM

        4,357  C:\WINDOWS\CONFDENT.CPE

          248  C:\WINDOWS\CONTENT.GIF

        2,112  C:\WINDOWS\CONTROL.EXE

          833  C:\WINDOWS\CONTROL.INI

          138  C:\WINDOWS\CTPNP.CFG

       77,824  C:\WINDOWS\CVTAPLOG.EXE

        2,614  C:\WINDOWS\DBLBUFF.SYS

       76,704  C:\WINDOWS\DEFAULT.SF0

       72,863  C:\WINDOWS\DEFAULT.SFC

        5,068  C:\WINDOWS\DELETEFI.INI

       89,147  C:\WINDOWS\DOSREP.EXE

          865  C:\WINDOWS\DOSREP.INI

      125,495  C:\WINDOWS\EMM386.EXE

      180,224  C:\WINDOWS\EXPLORER.EXE

      103,424  C:\WINDOWS\EXTRAC32.EXE

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\FTP.EXE

        4,473  C:\WINDOWS\FYI.CPE

        5,935  C:\WINDOWS\GENERIC.CPE

       55,488  C:\WINDOWS\GRPCONV.EXE

       36,864  C:\WINDOWS\HH.EXE

        3,216  C:\WINDOWS\HIDCI.DLL

       33,191  C:\WINDOWS\HIMEM.SYS

        1,407  C:\WINDOWS\HLPBELL.GIF

        1,492  C:\WINDOWS\HLPCD.GIF

        1,603  C:\WINDOWS\HLPGLOBE.GIF

        1,185  C:\WINDOWS\HLPLOGO.GIF

        1,107  C:\WINDOWS\HLPSTEP1.GIF

        1,154  C:\WINDOWS\HLPSTEP2.GIF

        1,249  C:\WINDOWS\HLPSTEP3.GIF

          736  C:\WINDOWS\HOSTS.SAM

      122,912  C:\WINDOWS\HWINFO.DAT

      110,592  C:\WINDOWS\HWINFO.EXE

        3,708  C:\WINDOWS\IFSHLP.SYS

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\INETMIB1.DLL

       12,327  C:\WINDOWS\IOS.INI

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\IPCONFIG.EXE

        6,550  C:\WINDOWS\JAUTOEXP.DAT

          688  C:\WINDOWS\KANYABUM.PWL

        3,717  C:\WINDOWS\LMHOSTS.SAM

      129,078  C:\WINDOWS\LOGOS.SYS

      129,080  C:\WINDOWS\LOGOW.SYS

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\MM2ENT.EXE

       84,416  C:\WINDOWS\MORICONS.DLL

        1,405  C:\WINDOWS\MSDFMAP.INI

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\MSNCREAT.EXE

       65,536  C:\WINDOWS\MSNMGSR1.EXE

      122,936  C:\WINDOWS\MSOWS409.DLL

       34,543  C:\WINDOWS\NBTSTAT.EXE

       14,032  C:\WINDOWS\NDDEAPI.DLL

       10,976  C:\WINDOWS\NDDENB.DLL

      356,134  C:\WINDOWS\NET.EXE

       56,880  C:\WINDOWS\NETDDE.EXE

        7,885  C:\WINDOWS\NETDET.INI

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\NETSTAT.EXE

          407  C:\WINDOWS\NETWORKS

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\NOTEPAD.EXE

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\PIDSET.EXE

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\PING.EXE

          578  C:\WINDOWS\PINSTRIPE.BMP

      113,456  C:\WINDOWS\PROGMAN.EXE

          800  C:\WINDOWS\PROTOCOL

          120  C:\WINDOWS\PROTOCOL.INI

      118,784  C:\WINDOWS\REGEDIT.EXE

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\RG2CATDB.EXE

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\ROUTE.EXE

        4,960  C:\WINDOWS\RUNDLL.EXE

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\RUNDLL32.EXE

        4,896  C:\WINDOWS\SCANDSKW.EXE

          787  C:\WINDOWS\SCANREG.INI

       86,016  C:\WINDOWS\SCANREGW.EXE

          897  C:\WINDOWS\SCHEDLOG.TXT

       38,400  C:\WINDOWS\SCRIPT.DOC

        6,007  C:\WINDOWS\SERVICES

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\SETDEBUG.EXE

       18,939  C:\WINDOWS\SETVER.EXE

      131,072  C:\WINDOWS\SIGVERIF.EXE

       45,379  C:\WINDOWS\SMARTDRV.EXE

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\SNMPAPI.DLL

          590  C:\WINDOWS\STRAW MAT.BMP

           86  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.CB

    2,158,624  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.DAT

        1,619  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM.INI

       49,152  C:\WINDOWS\TASKMAN.EXE

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\TASKMON.EXE

          578  C:\WINDOWS\TILES.BMP

       20,480  C:\WINDOWS\TRACERT.EXE

          198  C:\WINDOWS\TRIANGLES.BMP

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\UPWIZUN.EXE

        4,345  C:\WINDOWS\URGENT.CPE

       98,336  C:\WINDOWS\USER.DAT

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\VCMUI.EXE

          190  C:\WINDOWS\WAVES.BMP

       24,791  C:\WINDOWS\WIN.COM

        6,653  C:\WINDOWS\WIN.INI

       57,654  C:\WINDOWS\WIN98SE1.BMP

      155,424  C:\WINDOWS\WINFILE.EXE

        2,416  C:\WINDOWS\WINHELP.EXE

       41,973  C:\WINDOWS\WININIT.EXE

       53,248  C:\WINDOWS\WINIPCFG.EXE

        1,813  C:\WINDOWS\WINLOGO.GIF

       27,600  C:\WINDOWS\WINPOPUP.EXE

      438,272  C:\WINDOWS\WINREP.EXE

       21,504  C:\WINDOWS\WINSOCK.DLL

        3,648  C:\WINDOWS\WINVER.EXE

      139,264  C:\WINDOWS\WSCRIPT.EXE

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\WUPDMGR.EXE



        9,719  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\ANSI.SYS

       15,252  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\ATTRIB.EXE

        2,047  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\BOOTDISK.BAT

       28,096  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CHKDSK.EXE

        5,239  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CHOICE.COM

       30,742  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\COUNTRY.SYS

      135,168  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CSCRIPT.EXE

       20,554  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DEBUG.EXE

       19,083  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DELTREE.EXE

       21,975  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DISKCOPY.COM

       17,175  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DISPLAY.SYS

       15,495  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DOSKEY.COM

       69,902  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EDIT.COM

       58,870  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EGA.CPI

       93,242  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\EXTRACT.EXE

       20,574  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FC.EXE

       63,916  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FDISK.EXE

        6,658  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FIND.EXE

       49,575  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\FORMAT.COM

       17,655  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\IEXTRACT.EXE

       19,927  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYB.COM

       34,566  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBOARD.SYS

       31,942  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBRD2.SYS

       31,633  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBRD3.SYS

       13,014  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\KEYBRD4.SYS

        9,324  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\LABEL.EXE

       32,146  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MEM.EXE

       29,271  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MODE.COM

       10,471  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MORE.COM

       27,299  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MOVE.EXE

       25,473  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\MSCDEX.EXE

        6,940  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\NLSFUNC.EXE

      143,818  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SCANDISK.EXE

        7,329  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SCANDISK.INI

      165,502  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SCANREG.EXE

       25,882  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SORT.EXE

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\START.EXE

       17,904  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SUBST.EXE

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SULFNBK.EXE

       18,967  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\SYS.COM

        3,878  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\XCOPY.EXE

        3,878  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\XCOPY32.EXE

       41,472  C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\XCOPY32.MOD



       10,992  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\8514FIX.FON

       12,288  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\8514OEM.FON

        9,600  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\8514SYS.FON

      273,020  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\ARIAL.TTF

      297,660  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\COUR.TTF

       23,424  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\COURE.FON

       31,744  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\COURF.FON

       44,320  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\DOSAPP.FON

      115,068  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\LUCON.TTF

       17,412  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\MARLETT.TTF

        7,968  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\MODERN.FON

       57,952  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SERIFE.FON

       81,744  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SERIFF.FON

       24,352  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SMALLE.FON

       19,632  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SMALLF.FON

       64,656  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SSERIFE.FON

       89,856  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SSERIFF.FON

       69,464  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SYMBOL.TTF

       56,352  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SYMBOLE.FON

       80,928  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\SYMBOLF.FON

      249,012  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\TAHOMA.TTF

      322,824  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\TIMES.TTF

      139,640  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VERDANA.TTF

      136,032  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VERDANAB.TTF

        5,232  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGA850.FON

        5,376  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGAFIX.FON

        5,168  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGAOEM.FON

        7,296  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\VGASYS.FON

      118,752  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\WEBDINGS.TTF

       81,000  C:\WINDOWS\FONTS\WINGDING.TTF





       86,016  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ACTXPRXY.DLL

       65,536  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ADVAPI32.DLL

       24,527  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\AFVXD.VXD

       72,192  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\APPWIZ.CPL

        7,743  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ASPIENUM.VXD

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BATMETER.DLL

       30,193  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BIOS.VXD

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BROWSELC.DLL

      803,088  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\BROWSEUI.DLL

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CFGMGR32.DLL

      577,808  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMCTL32.DLL

      176,128  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMDLG32.DLL

        5,872  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMM.DRV

      155,136  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMMCTRL.DLL

       88,544  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COMMDLG.DLL

       14,696  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CONAGENT.EXE

      373,643  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\COOL.DLL

        9,866  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CP_1252.NLS

        8,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CP_437.NLS

      385,024  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CRYPT32.DLL

       18,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CSPMAN.DLL

       32,240  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DDEML.DLL

       30,389  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DDRAW.VXD

      221,280  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DESK.CPL

       21,303  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DFS.VXD

      202,800  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DIBENG.DLL

       16,986  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DINPUT.VXD

      215,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DSKMAINT.DLL

       56,259  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\DSOUND.VXD

       23,029  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\FILESEC.VXD

       10,720  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\FIOLOG.VXD

      345,584  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\GDI.EXE

      155,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\GDI32.DLL

       10,982  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\HWINFOD.VXD

       16,384  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IMM32.DLL

      276,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\INETCPL.CPL

       60,928  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\INTL.CPL

       10,992  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSCLASS.DLL

       21,281  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\ISAPNP.VXD

        7,315  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\JAVASUP.VXD

      138,752  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\JOY.CPL

          398  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KBDUS.KBD

      471,040  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KERNEL32.DLL

       12,688  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KEYBOARD.DRV

      127,040  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\KRNL386.EXE

       36,864  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LINKINFO.DLL

      174,996  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LOCALE.NLS

       12,472  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LOGGER.VXD

       35,572  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LPT.VXD

       17,208  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LPTENUM.VXD

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LZ32.DLL

       23,696  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\LZEXPAND.DLL

      103,424  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MAIN.CPL

      491,792  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MLANG.DLL

       13,940  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MMDEVLDR.VXD

      108,528  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MMSYSTEM.DLL

        1,184  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MMTASK.TSK

       93,248  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MODEM.CPL

        7,712  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MOUSE.DRV

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MPR.DLL

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MPREXE.EXE

      155,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MPRSERV.DLL

       53,552  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSACM.DLL

       23,440  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSACM.DRV

       45,056  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSAFD.DLL

       12,101  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSANALOG.VXD

       18,585  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSGAME.VXD

       11,920  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSGSRV32.EXE

       29,168  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSIDLE.DLL

        2,336  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSJSTICK.DRV

      167,936  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSLS31.DLL

       15,809  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSMOUSE.VXD

       77,824  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSNET32.DLL

       81,920  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSNP32.DLL

      151,552  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSOSS.DLL

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSPWL32.DLL

       94,208  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSSHRUI.DLL

       21,661  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSSP.VXD

      245,760  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSTASK.DLL

      118,784  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSTASK.EXE

      266,293  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSVCRT.DLL

      274,432  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSVCRT20.DLL

       86,016  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MSWSOCK.DLL

       73,728  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MYDOCS.DLL

       24,064  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\M_CTRL.DLL

      166,029  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NDIS.VXD

       23,744  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NDIS2SUP.VXD

       13,011  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NDISWAN.VXD

       20,480  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NETAPI32.DLL

       28,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NETBIOS.DLL

       14,448  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NETCPL.CPL

       20,480  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\NTDLL.DLL

      790,528  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLE32.DLL

      598,288  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLEAUT32.DLL

       82,944  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLECLI.DLL

      155,648  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLEDLG.DLL

       24,064  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\OLESVR.DLL

       23,102  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PARALINK.VXD

       47,104  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PASSWORD.CPL

       65,895  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PCI.VXD

       82,832  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PIFMGR.DLL

        1,920  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\POWER.DRV

       51,984  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\POWERCFG.CPL

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\POWRPROF.DLL

       20,334  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\PTVCD.VXD

        5,672  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\QUARTZ.VXD

      217,088  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RASAPI32.DLL

       61,440  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RNR20.DLL

      339,968  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RPCRT4.DLL

        9,802  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SAGE.VXD

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SECUR32.DLL

       20,228  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SERENUM.VXD

       18,625  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SERIAL.VXD

       18,296  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SERWAVE.VXD

        6,208  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SETUP4.DLL

      409,600  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SETUPAPI.DLL

      745,168  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SETUPX.DLL

       61,440  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHD401LC.DLL

      504,080  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHDOC401.DLL

      356,352  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHDOCLC.DLL

      946,448  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHDOCVW.DLL

      126,704  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHELL.DLL

    1,400,832  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHELL32.DLL

       37,632  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHFOLDER.DLL

      282,896  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SHLWAPI.DLL

       17,986  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SMARTVSD.VXD

       70,656  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\STICPL.CPL

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SVRAPI.DLL

       11,830  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SW3DPRO.VXD

       12,838  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SW3DPRO2.VXD

       11,832  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SWGAMPAD.VXD

      387,072  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSDM.CPL

        2,288  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSTEM.DRV

       16,400  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSTHUNK.DLL

       32,768  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\SYSTRAY.EXE

       14,848  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TELEPHON.CPL

       37,376  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TIMEDATE.CPL

       12,112  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TOOLHELP.DLL

       34,676  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\UNICODE.NLS

       59,539  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\UNIMODEM.VXD

      446,736  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\URLMON.DLL

      147,456  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\USBUI.DLL

      549,664  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\USER.EXE

       69,632  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\USER32.DLL

       66,279  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VDHCP.386

       12,496  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VER.DLL

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VERSION.DLL

        5,859  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VFD.VXD

        6,417  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VFIXD.VXD

       52,080  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VGA.DRV

       14,624  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VGAFULL.3GR

       25,106  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VGARTD.VXD

       80,385  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VIP.386

       35,872  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VJOYD.VXD

      928,319  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32.VXD

       90,869  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VNBT.386

       39,506  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VNETBIOS.VXD

       17,631  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VNETSUP.VXD

       37,523  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VPOWERD.VXD

      165,437  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VREDIR.VXD

      101,617  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VRTWD.386

      112,888  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VSERVER.VXD

       60,257  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VTCP.386

        5,691  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VTDI.386

       20,653  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VUDP.386

        5,186  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WDMMDMLD.VXD

      274,704  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WEBCHECK.DLL

      459,024  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WININET.DLL

       65,536  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WINMM.DLL

       62,224  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WINOA386.MOD

       23,040  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WINSPOOL.DRV

       49,152  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WMI.DLL

       57,344  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WMICORE.DLL

       16,384  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WMIEXE.EXE

       24,576  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WS2HELP.DLL

       73,728  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WS2_32.DLL

        9,917  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSHTCP.VXD

       15,527  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSOCK.VXD

       23,183  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSOCK2.VXD

       40,960  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\WSOCK32.DLL



      185,902  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32\IFSMGR.VXD

       69,570  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32\IOS.VXD

        9,792  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\VMM32\QEMMFIX.VXD



       59,184  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\AIC78XX.MPD

       29,497  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\APIX.VXD

       11,311  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\ATAPCHNG.VXD

        9,952  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\BIGMEM.DRV

       59,133  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\CDFS.VXD

       13,884  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\CDTSD.VXD

       32,419  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\CDVSD.VXD

       18,809  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\DISKTSD.VXD

       10,194  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\DISKVSD.VXD

       24,406  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\ESDI_506.PDR

       25,741  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\HSFLOP.PDR

        9,926  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\NECATAPI.VXD

       13,242  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\RMM.PDR

       19,270  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\SCSI1HLP.VXD

       23,650  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\SCSIPORT.PDR

       11,067  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\TORISAN3.VXD

       18,491  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\VOLTRACK.VXD



       31,680  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\CCPORT.SYS

       23,520  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\HIDCLASS.SYS

       44,368  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\HIDPARSE.SYS

        5,088  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\HIDVKD.SYS

      137,120  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\KMIXER.SYS

       98,432  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\KS.SYS

      165,424  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\PORTCLS.SYS

        5,664  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\REDBOOK.SYS

       36,112  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SBEMUL.SYS

       39,776  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\STREAM.SYS

        3,296  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SWENUM.SYS

       52,656  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SWMIDI.SYS

       45,456  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\SYSAUDIO.SYS

       30,448  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\UHCD.SYS

       60,592  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\UPDATE.SYS

       40,272  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\USBAUDIO.SYS

       18,912  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\USBD.SYS

       35,680  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\USBHUB.SYS

       68,096  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WDMAUD.SYS

        4,064  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WDMFS.SYS

       14,800  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WMIDRV.SYS

        3,600  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\WMILIB.SYS



          967  C:\WINDOWS\DESKTOP\CONSOLE.PIF



          303  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\WINDOWS EXPLORER.LNK

          278  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\NOTEPAD.LNK

          278  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\SYSTEM TOOLS\DISK DEFRAGMENTER.LNK

          284  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\SYSTEM TOOLS\SCANDISK.LNK

          380  C:\WINDOWS\START MENU\PROGRAMS\ACCESSORIES\SYSTEM TOOLS\SCHEDULED TASKS.LNK



   ----------  For the video card that I have (Matrox) ------------------



      221,312  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MGAPDX64.DRV

       79,158  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\MGAPDX64.VXD



        >>>>>  My system crashes at the boot time without these files

               unless VGA.DRV is present.



   ----------  For the sound card that I have (CMI) ---------------------



       79,872  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CMMPU.EXE



        >>>>>  My system complains that this file is missing (not fatal).



   ----------  For the Ethernet adapter that I have ---------------------



       29,820  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\RTL8139.SYS



   ----------  For USB-disk support -------------------------------------



      200,704  C:\WINDOWS\TPPSTRAY.EXE

      118,784  C:\WINDOWS\TPPALDR.EXE

       33,669  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\TPP300.SYS

        8,650  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\TPPIOSMP.SYS

        4,692  C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\IOSUBSYS\TPPIOSTB.PDR



  


© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY
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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #90




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: XXCOPY Corporate Site License

Date:    2001-06-12

====================================================================





* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

     X X C O P Y   F r e e w a r e   L i c e n s e   T e r m s

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *



Pixelab, Inc, the copyright owner of the XXCOPY software package,

grants a non-exclusive license without charge to you, an individual

who intends to use the XXCOPY program for non-commercial purposes

provided that all of the following additional conditions are met.



You may use XXCOPY under this freeware license if:



 1.  You install the XXCOPY program on a computer that is your own

     personal property and you are the primary user of the computer.



 2.  If you transfer files between networked computers using XXCOPY,

     all of the computers are also your own personal property.



 3.  Or, even if the above conditions are not met, you may still use

     XXCOPY for 60 days for evaluation purposes without charge.





If your situation does not qualify for the freeware license,

the usage of XXCOPY will be considered as a commercial usage.

Please contact Pixelab that offers various types of licenses.



This freeware version of XXCOPY is distributed AS IS and without

any warranties.  If you have problems, our liability is limited

to $1.00 per site, that is much more than you paid for it.



XXCOPY is a trademark of Pixelab, Inc.



With the freeware license, you may give your friends a copy of the

XXCOPY Freeware, as long as the package is not altered and remains

as a whole.  However, for distribution on a commercial basis,

(even in a Freeware distribution CD-ROM, or download service),

you must obtain a written permission from Pixelab, Inc.



Please note that Emails from freeware users may not be answered due

to the large number of Emails we receive.  If you wish to receive

technical support by Email, you may consider acquiring a single user

license even if your usage complies with the freeware license terms.









* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

   X X C O P Y   C o m m e r c i a l   U s e   L i c e n s e   T e r m s

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *



Pixelab, Inc, the copyright owner of the XXCOPY software package,

grants a non-exclusive license to you, the holder of the commercial use

license to use the XXCOPY program for personal and/or commercial purposes.



Under the commercial use license, you are allowed to access files on a

number of remote (networked) computers.  The license sets a limit on the

number of computers that you are permitted to access using the XXCOPY

software unless specifically stipulated as UNLIMITED.



If the number of computers that you routinely access files using XXCOPY

exceeds the limit of the current license, you should upgrade to a license

with a larger limit.



This version of XXCOPY is distributed AS IS and without any warranties

except that it will perform substantially as documented.  It is not

perfect and you should subscribe to our update plan to get both bug fixes

and corrections. If you have problems, our liability is limited to

refunding the amount that you paid for the license less the fair value

of your use. 



Please note that the software is protected by the copyright laws and

international treaties.  You are authorized to make two copies for

backup purposes.  You may not transfer or disclose the software package

to a third party.



XXCOPY is a trademark of Pixelab, Inc



----------------------------------------------------------------------







             *************************************

              Commercial Use Site License Pricing

             *************************************



        License     The number   Per-computer    Total    

        Package    of Computers     Price     License Fee 

       ---------------------------------------------------

        XXLIC           2-9          $20       $40 - $180 

        XXLIC-010        10          $18         $   180  

        XXLIC-020        20          $16         $   320  

        XXLIC-050        50          $12         $   600  

        XXLIC-100       100          $ 9         $   900  

        XXLIC-200       200          $ 6         $ 1,200  

          ...                                       ...   

          ...      can go as low as  $ 1            ...   





For a networked environment, please contact Pixelab for a quotation

with a special discount pricing.





License

 Click this button to go to the Ordering page

 for the XXCOPY Corporate Site License...







Once the XXCOPY program is installed in accordance with the site

license terms, the program will function indefinitely.



Being a licensee, your Emails with questions will be given higher

priority for tech support.  We may not reply to Emails from freeware

users when our tech support technicians are busy.



A site license allows you to download free updates within twelve

months of the license date.  For a renewal of a site license for

updates beyond the first twelve months, please contact Pixelab.



For on-line ordering of Corporate Site Licensing, please visit

the following web site: xxform46.htm  XXCOPY Order form.

For an order with $300 or more, we accept a Purchase Order.

Please send Email to <sales@xxcopy.com.




© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

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XXCOPY
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XXCOPY TECHNICAL BULLETIN #99




From:    Kan Yabumoto           tech@xxcopy.com

To:      XXCOPY user

Subject: Revision History of XXCOPY.

Date:    2003-08-16  (latest update)

====================================================================





 Version   Date



 2.20.0   1999-10-01    XXCOPY debuted under the new name.

 2.21.9   2000-01-07    the limit on # of exclude-items removed

 2.22.0   2000-01-14    /X and /EX made better

 2.22.2   2000-01-14    New switch, /DA#n (relative # days from today)

 2.22.8   2000-02-11    New switch, /CC and /CCY (auto-exclude on cyclic copy)

 2.22.9   2000-02-16    New switch, /AA /AZ

 2.24.3   2000-03-13    /K and /KS now work with directory attributes.

 2.25.1   2000-05-07    /CLONE, a shortcut for /KS/H/E/R/Q/Y/BI/ZY

                        New switches /RC/RS/RD/RX, for file removal.

 2.40.0   2000-06-18    /FT allows file-time comparison in mixed OS

 2.42.2   2000-10-13    XXCOPY16 now works /XFT allows file-time comparison in mixed OS

                        XXCOPY16 supports all XXCOPY (32-bit) features

                        New /SG feature, gathers files into one directory

                        Partial date parameter accepted  (/DA:2000-05)

                        New /AT, /AX, /AN, /AS, /AR switches

                        /N made XCOPY-compatible (old /N renamed to /NX)

                        /BZ checks the file size but not file time.

                        New /NP for precise filename matching algorithm

                        New /CB for cleaner batch files

 2.42.4   2000-11-11    bugfix on XXCOPY16 /DA and /DB parameters

 2.42.5   2000-11-17    bugfix on /RX operation

 2.44.0   2001-01-15    New switches /SP, /DL, /NI

                        Enhanced     /X and the source specifier syntax

 2.44.1   2001-01-19    bugfix /NI parsing was incorrect

 2.44.2   2001-01-23    bugfix nested Wild-Wild-source dir with /X items

 2.44.3   2001-01-28    improved, \src\*\a\b\ matches a case like \src\a\a\b\

 2.44.4   2001-01-31    New /WD warning switch

 2.60.0   2001-07-04    New release with all the new features that were

                        tested between v.2.54.6 and v.2.56.9



 2.80.0   2001-12-31    New release with features up to v.2.71.5

 2.80.0   2002-01-01    The newe version for the new year (put a new date).

 2.80.1   2002-01-01    Bugfix XXCOPY16's timestamp (problem started v2.71.0)

 2.80.2   2002-01-06    Bugfix destination directory timestamp on NT/2K/XP.

 2.80.3   2002-01-06    Minor bugfixes.

 2.80.6   2002-04-17    Context-sensitive help for Prompt buster (? on Y/N)

                        Command Switch may accept a colon as a delimiter

                        Bugfix /DBxxH, /DBxxM, /DBxxS.

                        Bugfix WinNT/2K/XP overwriting RHS files.

                        New macro variables, /$WWW$ /$W$ /$HOST$

                        Improved switches /IA:, /IP:

                        Improved switches /WS, /WE

 2.82.0   2002-06-28    New release based on beta v.2.90.9

 2.82.2   2002-07-01    Bugfix /INSTALL sequence         

 2.82.3   2002-08-01    Supports Windows 2000 SP3.

 2.82.4   2002-09-13    Supports Windows XP   SP1.

 2.82.6   2002-09-21    Bugfix /R (for removing rd-only directory)

                        Bugfix /E (in 2.82.4 it had problems)

 2.82.7   2002-10-25    Bugfix batch launch on XP with quoted string on 1st wd

 2.82.8   2003-01-28    Bugfix /SG/SX (was broken since 2.80.0)

			Bugfix copying large files (>= 4GB)

			Bugfix /PB

			Improved checking on directory specifier arguments.

 2.82.9   2003-02-10    Improved /NX (SFN-preservation) function

 2.82.9b  2003-02-26    Bugfix /TR (formerly known as /SZ).

 2.84.4   2003-05-28    New switches /ILS /ILD /CA

                        New macros /$M$ /$D$ /$H$ /$N$ /$S$ /$IIII$ /$IWK$ /$K$

 2.84.6   2003-07-01    Supports Windows 2000 SP4.

 2.84.7   2003-07-09    /RC can be combined with /SX,/SL, or /SR.

                        Supports Windows NT4  SP4.

 2.84.8   2003-07-10    Warning with /FF case for a /BI operation

 2.84.9   2003-07-11    Bugfix /Xc:\pagefile.sys

 2.85.0   2003-08-11    Bugfix /RC/R (/R is for both overwrite and delete) 

 2.85.1   2003-08-16    Bugfix /ILD now works



 *** beta releases      **********************************************



 2.35.2   2000-05-08    bugfix /z which failed on RdDir on WinNT/2K

                        bugfix UNC path on remote directory now works well

 2.35.8   2000-06-05    bugfix /DB:.  /D valid date between 1970-2069

 2.50.7   2000-08-15    XXCOPY16 supports all XXCOPY (32-bit) features

 2.50.9   2000-08-27    New /SG feature, gathers files into one directory

 2.51.0   2000-09-01    Bugfix /Fo fatal crash at the end (no real damage)

 2.51.1   2000-09-09    Partial date parameter accepted  (/DA:2000-05)

 2.51.2   2000-09-13    Bugfix /R was not working since v2.25.1

 2.51.3   2000-09-15    New /AT, /AX, /AN, /AS, /AR switches

 2.51.4   2000-09-18    /N made XCOPY-compatible (old /N renamed to /NX)

 2.51.5   2000-09-19    /BZ checks the file size but not file time.

 2.51.6   2000-09-22    Bugfix on UNC pathname under NT4

                        New /NP for precise filename matching algorithm

 2.51.7   2000-09-25    Bugfix on file display with /Rx (remove command)

 2.51.9   2000-10-03    New /CB for cleaner batch files

 2.52.0   2000-10-09    Enhanced exclusion specifier with multi-level dir

 2.52.3   2000-10-31    New /CR for retry timeout set

                        New /SP for span destination into multi volume

                        New /BZX/BZL/BZS/BZE more variations in backup

 2.52.6   2000-11-30    New /SP (span media) /IN (include alt template)

                        New Wild-Wild-Source, the enhanced source specifier

                        with multi-level wildcard directory and template

 2.52.9   2000-12-08    Bugfix /X directory/template matching

 2.53.0   2000-12-09    New /DL to limit the directory nesting levels

 2.53.2   2000-12-24    Bugfix XXCOPY16's source specifier with trailing BS

 2.53.3   2000-12-29    Macros (/$xxxx$) to embed date/time in parameters

 2.53.5   2001-01-04    Bugfix /L statistics, /X*\*\dir\

 2.53.6   2001-01-15    As the official release version v2.44.0

 2.54.6   2001-02-12    Bugfix /INxxxx for XXCOPY16

                        New  /NW /ND for Wildcard treatment selection

 2.54.7   2001-02-13    New  /FR for Rounding Up filetime (NTFS).

 2.54.9   2001-02-14    Bugfix The name matching scheme had some holes.

 2.55.0   2001-02-24    New /DA#nH, /DA#nM, to specify age by hr, min, etc.

 2.55.1   2001-02-26    New /PB to show the progress bar

			New /TS /TD for timezone adjustment

 2.55.2   2001-02-27    Bugfix /RS/RC/RD/RX prompt/display corrected

 2.55.3   2001-03-01    Bugfix /X when base directory is at the root

 2.55.4   2001-03-03    Bugfix XXCOPY16 /X with UNC

 2.55.5   2001-03-04    Bugfix /X with absolute pathspec

 2.55.6   2001-03-18    New /CF which accepts a command file

 2.55.7   2001-03-20    Bugfix /X some more rare case

 2.55.8   2001-03-23    Aggressive file access for shared file backup

 2.56.0   2001-06-10    Two versions: XXCOPY-PRO and XXCOPY-FREEWARE 

 2.56.1   2001-06-12    Bugfix /NW on XXCOPY16

 2.56.2   2001-06-14    Bugfix /Xabc\*\ and /Xabc\?\ cases added 

 2.56.3   2001-06-15    Bugfix /X\mydir (on where srcdir is not default drive)

 2.56.4   2001-06-20    Bugfix /oF and XXCOPY16's /NW on /X paramters

 2.56.5   2001-06-22    Mew    /FF fpr Fuzzy Filetime with flexible parameters

 2.56.6   2001-06-23    Buxfix /H /Ho (bug introduced in v2.55.1)

 2.56.7   2001-06-29    New /LTREE switch to list directories only

 2.56.8   2001-07-01    Improved /PB display using a new pop-up window

 2.56.9   2001-07-03    Bugfix /CK0 (which was malfunctioning since v2559)

                        Bugfix /CE exit code propagation back in operation

                        Bugfix /LDT now shows the /FC and /FA option

                        New  NUL recognized as nonmatch-file pattern

 2.57.0   2001-07-04    Bugfix /DB#x,  the midnight-based time-comparison

                        was inadvertently in effect even for a non-day value.

 2.70.1   2001-07-10    New  /INSTALL: to specify XXCOPY's home dir

 2.70.2   2001-07-20    /PB is removed from the default in /CLONE

                        The progress bar no longer takes away the input focus.

                        Bugfix on UNC-based destination specifier (root) which

                        results in a fatal error.

                        /WV and /WV0 for system DLL timestamp test and warning. 

 2.70.3   2001-08-05    Bugfix /AZ displayed an erroneous file count in stats

 2.70.4   2001-09-01    Bugfix access to 1st level dir \\server\rsrc\ on NT/2K

 2.70.5   2001-09-04    Bugfix SFN preservation on dir names sometimes failed.

 2.70.6   2001-09-10    New /SC /SF features for security info handling.

 2.70.7   2001-09-26    Enhanced /DA: and /DB: with time value

                        Bugfix /X on WinNT/2K for root-level exclusion dir.

 2.70.8   2001-10-04    Improved /HELP with built-in "More" funcition 

			Improved /SC/SF now works under Win98/ME

			Bugfix NT/2K registry key retireval (/CB works better)

			Improved pathname parser (GetFullPathName())

 2.71.0   2001-10-09    Last-Access timestamp /TTA0 as default (like Robocopy)

 2.71.1   2001-10-11    Bugfix /TTA0 warning suppressed when harmless

 2.71.2   2001-10-20    Improved /DA/DB with partial date specifiers

                        Bugfix /V2 with open files

			Improved Elapsed time displayed

 2.71.4   2001-10-23    Bugfix /RC now handle creation of subdirectories

                        Now /ED preserves N levels of empty directories.

 2.90.3   2002-01-09    Minor bugfixes.

 2.90.8   2002-06-13    No default file pattern unless /IN is defined

                        New /TFxx/TTxx/TCxx (to be documented later)

                        New /DA@ to accept timestamp of a file as time value

 2.90.9   2002-06-19    Bugfix of error on directory timestamp setting









Note:  the second digit in version number denotes a beta test version

       if it is an odd value.  For example, Ver 2.34.6 is a beta test

       version which is equivalent of release version ver2.24.6.








© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.

[ XXCOPY Home ] [ Table of Contents ] [ << ] [ DATMAN Home ]

© Copyright 2003 Pixelab, Inc. All rights reserved.