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- POKing Around On The Fixed Disk
-
- Chris Thomas
- UCLA
-
- The other day I was investigating how many files I could put on my fixed
- disk. The DOS manual indicated that the format of the disk depends on how
- much of it is allocated for DOS. So I POKEd around and found that when
- allocated entirely for DOS use, the 20740 sectors on the 10MB Fixed Disk
- are allocated as follows:
-
- # of
- Sectors Use
- -------- -----------
- 1 System boot and partition map
- 1 DOS boot record
- 8 FAT
- 8 FAT - duplicate copy
- 32 Directory
- 20688 Data sectors (2586 clusters)
- 2 Unused sectors(not mapped
- by FAT)
- 68 Cylinder 305, used by
- diagnostic routines
-
- There are eight sectors per cluster, meaning the smallest file takes 4K.
- This is necessitated by the architecture of the File Allocation Table,
- which allows a maximum of 4087 clusters. The directory has space for 512
- files, unless there is some other limitation in DOS.
-
- One result of this exploration is that I feel much pressure to use
- subdirectories to keep from running out of directory space. Although
- subdirectories are fine for some data, many things only coexist with
- subdirectories and don't actually support them.