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Operating Systems Linux C++ Code to Access Linux Hard Disk Sectors (with a LoopBack Virtual Hard Disk) Post 302491445 by shen747 on Thursday 27th of January 2011 12:49:38 PM
Old 01-27-2011
Hi Corona688,

I found the following article through a Google search(while awaiting your reply) on creating a floppy drive with the loop back device and got it mounted.


CREATING A Virtual MS-DOS Floppy Inside Linux
.

Is the above approach correct ?.
Anyways now I'm back where I began as of how can I create files & folders inside the loop back device. Now with the MS-DOS FAT-16 file system. If you have any direct pointers to get me started on implementing this it would be a great help Smilie.
 

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DOSSRV(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							 DOSSRV(4)

NAME
dossrv, 9660srv, a:, b:, c:, eject - DOS and ISO9660 file systems SYNOPSIS
dossrv [ -v ] [ -s ] [ -f file ] [ service ] 9660srv [ -v ] [ -s ] [ -f file ] [ service ] a: b: c: eject [ n ] DESCRIPTION
Dossrv is a file server that interprets DOS file systems. A single instance of dossrv can provide access to multiple DOS disks simultane- ously. Dossrv posts a file descriptor named service (default dos) in the /srv directory. To access the DOS file system on a device, use mount with the spec argument (see bind(1)) the name of the file holding raw DOS file system, typically the disk. If spec is undefined in the mount, dossrv will use file as the default name for the device holding the DOS system. Normally dossrv creates a pipe to act as the communications channel between itself and its clients. The -s flag instructs dossrv to use its standard input and output instead. The kernels use this if they are booting from a DOS disk. This flag also prevents the creation of an explicit service file in /srv. The -v flag causes verbose output for debugging. The shell script a: contains unmount /n/a: >[2] /dev/null mount -c /srv/dos /n/a: /dev/fd0disk and is therefore a shorthand for mounting a floppy disk in drive A. The scripts b: and c: are similar. 9660srv is identical to dossrv in specification, except that it interprets ISO9660 CD-ROM file systems instead of DOS file systems. If the floppy drive has an ejection motor, eject will spit out the floppy from drive n, default 0. EXAMPLE
Mount a floppy disk with a DOS file system on it. dossrv a: SEE ALSO
kfs(4) SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/dossrv /sys/src/cmd/9660srv /rc/bin/eject DOSSRV(4)
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