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Languguage OS 2
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Languguage OS II Version 10-94 (Knowledge Media)(1994).ISO
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a_utils
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dos
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gzip.exe
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README.DOS
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1993-08-19
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Please read the generic README file first. Note in particular:
copy gzip.exe to gunzip.exe and zcat.exe, or use "gzip -d" to decompress.
gzip386.exe runs much faster but only on 386 and above; it is compiled with
djgpp 1.10 available in directory omnigate.clarkson.edu:/pub/msdos/djgpp.
Read also gzip.doc, and in particular the description of the -N option
which is very useful for MSDOS to restore the original file names that
have been truncated. You can set it by default by adding
set GZIP=-N
in your autoexec.bat file.
gzip386.exe includes the djgpp DOS extender (go32.exe) taken from
djdev110.zip. If you already have djgpp 1.10 or later, you can remove
go32.exe to get a smaller executable using:
exe2aout gzip386.exe
aout2exe gzip386
del gzip386
If you get the error message "DMPI: Not enough memory", you are using a
memory manager which allocates physical memory immediately instead of
allocating on demand when pages are used for the firt time. This problem
occurs only when using DMPI. (Try under plain DOS without loading any memory
manager in config.sys.) This problem will be fixed in future versions of
djgpp using the COFF object format instead of a.out. (In the a.out format,
the data segment is loaded at virtual address 0x400000 and the memory manager
thinks that gzip requires more than 4 megs of memory.)
With gzip386.exe, you may have to set the TZ environment variable to
get correct timestamps in the compressed files. For example in France
I must set:
set TZ=MET-1
The 16 bit version always uses local time.
For other problems related to DJGPP, read the documentation provided
in djdev110.zip. If a problem occurs with gzip386.exe, check first
if it occurs also with gzip.exe before reporting it.
The two programs gzip.exe and gzip386.exe give different compression ratios
because the 16 bit version (gzip.exe) is compiled with -DSMALL_MEM to
reduce memory usage. When compiled without this flag, all versions of
gzip give exactly the same compression ratio. The 386 version runs faster
under plain DOS without any memory manager than when using DMPI.
Please send comments and bug reports to Jean-loup Gailly <jloup@chorus.fr>
or to bug-gnu-utils@prep.ai.mit.edu.