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CD ROM Paradise Collection 4
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CD ROM Paradise Collection 4 1995 Nov.iso
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os2
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dsiz12.zip
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DSIZE.TXT
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1994-01-15
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3KB
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49 lines
Changes in Version 1.2 1/14/94
Fixed in bug which caused the program to abruptly stop after processing
a large number of files (880+) in one process. The program may stop
with no messages. There has been at least one report of a possible
system crash on a network machine. This may or may not have been
fixed. The program should be able to handle very large numbers of
files.
DSize - a program to display number of files and number of bytes in each
directory on a particular disk. 32 bit version for OS/2 version 2.0
and later only. Will not run on DOS and prior versions of OS/2.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 SPW Consulting
Direct comments to Scott Walton, Compuserve 71177,576
May be freely used and exchanged, so long as it is not modified or
sold for more than the cost of duplicating disks (not to exceed $10).
Usage: Dsize [drive letter] .... [drive letter] /options
The drive letter may be omitted or repeated. The default is the
current drive. HPFS drives and FAT drives are supported. Support
includes long filenames on HPFS drives. Using multiple drive letters
causes all drives listed to be included.
The output may be redirected (without the header) to support sorting
via different items, or copying to the printer. The normal output is
sorted by drive and then by directory name (for HPFS, without regard
for case).
Each line of the output consists of the number of files (including
hidden and system files, but not including directories). The second
field lists the total number of bytes contained in those files. The
total size is the total of the number of bytes actually used in those
drives and not the space occupied. Thus the total will not match a
CHKDSK. The remainder of the line lists the full path to the
directory. If more than one drive is used, then the full path
includes the drive letter.
Options allow choice of sort sequences. /Sd specifies sort by drive
and name (the default). /Sn requests a sort by name only. /Sc
specifies sort by file count and /ss sorts by file size. Use /s0 to
suppress sorting. If the sort has been suppressed, the order is
not predictable.
/total specifies listing the total size and file count in all
subdirectories, as well as the current directory. If totaling is
requested, then sort by drive is forced.