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- -----------------------------------------------------------
- Microsoft Plus! Readme for DriveSpace and Compression Agent
- August 1995
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- (c) Copyright Microsoft Corporation, 1995
-
-
- This document supplements the Microsoft Plus! documentation. It
- provides complementary or late-breaking information about DriveSpace 3
- disk compression and the Compression Agent file-compression program.
-
- ------------------------
- HOW TO USE THIS DOCUMENT
- ------------------------
-
- To view Drvspace.txt on screen in Notepad, maximize the Notepad window.
-
- To print Drvspace.txt, open it in Notepad or another word processor,
- and then use the Print command on the File menu.
-
-
- --------
- CONTENTS
- --------
-
- USING COPY-PROTECTED SOFTWARE WITH DRIVESPACE 3
- FREEING CONVENTIONAL MEMORY FOR RUNNING MS-DOS PROGRAMS
- USING DISK TOOLS WITH SIDEKICK FOR WINDOWS
- COMPRESSION AGENT AND THE WINDOWS SWAP FILE
- AUTOMOUNTING COMPRESSED FLOPPY DISKS
- FREQUENTLY-ASKED QUESTIONS
-
-
- COMPRESSING AND UPGRADING DRIVES
- ================================
-
- Using Copy-Protected Software With DriveSpace 3
- -----------------------------------------------
-
- If you use copy-protected software, contact the manufacturer
- before you compress or upgrade your drive using DriveSpace 3.
- Some copy-protected software depends on the absolute physical
- location of a "key" file, and will not work properly with
- DriveSpace 3.
-
- You might be able to work around this problem by uninstalling
- the copy-protected software and then reinstalling it after
- compressing or upgrading your drive.
-
-
- If a Drive Becomes Inaccessible After You Compress Another Drive
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- If, after compressing a drive, your CD-ROM drive or another hard
- disk drive becomes inaccessible or "disappears", the drive letter
- may have been changed when DriveSpace reserved drive letters for
- other purposes.
-
- To restore the original drive letter:
-
- 1. Use the right mouse button to click the My Computer icon on
- the desktop, and then click Properties.
-
- 2. Click the Device Manager tab.
-
- 3. Click the + sign to the left of the Disk Drives item, click
- the drive you want to restore, and then click Properties.
-
- 4. Set the drive letter back to the original drive letter for
- that drive.
-
- If the original drive letter is not available, it is probably
- in use by the host drive. (You can change the host drive to
- use a different letter. To do this, run DriveSpace, select
- the host drive, and choose Change Drive Letter from the
- Advanced menu.)
-
-
- FREEING CONVENTIONAL MEMORY FOR RUNNING MS-DOS PROGRAMS
- =======================================================
-
- Some MS-DOS-based programs (for example, networks or games) may
- not be able to run if DriveSpace 3 compression is installed, even
- if you have not yet upgraded your drives to DriveSpace 3 format.
- Typically, this problem occurs only when Windows is not running,
- and with programs that require a lot of conventional memory.
-
- To get your program to run, you need to reconfigure your
- system so that more conventional memory is available.
-
- The general steps involved are:
-
- 1. Make sure your Config.sys file contains commands like the
- following:
-
- DEVICE=C:\WINDOWS\HIMEM.SYS
- DEVICE=C:\WINDOWS\EMM386.EXE NOEMS
- DOS=HIGH,UMB
- DEVICEHIGH=C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\DRVSPACE.SYS /MOVE
-
- These commands make it possible for DriveSpace to use
- upper memory, which can free more conventional memory for
- your program.
-
- NOTE: If the Devicehigh command for Drvspace.sys contains
- the /L:0 switch, delete the /L:0 from that command.
-
- If your Config.sys file does not contain these commands,
- add them. (To check whether DriveSpace is using upper
- memory, type Mem /C at the MS-DOS prompt.)
-
- 2. Restart your system, and then try running your program again.
-
- 3. If your program still does not run, disable any unnecessary
- drivers and memory-resident programs in your Autoexec.bat
- and Config.sys files.
-
- Try loading device drivers by using the Devicehigh command
- instead of the Device command. For example:
-
- DEVICEHIGH=C:\WINDOWS\IFSHLP.SYS
-
- Try loading memory-resident programs by using the Loadhigh
- command. For example:
-
- LOADHIGH DOSKEY
-
- Restart your computer, and then try running your program again.
-
- 4. If your program still does not run, you need to create
- a startup floppy disk that you can use to start your computer
- without DriveSpace. You can then run your program from your
- uncompressed (host) drive. For more information, see the
- following section.
-
-
- Creating a Startup Disk for Running MS-DOS Programs
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- If your MS-DOS program does not run because there is not enough free
- conventional memory, and you have carried out the procedure in the
- previous section, you may need to create a special startup floppy
- disk. You can then use that disk to start your computer without
- DriveSpace, and then run your program from your uncompressed drive.
-
- To create your startup disk, you will need the Startup Disk wizard,
- nocomp.exe, which is located in the System subfolder of the folder
- that contains your Microsoft Plus! files.
-
- 1. Make sure there is enough free space on your host drive (or
- another uncompressed drive) to install your program.
-
- To create more free space on your host drive, use the Adjust
- Free Space command in DriveSpace. (For other ways to free space,
- look up "Disk space, freeing" in the Help index.)
-
- 2. Run the Startup Disk wizard to create your startup floppy disk.
-
- NOTE: You will need a formatted or unformatted floppy disk that
- fits in drive A.
-
- 3. After the Startup Disk wizard finishes creating your startup
- floppy disk, insert the disk in drive A, and then restart
- your computer.
-
- Your computer will start without loading DriveSpace. This will
- free memory for your program to use.
-
- NOTE: Your compressed drives will be temporarily unavailable.
- They will become available again when you restart your
- computer normally.
-
- 4. Install your program on your host drive or on another
- uncompressed drive.
-
-
- USING DISK TOOLS WITH SIDEKICK FOR WINDOWS
- ==========================================
-
- If Sidekick for Windows version 2.0 is running, you may be unable to
- run certain disk tools, such as DriveSpace or Disk Defragmenter.
-
- To work around this problem, first exit Sidekick, and then try
- running the disk tool again.
-
- For an update to Sidekick that fixes this problem, contact the
- manufacturer.
-
-
- COMPRESSION AGENT AND THE WINDOWS SWAP FILE
- ===========================================
-
- When Compression Agent recompresses the files on your compressed
- drive, it automatically skips the Win386.swp file. (This file,
- known as the Windows swap file, provides virtual memory for
- Windows and applications to use.) There is no need to specifically
- exclude the Win386.swp file from compression by using Compression
- Agent's Exceptions dialog box.
-
-
- AUTOMOUNTING COMPRESSED FLOPPY DISKS
- ====================================
-
- DriveSpace 3 automatically mounts compressed floppy disks and
- other removable media when Windows 95 is running.
-
- However, when Windows is not running (for example, if you restart
- your computer in MS-DOS mode), automounting is disabled. To
- mount a compressed floppy disk yourself, you can use ScanDisk.
- For example, to mount the compressed floppy disk in drive A,
- type the following at the command prompt:
-
- C:\> SCANDISK /MOUNT A:
-
-
- FREQUENTLY-ASKED QUESTIONS
- ==========================
-
- This section answers some common questions about how Windows
- and DriveSpace report space usage on DriveSpace 3 drives.
-
-
- Why do my files seem to take up more space on a DriveSpace 3 drive?
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The space on each drive is divided into units called clusters.
- Each file or folder is stored in one or more clusters. When
- Windows stores a file on your drive, it allocates just enough
- clusters to hold the entire file. Because all the clusters on
- a particular drive are the same size, a portion of the last
- cluster for each file will probably be unused. For example,
- on a drive that uses 8K clusters, each file uses at least
- one 8K cluster, even if that file is only 1K in size.
-
- Windows keeps track of used space on a per-cluster basis:
- when Windows reports how much space is used by a file, it
- includes the unused space at the end of the file's last
- cluster. For example, Windows would report that a 1K file
- uses 8K of space.
-
- Larger drives have larger cluster sizes. In order to support
- very large (2GB) drives, DriveSpace 3 uses 32K clusters.
- This means that even a very small file still uses 32K of
- space. As a result, when you view the properties for your
- drive, the amount of used space might appear to be higher
- than before you compressed the drive with DriveSpace 3.
-
-
- Does this mean that more space is wasted on DriveSpace 3 drives?
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- No. On the contrary, DriveSpace 3 stores files much more
- efficiently than on an uncompressed drive. In addition
- to saving space by compressing the data in each file,
- DriveSpace 3 also saves space by allocating smaller amounts
- of physical disk space for each file. Although Windows
- still keeps track of files in units of clusters (which is
- why your files may appear to take up more space), DriveSpace
- actually uses 512-byte units when allocating physical space
- for each file. This means that no more than 512 bytes of
- actual disk space is wasted when allocating a file on a
- DriveSpace 3 drive.
-
-
- What is "reduced overhead"?
- ---------------------------
-
- When you view the properties for a compressed drive and
- click on the Compression tab, you'll typically see that some
- disk space was saved due to "reduced overhead." This
- is due to the fact that DriveSpace actually stores files in
- 512-byte increments, rather than in larger clusters, as
- would happen on an uncompressed drive. Reduced overhead
- reflects the amount of space saved by using this more
- efficient allocation, relative to the amount of space that
- would have been required to store the same files on the
- same drive if it was uncompressed. Reduced overhead does
- NOT include the savings from the actual compression of your
- data.
-
-
- What do the numbers on the Compression tab mean?
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- The Compression tab of the property sheet for a drive
- shows how your files are being compressed and how much
- space each type of compression is saving.
-
- For each type of compression, the compression ratio is
- computed by dividing the amount of data stored in that type
- of compression by the amount of physical disk space actually
- used to store the data. For example, if you have 100MB of
- data stored in UltraPack format, and its compression ratio
- is 2.5 to 1, then DriveSpace 3 is storing that data using
- only 40MB of physical space on your hard disk. As a result,
- the Gain column indicates that you've saved 60MB of space by
- using UltraPack compression.
-
- The overall compression ratio for a drive is an average of
- all the compression types, plus the savings from Reduced
- Overhead. It represents the ratio between the amount of
- space that would have been required to store the same files on
- the same drive if it were not compressed, and the amount of
- physical disk space that DriveSpace is actually using to store
- those files.
-
-
- Why isn't the compression ratio for UltraPack higher?
- -----------------------------------------------------
-
- UltraPack compression generally achieves the highest
- possible compression. However, because DriveSpace can read
- and write data stored in HiPack format more quickly than
- data stored in UltraPack, it uses HiPack format unless
- using UltraPack can save a significant amount of disk
- space. Because only the data that is most difficult to
- compress will be stored in UltraPack format, the ratio
- shown for UltraPack may actually be lower than that for HiPack.
-
-
- Why are some files not compressed at all?
- -----------------------------------------
-
- On many drives, a significant amount of data will be listed
- as being uncompressed. There are several reasons that
- particular files may not be compressed:
-
- * Files that are smaller than 512 bytes are never
- compressed. (DriveSpace 3 compresses a file only
- if it can save at least 512 bytes of disk space by
- doing so.)
-
- * Space used on your drive to store folders is never
- compressed.
-
- * The Windows swap file is never compressed. (This file
- provides virtual memory by using space on your hard
- disk.)
-
- * Certain files may not be compressed if you have
- configured Compression Agent to prevent it from
- compressing those files.
-
- * Files that are already compressed, such as JPEG or ZIP
- files, typically can't be compressed any further by
- DriveSpace, so they are listed as uncompressed.
-
- * Some files that do not compress well, such as program
- files (.EXE and .DLL files), may have portions that do
- not compress at all. These portions are listed as
- uncompressed.
-
-