From: Digest To: "OS/2GenAu Digest" Date: Thu, 12 Aug 2004 00:01:08 EST-10EDT,10,-1,0,7200,3,-1,0,7200,3600 Subject: [os2genau_digest] No. 912 Reply-To: X-List-Unsubscribe: www.os2site.com/list/ ************************************************** Wednesday 11 August 2004 Number 912 ************************************************** Subjects for today 1 Re: Fwd: Owch! : Ian Manners" 2 Re: Fwd: Owch! : Mike O'Connor 3 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : Chris_neeson 4 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : Voytek Eymont" 5 Re: EXT2 from OS/2 : freiherr at earthlink dot net 6 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : Ed Durrant 7 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : Robert Traynor (BobT)" 8 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : Kris Steenhaut 9 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : Ed Durrant 10 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : David Shearer" 11 Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze : David Forrester" **= Email 1 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 02:51:36 +1000 (EST) From: "Ian Manners" Subject: Re: Fwd: Owch! Hi John > Is this a risk for OS/2? > Developers, what can you tell us about dynamic loading of DLLs straight into > memory in OS/2-eCS? Yes, it is a risk for any Operating System including OS/2 but you would first need someone to write the DLL for OS/2. Its a bigger risk if you have Win-OS/2 and/or DOS support loaded. Second, you would need a hole in OS/2 to load the DLL into RAM. Third, PROTECTONLY=YES would need to be NO to present a more likely proposition of success. Same as any system, you also need a delivery mechanism. If you use a VPC running under OS/2, the answer would also depend on something external gaining access to that VPC. Cheers Ian Manners http://www.os2site dot com/ Windows: A View to be Killed. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 2 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 03:15:50 +1000 From: Mike O'Connor Subject: Re: Fwd: Owch! Ian Manners wrote: >Hi John > > > >>Is this a risk for OS/2? >>Developers, what can you tell us about dynamic loading of DLLs straight into >>memory in OS/2-eCS? >> >> > >Yes, it is a risk for any Operating System including OS/2 but you >would first need someone to write the DLL for OS/2. >Its a bigger risk if you have Win-OS/2 and/or DOS support loaded. >Second, you would need a hole in OS/2 to load the DLL into RAM. >Third, PROTECTONLY=YES would need to be NO to present a more >likely proposition of success. > >Same as any system, you also need a delivery mechanism. > >If you use a VPC running under OS/2, the answer would also depend >on something external gaining access to that VPC. > >Cheers >Ian Manners >http://www.os2site dot com/ > >Windows: A View to be Killed. > Hi Ian, John, Thanks for the confirmation Ian! I re-posted both this and previously an extract of the original on os2user at Yahoo. [Liked the tagline] -- Regards, Mike Failed the exam for -------------------- MCSE - Minesweeper Consultant and Solitaire Expert -------------------- [ISP blocks *.exe, *.cmd, *.bat, *.reg attachments] [Please use zipped versions of above] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 3 ==========================** Date: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 20:56:03 -0400 From: Chris_neeson Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze Subject formerly part of Graham Utilities - Wishlist One of Voytek's questions was how do we access HPFS from Windoze boots? 1. carefully 2a. somebody wrote an IHPFS DOS package that gave DOS boots access to HPFS partitions. Early versions were read only access ( still useful for recovery ). The HPFS partiton might get a different drive letter from a DOS boot than it had in OS2 ( depending how you 'configured' your DOS config.sys & autoexec ). For those who need it, they're on Hobbes ( & OS2site? ). 3a. somebody else wrote AMOS, also for DOS boots version 1.20 claims to support read/write access to HPFS ( haven't tried it, also downloadable from Hobbes ). Regards, Chris ------------- Relevant part of original sequence ------------------ Chris_neeson said: > 4 I'd like resurrection of Stacker, with extension of support > to JFS & Linux's ext2/3. > > ( not sure if this belongs in a utility package, but anyway... ) > > The beauty of Stacker for DOS & OS/2 was that you could access > your compressed 'drives' from whichever OS you booted > ( ESSENTIAL! - having access to data dependent on your OS > is simply unacceptable ) how do you access HPFS from windoze ? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 4 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 11:10:52 +1000 (EST) From: "Voytek Eymont" Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze Chris_neeson said: > Subject formerly part of Graham Utilities - Wishlist > One of Voytek's questions was how do we access HPFS > from Windoze boots? > 2a. somebody wrote an IHPFS DOS package that gave DOS boots > 3a. somebody else wrote AMOS, also for DOS boots thanks, I'll try I ocassionally boot windoze 98 (either to sync Palm/Avantgo, use word/acrobat or use IE) and, it would be handy at times to be able to access stuff, if need be -- Voytek ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 5 ==========================** Date: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 20:13:42 -0400 From: freiherr at earthlink dot net Subject: Re: EXT2 from OS/2 Along the recent line of HPFS from Windows, it occurs to me that years ago I had a utility that would read and write Linux EXT2 partitions from OS/2. It was broken when I went to larger drives, and over time I've lost it. A search has been fruitless; does anyone know if there is something that works? Regards, Eric Schilke Copyright (c) 2004. All rights reserved. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 6 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 17:44:37 +1000 From: Ed Durrant Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze Actually microsoft supply the required solution for accessing HPFS from any of their 32Bit Operating systems (ie not WINDOS 9X or 3X). I'm pretty sure it's documented ON THE MICROSOFT SITE ! Do a search on PINBALL - this is the DLL (ex windows NT 4) that you can add to Windows 2000 or Windows XP and Windows then supports HPFS formatted drives the same as NTFS or FAT32. Cheers/2 Ed. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 7 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 18:55:29 +1000 From: "Robert Traynor (BobT)" Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze Ed, In the name of accuracy:- A search of microsoft via google for "pinball" only returns 3 hits for games. The name of the file you refer to is PINBALL.SYS and NOT a DLL file. For those of a suicidal nature, have a look at:- http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/util/disk/hpfs_w2k.zip http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/util/disk/hpfs_nt4.zip From a readme;- ------------- Copy pinball.sys from your NT 3.5x CD-ROM to x:\winnt\system32\drivers. Substitute x: for your own drive letter and winnt for your Windows NT directory. Then use hpfs_nt.exe, a freeware program from WarpSpeed Software, which will setup all your registry entries. ------------- Also, I think there are caveats on the use of this driver. From memory, I think the HPFS partition size was critical when it got beyond a certain size. A lot of people in the early days, could not get it to work after win2k and some claimed HPFS file system corruption. Personally, I would NOT try it at all. I am sure Microsoft will have ensured that the later windows versions (XP etc.) will NOT work with this kludge.! Don't blame me if you totally screw up your os2 HPFS partitions. Lots of luck, mate. Regards, Robert Traynor (BobT). 11 August 2004 18:51 On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 17:44:37 +1000, Ed Durrant wrote: > Actually microsoft supply the required solution for accessing HPFS from any of their > 32Bit Operating systems (ie not WINDOS 9X or 3X). I'm pretty sure it's documented ON > THE MICROSOFT SITE ! Do a search on PINBALL - this is the DLL (ex windows NT 4) that > you can add to Windows 2000 or Windows XP and Windows then supports HPFS formatted > drives the same as NTFS or FAT32. > > Cheers/2 > > Ed. ,-._|\ Robert Traynor (BobT) / Oz \ email rtraynor at removeme.optusnet dot com dot au \_,--.x/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 8 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 12:30:12 +0200 From: Kris Steenhaut Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze Ed Durrant schreef: >THE MICROSOFT SITE ! Do a search on PINBALL - this is the DLL (ex windows NT 4) that >you can add to Windows 2000 or Windows XP and Windows then supports HPFS formatted >drives the same as NTFS or FAT32. > > I'm afraid that is a bit of an exaggeration. The pinball.sys supports up to 4 Giga and that's it. Better than nothing, but I wouldn't call it "the same support". :-) -- Groeten uit Gent, Kris ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 9 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 20:37:08 +1000 From: Ed Durrant Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze Kris Steenhaut wrote: > Ed Durrant schreef: > > >THE MICROSOFT SITE ! Do a search on PINBALL - this is the DLL (ex windows NT 4) that > >you can add to Windows 2000 or Windows XP and Windows then supports HPFS formatted > >drives the same as NTFS or FAT32. > > > > > I'm afraid that is a bit of an exaggeration. The pinball.sys supports up > to 4 Giga and that's it. > > Better than nothing, but I wouldn't call it "the same support". :-) > Agreed, what I meant is that the partitions so supported appear to the user in the same way as other "native" Windows file systems. The 4GB limit may be an issue nowadays I guess, but is that not also the restriction under OS/2 and that is then one reason for HPFS 386 or JFS ? Thanks for whoever it was that corrected me, yes it's pinball.sys not pinball.dll. Cheers/2 Ed. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 10 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 20:37:06 +1000 From: "David Shearer" Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze On the contary I have used the HPFS driver under NT then WinXP quite successfully. Indeed you need to be careful not to use a very large partition - i use around 2GB but I think you can use up to 4gb. I first used the NT HPFS setup package available on Hobbes - it copies pinball.sys for you. Then you use the updated HPFS_Wk2 package also from hobbes which patches the pinabll.sys to work under Win2k and WinXP - the original one from NT 3.5 doesnt work. So far so good - I have being using it for a couple of years now and never lost data!!. At least it is preferable to using a FAT16 partition to share files - although I now find FAT32 to be better to share a partition. My 2 cents worth. David On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 18:55:29 +1000, Robert Traynor . (BobT) wrote: >Ed, > >In the name of accuracy:- >A search of microsoft via google for "pinball" only returns 3 hits for games. > >The name of the file you refer to is PINBALL.SYS and NOT a >DLL file. > > >For those of a suicidal nature, have a look at:- > >http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/util/disk/hpfs_w2k.zip > >http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/util/disk/hpfs_nt4.zip > >From a readme;- >------------- >Copy pinball.sys from your NT 3.5x CD-ROM to x:\winnt\system32\drivers. >Substitute x: for your own drive letter and winnt for your >Windows NT directory. > >Then use hpfs_nt.exe, a freeware program from WarpSpeed Software, >which will setup all your registry entries. >------------- > >Also, I think there are caveats on the use of this driver. > >From memory, I think the HPFS partition size was critical when >it got beyond a certain size. A lot of people in the early >days, could not get it to work after win2k and some claimed >HPFS file system corruption. > >Personally, I would NOT try it at all. > >I am sure Microsoft will have ensured that the later windows >versions (XP etc.) will NOT work with this kludge.! > >Don't blame me if you totally screw up your os2 HPFS partitions. > >Lots of luck, mate. > >Regards, >Robert Traynor (BobT). >11 August 2004 18:51 > > > >On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 17:44:37 +1000, Ed Durrant wrote: > >> Actually microsoft supply the required solution for accessing HPFS from any of their >> 32Bit Operating systems (ie not WINDOS 9X or 3X). I'm pretty sure it's documented ON >> THE MICROSOFT SITE ! Do a search on PINBALL - this is the DLL (ex windows NT 4) that >> you can add to Windows 2000 or Windows XP and Windows then supports HPFS formatted >> drives the same as NTFS or FAT32. >> >> Cheers/2 >> >> Ed. > > > > > > ,-._|\ Robert Traynor (BobT) > / Oz \ email rtraynor at removeme.optusnet dot com dot au > \_,--.x/ > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **= Email 11 ==========================** Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 21:50:20 +1000 (EST) From: "David Forrester" Subject: Re: Accessing HPFS from windoze On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 20:37:06 +1000, David Shearer wrote: >On the contary I have used the HPFS driver under NT then WinXP quite successfully. Indeed you need to >be careful not to use a very large partition - i use around 2GB but I think you can use up to 4gb. > >I first used the NT HPFS setup package available on Hobbes - it copies pinball.sys for you. Then you use >the updated HPFS_Wk2 package also from hobbes which patches the pinabll.sys to work under Win2k and >WinXP - the original one from NT 3.5 doesnt work. > >So far so good - I have being using it for a couple of years now and never lost data!!. At least it is preferable >to using a FAT16 partition to share files - although I now find FAT32 to be better to share a partition. I'll back this up. I've been using the HPFS_Wk2 package under Win2000 for at least three years. I've seen reports that it will support up to 8GB partitions, but, when I replace the drive in my laptop last year, it didn't work. But, I have a 2GB and a 4GB partition that are shared, and I have no problems with them. -- David Forrester davidfor at internode.on dot net http://www.os2world dot com/djfos2/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------