Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

DOS Plus

Encyclopedia : D : DO : DOS : DOS Plus


DOS Plus (also known as DOS+) is an operating system written by Digital Research, first released in 1985. It can be seen as an intermediate step between CP/M-86 and DR-DOS.

It is able to run programs written for either CP/M-86 or MS-DOS 2.11, and can read and write the floppy formats used by both these systems. Up to four CP/M-86 programs can be multitasked, but only one DOS program can be run at a time.

User interface

DOS Plus attempts to present the same command line interface as MS-DOS. Like MS-DOS, it has a command line interpreter called COMMAND.COM. There is an AUTOEXEC.BAT file, but no CONFIG.SYS. The major difference the user will notice is that the bottom line of the screen contains status information similar to:

DDT86    ALARM                  UK8 PRN=LPT1      Num    10:17:30
The left-hand side of the status bar shows running processes. The leftmost one will be visible on the screen; the others (if any) are running in the background. The right-hand side shows the keyboard layout in use (UK8 in the above example), the printer port assignment, the keyboard caps lock and num lock status, and the current time. If a DOS program is running, the status line is not shown. DOS programs cannot be run in the background.

The keyboard layout in use can be changed by pressing Ctrl, Alt and one of the function keys F1-F5.

Commands

DOS Plus contains a number of extra commands to support its limited multitasking features:

It also contains subsets of the standard DOS commands and CP/M commands - for example, it has both a built-in COPY command, and a PIP utility, both of which copy files.

The CD command can assign one of the three drives N:, O: or P: to a directory on a different drive, in a similar manner to the MS-DOS command SUBST. For example,

CD N:=C:\DATA\ACCOUNTS
will cause the directory C:\DATA\ACCOUNTS to appear as drive N:.

Internal structure

DOS Plus boots from a single file called DOSPLUS.SYS (rather than the IO.SYS / MSDOS.SYS combination of MS-DOS). This file is in the CP/M-86 CMD format, and is structured internally as a number of modules:

Computers that used DOS Plus

DOS Plus was the main operating system for the non-PC compatible BBC Master 512 and the Philips Yes. PC compatible versions were supplied with the Amstrad PC-1512 and the TRAN Jasmin Turbo.

References

Gilmour, Jean (1986) Amstrad Personal Computer PC1512 User Instructions

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: