![]() Then repeat to load up the other non-A: filesystems. Then you can copy (with PIP?_) the A: filesystem to B:, C:, or D. What I did was to create a filesystem for the first drive, mount the CF, and initialize (with INIT) the other 3 drives. > I'm also interested in how you created 4 (or more) drives on a CF. Full track, and other caching methods would take a lot more work. The simple approach is what I used (I think). > I really like "A Simple Approach" described in section 5.3.1 of CP/M-68K System Guide, but the author discouraged the method! #OS 9 68K EMULATOR MAC MACOS DSK IMAGE HOW TO#I have absolutely no idea how to transfer CP/M back to FAT16-I'm just not smart enough today to write a FAT16 driver in CP/M. It works, but I can think of many ways it'd blew up. Then move the CF to the CP/M machine, located the beginning of the image and copy it starting from sector 0 of the CF. ![]() The way I go from PC to CP/M was to create a CP/M image with cpmtools and write the resulting image to a newly (FAT16) formated CF. I don't have a Linux machine and my hardware does not support floppy disks, CompactFlash is all I got. My truly burning question was how to transfer files to/from PC (Windows Vista) to CP/M. It works, but seems a dangerous method because writing boot with PUTBOOT would potentially corrupt the previous drives. My method was adding successive drives each with track offset greater than the total tracks of the previous drives. I'm also interested in how you created 4 (or more) drives on a CF. I really like "A Simple Approach" described in section 5.3.1 of CP/M-68K System Guide, but the author discouraged the method! ![]()
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