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Wikipedia

MS-DOS

MS-DOS (/ˌɛmˌɛsˈdɒs/ em-es-DOSS; acronym for Microsoft Disk Operating System, also known as Microsoft DOS) is an operating system for x86-based personal computers mostly developed by Microsoft. Collectively, MS-DOS, its rebranding as IBM PC DOS, and a few operating systems attempting to be compatible with MS-DOS, are sometimes referred to as "DOS" (which is also the generic acronym for disk operating system). MS-DOS was the main operating system for IBM PC compatibles during the 1980s, from which point it was gradually superseded by operating systems offering a graphical user interface (GUI), in various generations of the graphical Microsoft Windows operating system.

MS-DOS
The command-line interface, showing that the current directory is the root of drive C
DeveloperMicrosoft
Written inx86 assembly,[1] later versions also used C
OS familyDOS
Working statePreserved pieces exist in 32-bit Windows
Source modelClosed source; open source for select versions since 2018[2]
Initial releaseAugust 12, 1981; 41 years ago (1981-08-12)[3]
Final release8.0 (Windows Me) / September 14, 2000; 22 years ago (2000-09-14)
Repository
  • github.com/microsoft/ms-dos
Available inEnglish
Update methodRe-installation
Package managerNone
Platformsx86
Kernel typeMonolithic
Influenced byTOPS-10
Default
user interface
Command-line (COMMAND.COM), text (DOS Shell)
License
Succeeded byWindows NT (since Windows XP)
Official website
Support status
MS-DOS versions 1x-7.0 unsupported as of December 31, 2001[4] MS-DOS versions 7.10 and 8.0 unsupported as of July 11, 2006.

IBM licensed and re-released it in 1981 as PC DOS 1.0 for use in its PCs. Although MS-DOS and PC DOS were initially developed in parallel by Microsoft and IBM, the two products diverged after twelve years, in 1993, with recognizable differences in compatibility, syntax, and capabilities.

Beginning in 1988 with DR-DOS, several competing products were released for the x86 platform,[5] and MS-DOS went through eight versions, until development ceased in 2000.[6] Initially, MS-DOS was targeted at Intel 8086 processors running on computer hardware using floppy disks to store and access not only the operating system, but application software and user data as well. Progressive version releases delivered support for other mass storage media in ever greater sizes and formats, along with added feature support for newer processors and rapidly evolving computer architectures. Ultimately, it was the key product in Microsoft's development from a programming language company to a diverse software development firm, providing the company with essential revenue and marketing resources. It was also the underlying basic operating system on which early versions of Windows ran as a GUI.

History

 
MS-DOS command prompt

MS-DOS was a renamed form of 86-DOS[7] – owned by Seattle Computer Products, written by Tim Paterson. Development of 86-DOS took only six weeks, as it was basically a clone of Digital Research's CP/M (for 8080/Z80 processors), ported to run on 8086 processors and with two notable differences compared to CP/M: an improved disk sector buffering logic, and the introduction of FAT12 instead of the CP/M filesystem. This first version was shipped in August 1980.[3] Microsoft, which needed an operating system for the IBM Personal Computer,[8][9] hired Tim Paterson in May 1981 and bought 86-DOS 1.10 for US$75,000 in July of the same year. Microsoft kept the version number, but renamed it MS-DOS. They also licensed MS-DOS 1.10/1.14 to IBM, which, in August 1981, offered it as PC DOS 1.0 as one of three operating systems[10] for the IBM 5150 or the IBM PC.[3]

Within a year, Microsoft licensed MS-DOS to over 70 other companies.[11] It was designed to be an OS that could run on any 8086-family computer. Each computer would have its own distinct hardware and its own version of MS-DOS, similar to the situation that existed for CP/M, and with MS-DOS emulating the same solution as CP/M to adapt for different hardware platforms. To this end, MS-DOS was designed with a modular structure with internal device drivers (the DOS BIOS), minimally for primary disk drives and the console, integrated with the kernel and loaded by the boot loader, and installable device drivers for other devices loaded and integrated at boot time. The OEM would use a development kit provided by Microsoft to build a version of MS-DOS with their basic I/O drivers and a standard Microsoft kernel, which they would typically supply on disk to end users along with the hardware. Thus, there were many different versions of "MS-DOS" for different hardware, and there is a major distinction between an IBM-compatible (or ISA) machine and an MS-DOS [compatible] machine. Some machines, like the Tandy 2000, were MS-DOS compatible but not IBM-compatible, so they could run software written exclusively for MS-DOS without dependence on the peripheral hardware of the IBM PC architecture.

This design would have worked well for compatibility, if application programs had only used MS-DOS services to perform device I/O, and indeed the same design philosophy is embodied in Windows NT (see Hardware Abstraction Layer). However, in MS-DOS's early days, the greater speed attainable by programs through direct control of hardware was of particular importance, especially for games, which often pushed the limits of their contemporary hardware. Very soon an IBM-compatible architecture became the goal, and before long all 8086-family computers closely emulated IBM's hardware, and only a single version of MS-DOS for a fixed hardware platform was needed for the market. This version is the version of MS-DOS that is discussed here, as the dozens of other OEM versions of "MS-DOS" were only relevant to the systems they were designed for, and in any case were very similar in function and capability to some standard version for the IBM PC—often the same-numbered version, but not always, since some OEMs used their own proprietary version numbering schemes (e.g. labeling later releases of MS-DOS 1.x as 2.0 or vice versa)—with a few notable exceptions.

Microsoft omitted multi-user support from MS-DOS because Microsoft's Unix-based operating system, Xenix, was fully multi-user.[12] The company planned, over time, to improve MS-DOS so it would be almost indistinguishable from single-user Xenix, or XEDOS, which would also run on the Motorola 68000, Zilog Z8000, and the LSI-11; they would be upwardly compatible with Xenix, which Byte in 1983 described as "the multi-user MS-DOS of the future".[13][14] Microsoft advertised MS-DOS and Xenix together, listing the shared features of its "single-user OS" and "the multi-user, multi-tasking, UNIX-derived operating system", and promising easy porting between them.[15] After the breakup of the Bell System, however, AT&T Computer Systems started selling UNIX System V. Believing that it could not compete with AT&T in the Unix market, Microsoft abandoned Xenix, and in 1987 transferred ownership of Xenix to the Santa Cruz Operation (SCO).

On March 25, 2014, Microsoft made the code to SCP MS-DOS 1.25 and a mixture of Altos MS-DOS 2.11 and TeleVideo PC DOS 2.11 available to the public under the Microsoft Research License Agreement, which makes the code source-available, but not open source as defined by Open Source Initiative or Free Software Foundation standards.[16][17][18][19] Microsoft would later re-license the code under the MIT License on September 28, 2018, making these versions free software.[2]

As an April Fool's Day joke in 2015, Microsoft Mobile launched a Windows Phone application called MS-DOS Mobile which was presented as a new mobile operating system and worked similar to MS-DOS.[20]

Versions

Microsoft licensed or released versions of MS-DOS under different names like Lifeboat Associates "Software Bus 86"[21][22] a.k.a. SB-DOS,[5] COMPAQ-DOS,[21][22] NCR-DOS or Z-DOS[21][5] before it eventually enforced the MS-DOS name for all versions but the IBM one, which was originally called "IBM Personal Computer DOS", later shortened to IBM PC DOS. (Competitors released compatible DOS systems such as DR DOS and PTS-DOS that could also run MS-DOS applications.)

In the former Eastern bloc, MS-DOS derivatives named DCP (Disk Control Program [de]) 3.20 and 3.30 (DCP 1700, DCP 3.3) and WDOS existed in the late 1980s.[23][24][25] They were produced by the East German electronics manufacturer VEB Robotron.[26]

The following versions of MS-DOS were released to the public:[27][28]

MS-DOS 1.x

 
MS-DOS (Compaq-DOS) version 1.12 (based on MS-DOS 1.25) for Compaq Personal Computer
  • Version 1.24 (OEM) – basis for IBM's Personal Computer DOS 1.1
  • Version 1.25 (OEM) – basis for non-IBM OEM versions of MS-DOS, including SCP MS-DOS 1.25
  • Compaq-DOS 1.12, a Compaq OEM version of MS-DOS 1.25; Release date: November, 1983[29]
  • TI BOOT V. 1.13, a Texas Instruments OEM version of MS-DOS; Release date: August, 1983[30]
  • Zenith Z-DOS 1.19, a Zenith OEM version of MS-DOS 1.25[31]
  • Zenith Z-DOS/MS-DOS release 1.01, version 1.25, a Zenith OEM version of MS-DOS; Release date: May, 1983[32]

MS-DOS 2.x

 
MS-DOS 2.11 boot disk for the Leading Edge Model D in its sleeve

Support for IBM's XT 10 MB hard disk drives, support up to 16 MB or 32 MB FAT12 formatted hard disk drives depending on the formatting tool shipped by OEMs,[33] user installable device drivers, tree-structure filing system,[34] Unix-like[35] inheritable redirectable file handles,[36][37] non-multitasking child processes[38] an improved Terminate and Stay Resident (TSR) API,[39] environment variables, device driver support, FOR and GOTO loops in batch files, ANSI.SYS.[40]

  • Version 2.0 (OEM), First version to support 5.25-inch, 180 KB and 360 KB floppy disks;[41][42] Release date: October 1983[43]
  • Version 2.02 (OEM, Compaq); Release date: November 1983[44]
  • Version 2.05 (OEM, international support);[21] Release date: October 1983[45]
  • Version 2.1 (OEM, IBM only)[21]
  • Version 2.11 (OEM)[21]
    • Altos MS-DOS 2.11, an Altos OEM version of MS-DOS 2.11 for the ACT-86C
    • ITT Corporation ITT-DOS 2.11 Version 2 (MS-DOS 2.11 for the ITT XTRA Personal Computer); Release date: July 1985[46]
    • Olivetti M19 came with MS-DOS 2.11[47]
    • Tandy 1000 HX has MS-DOS 2.11 in ROM
    • TeleVideo PC DOS 2.11, a TeleVideo OEM version of MS-DOS 2.11
    • Toshiba MS-DOS 2.11 in ROM drive for the model T1000 laptop
  • Version 2.13 (OEM, Zenith); Release date: July 1984[48]
  • Version 2.2 (OEM, with Hangeul support)[21]
  • Version 2.25 (OEM, with Hangeul and Kanji support)[21]
  • Version 2.3 (used on the Toshiba Pasopia 16)[49]

MS-DOS 3.x

 
MS-DOS 3.3C for the PC-9800 series
  • Version 3.0 (OEM) – First version to support 5.25-inch, 1.2 MB floppy drives and diskettes, FAT16 partitions up to 32 MB;[50][51] Release date: April, 1985 [52]
  • Version 3.1 (OEM) – Support for Microsoft Networks through an IFS layer,[50] remote file and printer API[53][54]
  • Version 3.2 (OEM) – First version to support 3.5-inch, 720 KB floppy drives and diskettes and XCOPY.[41]
  • Version 3.10 (OEM, Multitech); Release date: May, 1986[55]
  • Version 3.20 – First retail release (non-OEM); Release date: July, 1986[56]
  • Version 3.21 (OEM / non-OEM); Release date: May, 1987[57]
  • Version 3.22 (OEM) – (HP 95LX)
  • Version 3.25 (OEM)
  • Version 3.3 (OEM) – First version to support 3.5-inch, 1.44 MB floppy drives and diskettes, extended and logical partitions, directory tree copying with XCOPY, improved support for internationalization (COUNTRY.SYS),[58] networked file flush operations[59]
  • Version 3.3a (OEM)
  • Version 3.30; Release date: February, 1988[60]
  • Version 3.30A (OEM, DTK); Release date: July, 1987[61]
  • Version 3.30T (OEM, Tandy); Release date: July, 1990[62]
  • Version 3.31 (Compaq OEM only)[nb 1] – supports FAT16B with partitions larger than 32 MiB;[nb 2] Release date: November, 1989[63]

MS-DOS 4.0 / MS-DOS 4.x

  • MS-DOS 4.0 (multitasking) and MS-DOS 4.1 – A separate branch of development with additional multitasking features, released between 3.2 and 3.3, and later abandoned. It is unrelated to any later versions, including versions 4.00 and 4.01 listed below
  • MS-DOS 4.x (IBM-developed) – includes a graphical/mouse interface. It had many bugs and compatibility issues.[64]
    • Version 4.00 (OEM) – First version with builtin IBM/Microsoft support of a hard disk partitions greater than 32 MB and up to a maximum size of 2 GB,[65] FASTOPEN/FASTSEEK, DOSSHELL, could use EMS for the disk buffers and provided EMS drivers and emulation for 386 compatible processors;[66] Release date: October, 1988[67]
    • Version 4.01 (OEM) – Microsoft rewritten Version 4.00 released under MS-DOS label but not IBM PC DOS. First version to introduce volume serial number when formatting hard disks and floppy disks (Disk duplication also[nb 3] and when using SYS to make a floppy disk or a partition of a hard drive bootable);[68] Release date: April, 1989[69]
    • Version 4.01a (OEM)

MS-DOS 5.x

 
MS-DOS version 5.0
  • Version 5.0 (Retail) – includes a full-screen text editor. A number of bugs required re issue. First version to support 3.5-inch, 2.88 MB floppy drives and diskettes. The SHARE command was not needed anymore for old DOS 1.x style FCB file API to partitions over 32 MB.[66][65] First version to get the HIMEM.SYS driver and load portions of the operating system into the upper memory area and high memory area. Support up to four DOS primary partitions although FDISK cannot create more than one.
    • AST Premium Exec DOS 5.0 (OEM) – a version for the AST Premium Exec series of notebooks with various extensions, including improved load-high and extended codepage support[70][71]
  • Version 5.0a (Retail) – With this release, IBM and Microsoft versions diverge.
  • Version 5.50 (Windows NTVDM) – All Windows NT 32-bit versions ship with files from DOS 5.0

MS-DOS 6.x

 
German MS-DOS 6.2 Update
 
MS-DOS version 6.22
  • Version 6.0 (Retail) – Online help through QBASIC. Disk compression, upper memory optimization and antivirus included.
  • Version 6.2 – SCANDISK as replacement for CHKDSK. Fix serious bugs in DBLSPACE.
  • Version 6.21 (Retail) – Stacker-infringing DBLSPACE removed.
  • Version 6.22 (Retail) – New DRVSPACE compression.[72]

MS-DOS 7/8 (as part of Windows 9x)

  • MS-DOS 7.0 was included in Windows 95's first retail release. It contains support for VFAT long file names when run in a Windows Virtual 8086 box or with an LFN driver such as DOSLFN. JO.SYS is an alternative filename of the IO.SYS kernel file and used as such for "special purposes". JO.SYS allows booting from either CD-ROM drive or hard disk. Last version to recognize only the first 8.4 GB of a hard disk. The VER internal command reports the Windows version 4.00.950, applications through the MS-DOS API would be reported a version number of 7.00.
  • MS-DOS 7.1 was included in Windows 95's OEM Service Release 2 through Windows 98 Second Edition. It added support for the FAT32 file system and logical block addressing (LBA), and was the last version that could boot to the command line from a hard disk. The VER internal command reports the Windows version 4.00.1111, 4.10.1998, or 4.10.2222 depending on the version of Windows, while applications through the API would report version 7.10.
  • MS-DOS 8.0 was included in Windows Me, the last version based on MS-DOS, and DOS mode was significantly altered in this release. Booting from the hard disk to a command line only was no longer permitted, AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS files were no longer loaded nor parsed before loading the Windows GUI; booting from floppy disk was still permitted to allow for emergency recovery and this version is included in Windows XP and later versions for creating MS-DOS Startup Disks. The VER internal command reports the Windows version 4.90.3000, or 5.1 when created from newer versions of Windows. Applications requesting the version through the API would report version 8.00.

Microsoft DOS was released through the OEM channel, until Digital Research released DR-DOS 5.0 as a retail upgrade. With PC DOS 5.00.1, the IBM-Microsoft agreement started to end, and IBM entered the retail DOS market with IBM DOS 5.00.1, 5.02, 6.00 and PC DOS 6.1, 6.3, 7, 2000 and 7.1.

Localized versions

 
Japanese MS-DOS 6.2/V

Localized versions of MS-DOS existed for different markets.[73] While Western issues of MS-DOS evolved around the same set of tools and drivers just with localized message languages and differing sets of supported codepages and keyboard layouts, some language versions were considerably different from Western issues and were adapted to run on localized PC hardware with additional BIOS services not available in Western PCs, support multiple hardware codepages for displays and printers, support DBCS, alternative input methods and graphics output. Affected issues include Japanese (DOS/V), Korean, Arabic (ADOS 3.3/5.0), Hebrew (HDOS 3.3/5.0), Russian (RDOS 4.01/5.0) as well as some other Eastern European versions of DOS.

Competition

 
The original MS-DOS advertisement in 1981

On microcomputers based on the Intel 8086 and 8088 processors, including the IBM PC and clones, the initial competition to the PC DOS/MS-DOS line came from Digital Research, whose CP/M operating system had inspired MS-DOS. In fact, there remains controversy as to whether QDOS was more or less plagiarized from early versions of CP/M code. Digital Research released CP/M-86 a few months after MS-DOS, and it was offered as an alternative to MS-DOS and Microsoft's licensing requirements, but at a higher price. Executable programs for CP/M-86 and MS-DOS were not interchangeable with each other; many applications were sold in both MS-DOS and CP/M-86 versions until MS-DOS became preponderant (later Digital Research operating systems could run both MS-DOS and CP/M-86 software). MS-DOS originally supported the simple .COM, which was modeled after a similar but binary-incompatible format known from CP/M-80. CP/M-86 instead supported a relocatable format using the file extension .CMD to avoid name conflicts with CP/M-80 and MS-DOS .COM files. MS-DOS version 1.0 added a more advanced relocatable .EXE executable file format.

Most of the machines in the early days of MS-DOS had differing system architectures and there was a certain degree of incompatibility, and subsequently vendor lock-in. Users who began using MS-DOS with their machines were compelled to continue using the version customized for their hardware, or face trying to get all of their proprietary hardware and software to work with the new system.

In the business world the 808x-based machines that MS-DOS was tied to faced competition from the Unix operating system which ran on many different hardware architectures. Microsoft itself sold a version of Unix for the PC called Xenix.

In the emerging world of home users, a variety of other computers based on various other processors were in serious competition with the IBM PC: the Apple II, early Apple Macintosh, the Commodore 64 and others did not use the 808x processor; many 808x machines of different architectures used custom versions of MS-DOS. At first all these machines were in competition. In time the IBM PC hardware configuration became dominant in the 808x market as software written to communicate directly with the PC hardware without using standard operating system calls ran much faster, but on true PC-compatibles only. Non-PC-compatible 808x machines were too small a market to have fast software written for them alone, and the market remained open only for IBM PCs and machines that closely imitated their architecture, all running either a single version of MS-DOS compatible only with PCs, or the equivalent IBM PC DOS. Most clones cost much less than IBM-branded machines of similar performance, and became widely used by home users, while IBM PCs had a large share of the business computer market.

Microsoft and IBM together began what was intended as the follow-on to MS-DOS/PC DOS, called OS/2. When OS/2 was released in 1987, Microsoft began an advertising campaign announcing that "DOS is Dead" and stating that version 4 was the last full release. OS/2 was designed for efficient multi-tasking and offered a number of advanced features that had been designed together with similar look and feel; it was seen as the legitimate heir to the "kludgy" DOS platform.

MS-DOS had grown in spurts, with many significant features being taken or duplicated from Microsoft's other products and operating systems. MS-DOS also grew by incorporating, by direct licensing or feature duplicating, the functionality of tools and utilities developed by independent companies, such as Norton Utilities, PC Tools (Microsoft Anti-Virus), QEMM expanded memory manager, Stacker disk compression, and others.

During the period when Digital Research was competing in the operating system market some computers, like Amstrad PC1512, were sold with floppy disks for two operating systems (only one of which could be used at a time), MS-DOS and CP/M-86 or a derivative of it. Digital Research produced DOS Plus, which was compatible with MS-DOS 2.11, supported CP/M-86 programs, had additional features including multi-tasking, and could read and write disks in CP/M and MS-DOS format.

While OS/2 was under protracted development, Digital Research released the MS-DOS compatible DR DOS 5.0, which included features only available as third-party add-ons for MS-DOS. Unwilling to lose any portion of the market, Microsoft responded by announcing the "pending" release of MS-DOS 5.0 in May 1990. This effectively killed most DR DOS sales until the actual release of MS-DOS 5.0 in June 1991. Digital Research brought out DR DOS 6.0, which sold well until the "pre-announcement" of MS-DOS 6.0 again stifled the sales of DR DOS.

Microsoft had been accused of carefully orchestrating leaks about future versions of MS-DOS in an attempt to create what in the industry is called FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) regarding DR DOS. For example, in October 1990, shortly after the release of DR DOS 5.0, and long before the eventual June 1991 release of MS-DOS 5.0, stories on feature enhancements in MS-DOS started to appear in InfoWorld and PC Week. Brad Silverberg, then Vice President of Systems Software at Microsoft and general manager of its Windows and MS-DOS Business Unit, wrote a forceful letter to PC Week (November 5, 1990), denying that Microsoft was engaged in FUD tactics ("to serve our customers better, we decided to be more forthcoming about version 5.0") and denying that Microsoft copied features from DR DOS:

"The feature enhancements of MS-DOS version 5.0 were decided and development was begun long before we heard about DR DOS 5.0. There will be some similar features. With 50 million MS-DOS users, it shouldn't be surprising that DRI has heard some of the same requests from customers that we have." – (Schulman et al. 1994).[74]

The pact between Microsoft and IBM to promote OS/2 began to fall apart in 1990 when Windows 3.0 became a marketplace success. Much of Microsoft's further contributions to OS/2 also went into creating a third GUI replacement for DOS, Windows NT.

IBM, which had already been developing the next version of OS/2, carried on development of the platform without Microsoft and sold it as the alternative to DOS and Windows.

Legal issues

As a response to Digital Research's DR DOS 6.0, which bundled SuperStor disk compression, Microsoft opened negotiations with Stac Electronics, vendor of the most popular DOS disk compression tool, Stacker. In the due diligence process, Stac engineers had shown Microsoft part of the Stacker source code. Stac was unwilling to meet Microsoft's terms for licensing Stacker and withdrew from the negotiations. Microsoft chose to license Vertisoft's DoubleDisk, using it as the core for its DoubleSpace disk compression.[75]

MS-DOS 6.0 and 6.20 were released in 1993, both including the Microsoft DoubleSpace disk compression utility program. Stac successfully sued Microsoft for patent infringement regarding the compression algorithm used in DoubleSpace. This resulted in the 1994 release of MS-DOS 6.21, which had disk compression removed. Shortly afterwards came version 6.22, with a new version of the disk compression system, DriveSpace, which had a different compression algorithm to avoid the infringing code.

Prior to 1995, Microsoft licensed MS-DOS (and Windows) to computer manufacturers under three types of agreement: per-processor (a fee for each system the company sold), per-system (a fee for each system of a particular model), or per-copy (a fee for each copy of MS-DOS installed). The largest manufacturers used the per-processor arrangement, which had the lowest fee. This arrangement made it expensive for the large manufacturers to migrate to any other operating system, such as DR DOS. In 1991, the U.S. government Federal Trade Commission began investigating Microsoft's licensing procedures, resulting in a 1994 settlement agreement limiting Microsoft to per-copy licensing. Digital Research did not gain by this settlement, and years later its successor in interest, Caldera, sued Microsoft for damages in the Caldera v. Microsoft lawsuit. It was believed that the settlement ran in the order of $150 million, but was revealed in November 2009 with the release of the Settlement Agreement to be $280 million.[76]

Use of undocumented APIs

Microsoft also used a variety of tactics in MS-DOS and several of their applications and development tools that, while operating perfectly when running on genuine MS-DOS (and PC DOS), would break when run on another vendor's implementation of DOS. Notable examples of this practice included:

  • Microsoft's QuickPascal (released in early 1989) was the first MS product that checked for MS-DOS by modifying the program's Program Segment Prefix using undocumented DOS functions, and then checked whether or not the associated value changed in a fixed position within the DOS data segment (also undocumented). This check also made it into later MS products, including Microsoft QuickC v2.5, Programmer's Workbench and Microsoft C v6.0.[74]
  • The AARD code, a block of code in the windows launcher (WIN.COM) and a few other system files of Windows 3.1. It was XOR encrypted, self-modifying, and deliberately obfuscated, using various undocumented DOS structures and functions to determine whether or not Windows really was running on MS-DOS.[74] In the beta versions, it displayed an "error" message if the test for genuine MS-DOS failed, prompting the user to abort or continue, with abort the default. In the final release version, the code still ran, but the message and prompt were disabled by an added flag byte, rendering it (probably) ineffectual.
    • Note that the Windows 3.0 beta code only gave a warning that Windows would not operate properly on a "foreign" OS. It did, in fact, run just fine on DR DOS 6.0.
  • Interrupt routines called by Windows to inform MS-DOS that Windows is starting/exiting, information that MS-DOS retained in an IN_WINDOWS flag, in spite of the fact that MS-DOS and Windows were supposed to be two separate products.[74]

Windows command-line interface

 
MS-DOS Prompt in Windows 95
 
Command Prompt in Windows 10

All versions of Microsoft Windows have had an MS-DOS or MS-DOS-like command-line interface called MS-DOS Prompt which redirected input to MS-DOS and output from MS-DOS to the MS-DOS Prompt, or, in later versions, Command Prompt. This could run many DOS and variously Win32, OS/2 1.x and POSIX command-line utilities in the same command-line session, allowing piping between commands. The user interface, and the icon up to Windows 2000, followed the native MS-DOS interface. The Command Prompt introduced with Windows NT is not actually MS-DOS, but shares some commands with MS-DOS.

Earlier versions of Windows

The 16-bit versions of Windows (up to 3.11) ran as a Graphical User Interface (GUI) on top of MS-DOS. With Windows 95, 98, and Me, the role of MS-DOS was reduced to a boot loader according to Microsoft, with MS-DOS programs running in a virtual DOS machine within 32-bit Windows, with ability to boot directly into MS-DOS retained as a backward compatibility option for applications that required real mode access to the hardware, which was generally not possible within Windows.[77] However, Windows 9x still runs under DOS, and it has been stated that there is almost no difference in the relationship between Windows 9x and its included MS-DOS 7.x and Windows 3.x and MS-DOS 6.x.[78] The command line accessed the DOS command line (usually COMMAND.COM) through a Windows module (WINOLDAP.MOD).[clarification needed]

Windows NT

Windows NT-based operating systems boot through a kernel whose sole purpose is to load Windows. One cannot run Win32 applications in the loader system in the manner that OS/2, UNIX or consumer versions of Windows can launch character-mode sessions.

The command session permits running various supported command-line utilities from Win32, MS-DOS, OS/2 1.x and POSIX. The emulators for MS-DOS, OS/2 and POSIX use the host's window in the same way that Win16 applications use the Win32 explorer. Using the host's window allows one to pipe output between emulations.

The MS-DOS emulation takes place through the NTVDM (NT Virtual DOS Machine). This is a modified SoftPC (a former product similar to VirtualPC), running a modified MS-DOS 5 (NTIO.SYS and NTDOS.SYS). The output is handled by the console DLLs, so that the program at the prompt (CMD.EXE, 4NT.EXE, TCC.EXE), can see the output. 64-bit Windows has neither the DOS emulation, nor the DOS commands EDIT, DEBUG and EDLIN that come with 32-bit Windows.

The DOS version returns 5.00 or 5.50, depending on which API function is used to determine it. Utilities from MS-DOS 5.00 run in this emulation without modification. The very early beta programs of NT show MS-DOS 30.00, but programs running in MS-DOS 30.00 would assume that OS/2 was in control.

The OS/2 emulation is handled through OS2SS.EXE and OS2.EXE, and DOSCALLS.DLL. OS2.EXE is a version of the OS/2 shell (CMD.EXE), which passes commands down to the OS2SS.EXE, and input-output to the Windows NT shell. Windows 2000 was the last version of NT to support OS/2. The emulation is OS/2 1.30.

POSIX is emulated through the POSIX shell, but no emulated shell; the commands are handled directly in CMD.EXE.

The Command Prompt is often called the MS-DOS Prompt. In part, this was the official name for it in Windows 9x and early versions of Windows NT (NT 3.5 and earlier), and in part because the SoftPC emulation of DOS redirects output into it. Actually only COMMAND.COM and other 16-bit commands run in an NTVDM with AUTOEXEC.NT and CONFIG.NT initialization determined by _DEFAULT.PIF, optionally permitting the use of Win32 console applications and internal commands with an NTCMDPROMPT directive.

Win32 console applications use CMD.EXE as their command prompt shell. This confusion does not exist under OS/2 because there are separate DOS and OS/2 prompts, and running a DOS program under OS/2 will launch a separate DOS window to run the application.

All versions of Windows for Itanium (no longer sold by Microsoft) and x86-64 architectures no longer include the NTVDM and can therefore no longer natively run DOS or 16-bit Windows applications. There are alternatives such as virtual machine emulators such as Microsoft's own Virtual PC, as well as VMware, DOSBox etc., unofficial compatibility layers such as NTVDMx64, OTVDM (WineVDM), Win3mu and others.

End-of-life

 
As of 2011, MS-DOS is still used in some enterprises to run legacy applications, such as this US Navy food service management system.

The introduction of Windows 3.0 in 1990, with an easy-to-use graphical user interface, marked the beginning of the end for the command-line driven MS-DOS. With the release of Windows 95 (and continuing in the Windows 9x product line through to Windows Me), an integrated version of MS-DOS was used for bootstrapping, troubleshooting, and backwards-compatibility with old DOS software, particularly games, and no longer released as a standalone product.[79] In Windows 95, the DOS, called MS-DOS 7, can be booted separately, without the Windows GUI; this capability was retained through Windows 98 Second Edition. Windows Me removed the capability to boot its underlying MS-DOS 8.0 alone from a hard disk, but retained the ability to make a DOS boot floppy disk (called an "Emergency Boot Disk") and can be hacked to restore full access to the underlying DOS. On December 31, 2001, Microsoft declared all versions of MS-DOS 6.22 and older obsolete and stopped providing support and updates for the system.[80] As MS-DOS 7.0 was a part of Windows 95, support for it also ended when Windows 95 extended support ended on December 31, 2001.[81] As MS-DOS 7.10 and MS-DOS 8.0 were part of Windows 98 and Windows ME respectively, support ended when Windows 98 and ME extended support ended on July 11, 2006, thus ending support and updates of MS-DOS from Microsoft.[82]

In contrast to the Windows 9x series, the Windows NT-derived 32-bit operating systems (Windows NT, 2000, XP and newer), developed alongside the 9x series, do not contain MS-DOS compatibility as a core component of the operating system nor do they rely on it for bootstrapping, as NT was not with the level of support for legacy MS-DOS and Win16 apps that Windows 9x was,[79] but does provide limited DOS emulation called NTVDM (NT Virtual DOS Machine) to run DOS applications and provide DOS-like command prompt windows. 64-bit versions of Windows NT prior to Windows 11 do not provide DOS emulation and cannot run DOS applications natively.[83] Windows XP contains a copy of the Windows Me boot disk, stripped down to bootstrap only. This is accessible only by formatting a floppy as an "MS-DOS startup disk". Files like the driver for the CD-ROM support were deleted from the Windows Me bootdisk and the startup files (AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS) no longer had content. This modified disk was the base for creating the MS-DOS image for Windows XP. Some of the deleted files can be recovered with an undelete tool.[84] When booting up an MS-DOS startup disk made with Windows XP's format tool, the version number and the VER internal command reports as "Windows Millennium" and "5.1", respectively, and not as "MS-DOS 8.0" (which was used as the base for Windows Me but never released as a stand-alone product), though the API still says Version 8.0.

When creating a DOS startup disk on Windows Vista, the files on the startup disk are dated April 18, 2005 but are otherwise unchanged, including the string "MS-DOS Version 8 Copyright 1981–1999 Microsoft Corp" inside COMMAND.COM. Windows 7, 8, and 8.1 can also create a MS-DOS startup disk. Starting with Windows 10, the ability to create a DOS startup disk has been removed and so either a virtual machine running MS-DOS or an older version (in a virtual machine or dual boot) must be used to format a floppy disk, or an image must be obtained from an external source. Other solutions include using DOS compatible alternatives, such as FreeDOS or even copying the required files and boot sector themselves. Starting with Windows 11, the operating system removed NTVDM entirely from the system as it no longer offers 32-bit versions of the operating system (being solely offered in 64-bit versions only), thus removing any traces of MS-DOS from Windows and Microsoft which in turn ended the 40-year legacy of MS-DOS.

MS-DOS 6.22 was the last standalone version produced by Microsoft for Intel 8088, Intel 8086, and Intel 80286 processors, which remain available for download via their MSDN,[85] volume license, and OEM license partner websites, for customers with valid login credentials. MS-DOS is still used in embedded x86 systems due to its simple architecture and minimal memory and processor requirements, though some current products have switched to the still-maintained open-source alternative FreeDOS.

In 2018, Microsoft released the source code for MS-DOS 1.25 and 2.0 on GitHub. The purpose of this, according to Microsoft, is mainly for education and experimentation with historic operating systems and for new programmers to gain an understanding of how low-level software works, both historic and current. According to program manager Rich Turner, the other versions could not be open-sourced due to third-party licensing restrictions.[86]

Due to the historical nature of the software, Microsoft will not accept any pull requests to the code; only pull requests for modified and translated documentation will be accepted. Users, however, are allowed and fully encouraged to fork the repository containing the MS-DOS source code and make their own modifications, and do whatever they like with it.

Legacy compatibility

From 1983 onwards, various companies worked on graphical user interfaces (GUIs) capable of running on PC hardware. However, this required duplicated effort and did not provide much consistency in interface design (even between products from the same company).

Later, in 1985, Microsoft Windows 1.0 was released as Microsoft's first attempt at providing a consistent user interface (for applications). The early versions of Windows ran on top of MS-DOS. At first Windows met with little success, but this was also true for most other companies' efforts as well, for example GEM. After version 3.0, Windows gained market acceptance.

Windows 9x used MS-DOS to boot the Windows kernel in protected mode. Basic features related to the file system, such as long file names, were only available to DOS applications when running through Windows. Windows NT runs independently of DOS but includes NTVDM, a component for simulating a DOS environment for legacy applications.

Related systems

MS-DOS compatible systems include:

Microsoft manufactured IBM PC DOS for IBM. It and MS-DOS were identical products that eventually diverged starting with MS-DOS version 6.0. Digital Research did not follow Microsoft's version numbering scheme. For example, MS-DOS 4, released in July 1988, was followed by DR DOS 5.0 in May 1990. MS-DOS 5.0 came in April 1991, and DR DOS 6.0 was released the following June.[87]

These products are collectively referred to as "DOS", even though "Disk Operating System" is a generic term used on other systems unrelated to the x86 and IBM PC. "MS-DOS" can also be a generic reference to DOS on IBM PC compatible computers.

Microsoft's control of the Windows platform, and their programming practices which intentionally made Windows appear as if it ran poorly on competing versions of DOS, crippled the ability of other DOS makers to continue to compete with MS-DOS.[74] Digital Research had to release interim releases to circumvent Windows limitations inserted artificially,[74] designed specifically to provide Microsoft with a competitive advantage.[74]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Confirmed that there was Compaq Personal Computer DOS 3.31 aside from MS-DOS 3.31.
  2. ^ Up to 512 MB only.
  3. ^ Only if boot record of source floppy disk contains volume serial number also.

References

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External links

  • MS-DOS Source – MS-DOS 1.1 and MS-DOS 2.0 Source Code on GitHub
  • Tim Paterson on DOS April 15, 2016, at the Wayback Machine – Paterson wrote the QDOS OS
  • DOSBox, a multiplatform DOS emulator
  • Archive.Org: MS Dos Emulator

this, article, about, microsoft, specifically, compatible, operating, systems, doss, acronym, microsoft, disk, operating, system, also, known, microsoft, operating, system, based, personal, computers, mostly, developed, microsoft, collectively, rebranding, ope. This article is about Microsoft DOS specifically For compatible operating systems see DOS MS DOS ˌ ɛ m ˌ ɛ s ˈ d ɒ s em es DOSS acronym for Microsoft Disk Operating System also known as Microsoft DOS is an operating system for x86 based personal computers mostly developed by Microsoft Collectively MS DOS its rebranding as IBM PC DOS and a few operating systems attempting to be compatible with MS DOS are sometimes referred to as DOS which is also the generic acronym for disk operating system MS DOS was the main operating system for IBM PC compatibles during the 1980s from which point it was gradually superseded by operating systems offering a graphical user interface GUI in various generations of the graphical Microsoft Windows operating system MS DOSThe command line interface showing that the current directory is the root of drive CDeveloperMicrosoftWritten inx86 assembly 1 later versions also used COS familyDOSWorking statePreserved pieces exist in 32 bit WindowsSource modelClosed source open source for select versions since 2018 2 Initial releaseAugust 12 1981 41 years ago 1981 08 12 3 Final release8 0 Windows Me September 14 2000 22 years ago 2000 09 14 Repositorygithub wbr com wbr microsoft wbr ms dosAvailable inEnglishUpdate methodRe installationPackage managerNonePlatformsx86Kernel typeMonolithicInfluenced byTOPS 10Defaultuser interfaceCommand line COMMAND COM text DOS Shell LicenseProprietaryMIT License v1 25 amp v2 0 2 Succeeded byWindows NT since Windows XP Official websiteInternet Archive MS DOS overviewSupport statusMS DOS versions 1x 7 0 unsupported as of December 31 2001 4 MS DOS versions 7 10 and 8 0 unsupported as of July 11 2006 IBM licensed and re released it in 1981 as PC DOS 1 0 for use in its PCs Although MS DOS and PC DOS were initially developed in parallel by Microsoft and IBM the two products diverged after twelve years in 1993 with recognizable differences in compatibility syntax and capabilities Beginning in 1988 with DR DOS several competing products were released for the x86 platform 5 and MS DOS went through eight versions until development ceased in 2000 6 Initially MS DOS was targeted at Intel 8086 processors running on computer hardware using floppy disks to store and access not only the operating system but application software and user data as well Progressive version releases delivered support for other mass storage media in ever greater sizes and formats along with added feature support for newer processors and rapidly evolving computer architectures Ultimately it was the key product in Microsoft s development from a programming language company to a diverse software development firm providing the company with essential revenue and marketing resources It was also the underlying basic operating system on which early versions of Windows ran as a GUI Contents 1 History 2 Versions 2 1 MS DOS 1 x 2 2 MS DOS 2 x 2 3 MS DOS 3 x 2 4 MS DOS 4 0 MS DOS 4 x 2 5 MS DOS 5 x 2 6 MS DOS 6 x 2 7 MS DOS 7 8 as part of Windows 9x 2 8 Localized versions 3 Competition 4 Legal issues 5 Use of undocumented APIs 6 Windows command line interface 6 1 Earlier versions of Windows 6 2 Windows NT 7 End of life 8 Legacy compatibility 9 Related systems 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditFurther information DOS and Timeline of DOS operating systems MS DOS command prompt MS DOS was a renamed form of 86 DOS 7 owned by Seattle Computer Products written by Tim Paterson Development of 86 DOS took only six weeks as it was basically a clone of Digital Research s CP M for 8080 Z80 processors ported to run on 8086 processors and with two notable differences compared to CP M an improved disk sector buffering logic and the introduction of FAT12 instead of the CP M filesystem This first version was shipped in August 1980 3 Microsoft which needed an operating system for the IBM Personal Computer 8 9 hired Tim Paterson in May 1981 and bought 86 DOS 1 10 for US 75 000 in July of the same year Microsoft kept the version number but renamed it MS DOS They also licensed MS DOS 1 10 1 14 to IBM which in August 1981 offered it as PC DOS 1 0 as one of three operating systems 10 for the IBM 5150 or the IBM PC 3 Within a year Microsoft licensed MS DOS to over 70 other companies 11 It was designed to be an OS that could run on any 8086 family computer Each computer would have its own distinct hardware and its own version of MS DOS similar to the situation that existed for CP M and with MS DOS emulating the same solution as CP M to adapt for different hardware platforms To this end MS DOS was designed with a modular structure with internal device drivers the DOS BIOS minimally for primary disk drives and the console integrated with the kernel and loaded by the boot loader and installable device drivers for other devices loaded and integrated at boot time The OEM would use a development kit provided by Microsoft to build a version of MS DOS with their basic I O drivers and a standard Microsoft kernel which they would typically supply on disk to end users along with the hardware Thus there were many different versions of MS DOS for different hardware and there is a major distinction between an IBM compatible or ISA machine and an MS DOS compatible machine Some machines like the Tandy 2000 were MS DOS compatible but not IBM compatible so they could run software written exclusively for MS DOS without dependence on the peripheral hardware of the IBM PC architecture This design would have worked well for compatibility if application programs had only used MS DOS services to perform device I O and indeed the same design philosophy is embodied in Windows NT see Hardware Abstraction Layer However in MS DOS s early days the greater speed attainable by programs through direct control of hardware was of particular importance especially for games which often pushed the limits of their contemporary hardware Very soon an IBM compatible architecture became the goal and before long all 8086 family computers closely emulated IBM s hardware and only a single version of MS DOS for a fixed hardware platform was needed for the market This version is the version of MS DOS that is discussed here as the dozens of other OEM versions of MS DOS were only relevant to the systems they were designed for and in any case were very similar in function and capability to some standard version for the IBM PC often the same numbered version but not always since some OEMs used their own proprietary version numbering schemes e g labeling later releases of MS DOS 1 x as 2 0 or vice versa with a few notable exceptions Microsoft omitted multi user support from MS DOS because Microsoft s Unix based operating system Xenix was fully multi user 12 The company planned over time to improve MS DOS so it would be almost indistinguishable from single user Xenix or XEDOS which would also run on the Motorola 68000 Zilog Z8000 and the LSI 11 they would be upwardly compatible with Xenix which Byte in 1983 described as the multi user MS DOS of the future 13 14 Microsoft advertised MS DOS and Xenix together listing the shared features of its single user OS and the multi user multi tasking UNIX derived operating system and promising easy porting between them 15 After the breakup of the Bell System however AT amp T Computer Systems started selling UNIX System V Believing that it could not compete with AT amp T in the Unix market Microsoft abandoned Xenix and in 1987 transferred ownership of Xenix to the Santa Cruz Operation SCO On March 25 2014 Microsoft made the code to SCP MS DOS 1 25 and a mixture of Altos MS DOS 2 11 and TeleVideo PC DOS 2 11 available to the public under the Microsoft Research License Agreement which makes the code source available but not open source as defined by Open Source Initiative or Free Software Foundation standards 16 17 18 19 Microsoft would later re license the code under the MIT License on September 28 2018 making these versions free software 2 As an April Fool s Day joke in 2015 Microsoft Mobile launched a Windows Phone application called MS DOS Mobile which was presented as a new mobile operating system and worked similar to MS DOS 20 Versions EditMain articles Comparison of DOS operating systems and Timeline of DOS operating systems Microsoft licensed or released versions of MS DOS under different names like Lifeboat Associates Software Bus 86 21 22 a k a SB DOS 5 COMPAQ DOS 21 22 NCR DOS or Z DOS 21 5 before it eventually enforced the MS DOS name for all versions but the IBM one which was originally called IBM Personal Computer DOS later shortened to IBM PC DOS Competitors released compatible DOS systems such as DR DOS and PTS DOS that could also run MS DOS applications In the former Eastern bloc MS DOS derivatives named DCP Disk Control Program de 3 20 and 3 30 DCP 1700 DCP 3 3 and WDOS existed in the late 1980s 23 24 25 They were produced by the East German electronics manufacturer VEB Robotron 26 The following versions of MS DOS were released to the public 27 28 MS DOS 1 x Edit MS DOS Compaq DOS version 1 12 based on MS DOS 1 25 for Compaq Personal Computer Version 1 24 OEM basis for IBM s Personal Computer DOS 1 1 Version 1 25 OEM basis for non IBM OEM versions of MS DOS including SCP MS DOS 1 25Compaq DOS 1 12 a Compaq OEM version of MS DOS 1 25 Release date November 1983 29 TI BOOT V 1 13 a Texas Instruments OEM version of MS DOS Release date August 1983 30 Zenith Z DOS 1 19 a Zenith OEM version of MS DOS 1 25 31 Zenith Z DOS MS DOS release 1 01 version 1 25 a Zenith OEM version of MS DOS Release date May 1983 32 dd MS DOS 2 x Edit MS DOS 2 11 boot disk for the Leading Edge Model D in its sleeve Support for IBM s XT 10 MB hard disk drives support up to 16 MB or 32 MB FAT12 formatted hard disk drives depending on the formatting tool shipped by OEMs 33 user installable device drivers tree structure filing system 34 Unix like 35 inheritable redirectable file handles 36 37 non multitasking child processes 38 an improved Terminate and Stay Resident TSR API 39 environment variables device driver support FOR and GOTO loops in batch files ANSI SYS 40 Version 2 0 OEM First version to support 5 25 inch 180 KB and 360 KB floppy disks 41 42 Release date October 1983 43 Version 2 02 OEM Compaq Release date November 1983 44 Version 2 05 OEM international support 21 Release date October 1983 45 Version 2 1 OEM IBM only 21 Version 2 11 OEM 21 Altos MS DOS 2 11 an Altos OEM version of MS DOS 2 11 for the ACT 86C ITT Corporation ITT DOS 2 11 Version 2 MS DOS 2 11 for the ITT XTRA Personal Computer Release date July 1985 46 Olivetti M19 came with MS DOS 2 11 47 Tandy 1000 HX has MS DOS 2 11 in ROM TeleVideo PC DOS 2 11 a TeleVideo OEM version of MS DOS 2 11 Toshiba MS DOS 2 11 in ROM drive for the model T1000 laptop Version 2 13 OEM Zenith Release date July 1984 48 Version 2 2 OEM with Hangeul support 21 Version 2 25 OEM with Hangeul and Kanji support 21 Version 2 3 used on the Toshiba Pasopia 16 49 MS DOS 3 x Edit MS DOS 3 3C for the PC 9800 series Version 3 0 OEM First version to support 5 25 inch 1 2 MB floppy drives and diskettes FAT16 partitions up to 32 MB 50 51 Release date April 1985 52 Version 3 1 OEM Support for Microsoft Networks through an IFS layer 50 remote file and printer API 53 54 Version 3 2 OEM First version to support 3 5 inch 720 KB floppy drives and diskettes and XCOPY 41 Version 3 10 OEM Multitech Release date May 1986 55 Version 3 20 First retail release non OEM Release date July 1986 56 Version 3 21 OEM non OEM Release date May 1987 57 Version 3 22 OEM HP 95LX Version 3 25 OEM Version 3 3 OEM First version to support 3 5 inch 1 44 MB floppy drives and diskettes extended and logical partitions directory tree copying with XCOPY improved support for internationalization COUNTRY SYS 58 networked file flush operations 59 Version 3 3a OEM Version 3 30 Release date February 1988 60 Version 3 30A OEM DTK Release date July 1987 61 Version 3 30T OEM Tandy Release date July 1990 62 Version 3 31 Compaq OEM only nb 1 supports FAT16B with partitions larger than 32 MiB nb 2 Release date November 1989 63 MS DOS 4 0 MS DOS 4 x Edit MS DOS 4 0 multitasking and MS DOS 4 1 A separate branch of development with additional multitasking features released between 3 2 and 3 3 and later abandoned It is unrelated to any later versions including versions 4 00 and 4 01 listed below MS DOS 4 x IBM developed includes a graphical mouse interface It had many bugs and compatibility issues 64 Version 4 00 OEM First version with builtin IBM Microsoft support of a hard disk partitions greater than 32 MB and up to a maximum size of 2 GB 65 FASTOPEN FASTSEEK DOSSHELL could use EMS for the disk buffers and provided EMS drivers and emulation for 386 compatible processors 66 Release date October 1988 67 Version 4 01 OEM Microsoft rewritten Version 4 00 released under MS DOS label but not IBM PC DOS First version to introduce volume serial number when formatting hard disks and floppy disks Disk duplication also nb 3 and when using SYS to make a floppy disk or a partition of a hard drive bootable 68 Release date April 1989 69 Version 4 01a OEM MS DOS 5 x Edit MS DOS version 5 0 Version 5 0 Retail includes a full screen text editor A number of bugs required re issue First version to support 3 5 inch 2 88 MB floppy drives and diskettes The SHARE command was not needed anymore for old DOS 1 x style FCB file API to partitions over 32 MB 66 65 First version to get the HIMEM SYS driver and load portions of the operating system into the upper memory area and high memory area Support up to four DOS primary partitions although FDISK cannot create more than one AST Premium Exec DOS 5 0 OEM a version for the AST Premium Exec series of notebooks with various extensions including improved load high and extended codepage support 70 71 Version 5 0a Retail With this release IBM and Microsoft versions diverge Version 5 50 Windows NTVDM All Windows NT 32 bit versions ship with files from DOS 5 0MS DOS 6 x Edit German MS DOS 6 2 Update MS DOS version 6 22 Version 6 0 Retail Online help through QBASIC Disk compression upper memory optimization and antivirus included Version 6 2 SCANDISK as replacement for CHKDSK Fix serious bugs in DBLSPACE Version 6 21 Retail Stacker infringing DBLSPACE removed Version 6 22 Retail New DRVSPACE compression 72 MS DOS 7 8 as part of Windows 9x Edit Main articles MS DOS 7 and Windows 9x MS DOS 7 0 was included in Windows 95 s first retail release It contains support for VFAT long file names when run in a Windows Virtual 8086 box or with an LFN driver such as DOSLFN JO SYS is an alternative filename of the IO SYS kernel file and used as such for special purposes JO SYS allows booting from either CD ROM drive or hard disk Last version to recognize only the first 8 4 GB of a hard disk The VER internal command reports the Windows version 4 00 950 applications through the MS DOS API would be reported a version number of 7 00 MS DOS 7 1 was included in Windows 95 s OEM Service Release 2 through Windows 98 Second Edition It added support for the FAT32 file system and logical block addressing LBA and was the last version that could boot to the command line from a hard disk The VER internal command reports the Windows version 4 00 1111 4 10 1998 or 4 10 2222 depending on the version of Windows while applications through the API would report version 7 10 MS DOS 8 0 was included in Windows Me the last version based on MS DOS and DOS mode was significantly altered in this release Booting from the hard disk to a command line only was no longer permitted AUTOEXEC BAT and CONFIG SYS files were no longer loaded nor parsed before loading the Windows GUI booting from floppy disk was still permitted to allow for emergency recovery and this version is included in Windows XP and later versions for creating MS DOS Startup Disks The VER internal command reports the Windows version 4 90 3000 or 5 1 when created from newer versions of Windows Applications requesting the version through the API would report version 8 00 Microsoft DOS was released through the OEM channel until Digital Research released DR DOS 5 0 as a retail upgrade With PC DOS 5 00 1 the IBM Microsoft agreement started to end and IBM entered the retail DOS market with IBM DOS 5 00 1 5 02 6 00 and PC DOS 6 1 6 3 7 2000 and 7 1 Localized versions Edit Japanese MS DOS 6 2 V Localized versions of MS DOS existed for different markets 73 While Western issues of MS DOS evolved around the same set of tools and drivers just with localized message languages and differing sets of supported codepages and keyboard layouts some language versions were considerably different from Western issues and were adapted to run on localized PC hardware with additional BIOS services not available in Western PCs support multiple hardware codepages for displays and printers support DBCS alternative input methods and graphics output Affected issues include Japanese DOS V Korean Arabic ADOS 3 3 5 0 Hebrew HDOS 3 3 5 0 Russian RDOS 4 01 5 0 as well as some other Eastern European versions of DOS Competition EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The original MS DOS advertisement in 1981 On microcomputers based on the Intel 8086 and 8088 processors including the IBM PC and clones the initial competition to the PC DOS MS DOS line came from Digital Research whose CP M operating system had inspired MS DOS In fact there remains controversy as to whether QDOS was more or less plagiarized from early versions of CP M code Digital Research released CP M 86 a few months after MS DOS and it was offered as an alternative to MS DOS and Microsoft s licensing requirements but at a higher price Executable programs for CP M 86 and MS DOS were not interchangeable with each other many applications were sold in both MS DOS and CP M 86 versions until MS DOS became preponderant later Digital Research operating systems could run both MS DOS and CP M 86 software MS DOS originally supported the simple COM which was modeled after a similar but binary incompatible format known from CP M 80 CP M 86 instead supported a relocatable format using the file extension CMD to avoid name conflicts with CP M 80 and MS DOS COM files MS DOS version 1 0 added a more advanced relocatable EXE executable file format Most of the machines in the early days of MS DOS had differing system architectures and there was a certain degree of incompatibility and subsequently vendor lock in Users who began using MS DOS with their machines were compelled to continue using the version customized for their hardware or face trying to get all of their proprietary hardware and software to work with the new system In the business world the 808x based machines that MS DOS was tied to faced competition from the Unix operating system which ran on many different hardware architectures Microsoft itself sold a version of Unix for the PC called Xenix In the emerging world of home users a variety of other computers based on various other processors were in serious competition with the IBM PC the Apple II early Apple Macintosh the Commodore 64 and others did not use the 808x processor many 808x machines of different architectures used custom versions of MS DOS At first all these machines were in competition In time the IBM PC hardware configuration became dominant in the 808x market as software written to communicate directly with the PC hardware without using standard operating system calls ran much faster but on true PC compatibles only Non PC compatible 808x machines were too small a market to have fast software written for them alone and the market remained open only for IBM PCs and machines that closely imitated their architecture all running either a single version of MS DOS compatible only with PCs or the equivalent IBM PC DOS Most clones cost much less than IBM branded machines of similar performance and became widely used by home users while IBM PCs had a large share of the business computer market Microsoft and IBM together began what was intended as the follow on to MS DOS PC DOS called OS 2 When OS 2 was released in 1987 Microsoft began an advertising campaign announcing that DOS is Dead and stating that version 4 was the last full release OS 2 was designed for efficient multi tasking and offered a number of advanced features that had been designed together with similar look and feel it was seen as the legitimate heir to the kludgy DOS platform MS DOS had grown in spurts with many significant features being taken or duplicated from Microsoft s other products and operating systems MS DOS also grew by incorporating by direct licensing or feature duplicating the functionality of tools and utilities developed by independent companies such as Norton Utilities PC Tools Microsoft Anti Virus QEMM expanded memory manager Stacker disk compression and others During the period when Digital Research was competing in the operating system market some computers like Amstrad PC1512 were sold with floppy disks for two operating systems only one of which could be used at a time MS DOS and CP M 86 or a derivative of it Digital Research produced DOS Plus which was compatible with MS DOS 2 11 supported CP M 86 programs had additional features including multi tasking and could read and write disks in CP M and MS DOS format While OS 2 was under protracted development Digital Research released the MS DOS compatible DR DOS 5 0 which included features only available as third party add ons for MS DOS Unwilling to lose any portion of the market Microsoft responded by announcing the pending release of MS DOS 5 0 in May 1990 This effectively killed most DR DOS sales until the actual release of MS DOS 5 0 in June 1991 Digital Research brought out DR DOS 6 0 which sold well until the pre announcement of MS DOS 6 0 again stifled the sales of DR DOS Microsoft had been accused of carefully orchestrating leaks about future versions of MS DOS in an attempt to create what in the industry is called FUD fear uncertainty and doubt regarding DR DOS For example in October 1990 shortly after the release of DR DOS 5 0 and long before the eventual June 1991 release of MS DOS 5 0 stories on feature enhancements in MS DOS started to appear in InfoWorld and PC Week Brad Silverberg then Vice President of Systems Software at Microsoft and general manager of its Windows and MS DOS Business Unit wrote a forceful letter to PC Week November 5 1990 denying that Microsoft was engaged in FUD tactics to serve our customers better we decided to be more forthcoming about version 5 0 and denying that Microsoft copied features from DR DOS The feature enhancements of MS DOS version 5 0 were decided and development was begun long before we heard about DR DOS 5 0 There will be some similar features With 50 million MS DOS users it shouldn t be surprising that DRI has heard some of the same requests from customers that we have Schulman et al 1994 74 The pact between Microsoft and IBM to promote OS 2 began to fall apart in 1990 when Windows 3 0 became a marketplace success Much of Microsoft s further contributions to OS 2 also went into creating a third GUI replacement for DOS Windows NT IBM which had already been developing the next version of OS 2 carried on development of the platform without Microsoft and sold it as the alternative to DOS and Windows Legal issues EditAs a response to Digital Research s DR DOS 6 0 which bundled SuperStor disk compression Microsoft opened negotiations with Stac Electronics vendor of the most popular DOS disk compression tool Stacker In the due diligence process Stac engineers had shown Microsoft part of the Stacker source code Stac was unwilling to meet Microsoft s terms for licensing Stacker and withdrew from the negotiations Microsoft chose to license Vertisoft s DoubleDisk using it as the core for its DoubleSpace disk compression 75 MS DOS 6 0 and 6 20 were released in 1993 both including the Microsoft DoubleSpace disk compression utility program Stac successfully sued Microsoft for patent infringement regarding the compression algorithm used in DoubleSpace This resulted in the 1994 release of MS DOS 6 21 which had disk compression removed Shortly afterwards came version 6 22 with a new version of the disk compression system DriveSpace which had a different compression algorithm to avoid the infringing code Prior to 1995 Microsoft licensed MS DOS and Windows to computer manufacturers under three types of agreement per processor a fee for each system the company sold per system a fee for each system of a particular model or per copy a fee for each copy of MS DOS installed The largest manufacturers used the per processor arrangement which had the lowest fee This arrangement made it expensive for the large manufacturers to migrate to any other operating system such as DR DOS In 1991 the U S government Federal Trade Commission began investigating Microsoft s licensing procedures resulting in a 1994 settlement agreement limiting Microsoft to per copy licensing Digital Research did not gain by this settlement and years later its successor in interest Caldera sued Microsoft for damages in the Caldera v Microsoft lawsuit It was believed that the settlement ran in the order of 150 million but was revealed in November 2009 with the release of the Settlement Agreement to be 280 million 76 Use of undocumented APIs EditMicrosoft also used a variety of tactics in MS DOS and several of their applications and development tools that while operating perfectly when running on genuine MS DOS and PC DOS would break when run on another vendor s implementation of DOS Notable examples of this practice included Microsoft s QuickPascal released in early 1989 was the first MS product that checked for MS DOS by modifying the program s Program Segment Prefix using undocumented DOS functions and then checked whether or not the associated value changed in a fixed position within the DOS data segment also undocumented This check also made it into later MS products including Microsoft QuickC v2 5 Programmer s Workbench and Microsoft C v6 0 74 The AARD code a block of code in the windows launcher WIN COM and a few other system files of Windows 3 1 It was XOR encrypted self modifying and deliberately obfuscated using various undocumented DOS structures and functions to determine whether or not Windows really was running on MS DOS 74 In the beta versions it displayed an error message if the test for genuine MS DOS failed prompting the user to abort or continue with abort the default In the final release version the code still ran but the message and prompt were disabled by an added flag byte rendering it probably ineffectual Note that the Windows 3 0 beta code only gave a warning that Windows would not operate properly on a foreign OS It did in fact run just fine on DR DOS 6 0 Interrupt routines called by Windows to inform MS DOS that Windows is starting exiting information that MS DOS retained in an IN WINDOWS flag in spite of the fact that MS DOS and Windows were supposed to be two separate products 74 Windows command line interface EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message MS DOS Prompt in Windows 95 Command Prompt in Windows 10 All versions of Microsoft Windows have had an MS DOS or MS DOS like command line interface called MS DOS Prompt which redirected input to MS DOS and output from MS DOS to the MS DOS Prompt or in later versions Command Prompt This could run many DOS and variously Win32 OS 2 1 x and POSIX command line utilities in the same command line session allowing piping between commands The user interface and the icon up to Windows 2000 followed the native MS DOS interface The Command Prompt introduced with Windows NT is not actually MS DOS but shares some commands with MS DOS Earlier versions of Windows Edit The 16 bit versions of Windows up to 3 11 ran as a Graphical User Interface GUI on top of MS DOS With Windows 95 98 and Me the role of MS DOS was reduced to a boot loader according to Microsoft with MS DOS programs running in a virtual DOS machine within 32 bit Windows with ability to boot directly into MS DOS retained as a backward compatibility option for applications that required real mode access to the hardware which was generally not possible within Windows 77 However Windows 9x still runs under DOS and it has been stated that there is almost no difference in the relationship between Windows 9x and its included MS DOS 7 x and Windows 3 x and MS DOS 6 x 78 The command line accessed the DOS command line usually COMMAND COM through a Windows module WINOLDAP MOD clarification needed Windows NT Edit Windows NT based operating systems boot through a kernel whose sole purpose is to load Windows One cannot run Win32 applications in the loader system in the manner that OS 2 UNIX or consumer versions of Windows can launch character mode sessions The command session permits running various supported command line utilities from Win32 MS DOS OS 2 1 x and POSIX The emulators for MS DOS OS 2 and POSIX use the host s window in the same way that Win16 applications use the Win32 explorer Using the host s window allows one to pipe output between emulations The MS DOS emulation takes place through the NTVDM NT Virtual DOS Machine This is a modified SoftPC a former product similar to VirtualPC running a modified MS DOS 5 NTIO SYS and NTDOS SYS The output is handled by the console DLLs so that the program at the prompt CMD EXE 4NT EXE TCC EXE can see the output 64 bit Windows has neither the DOS emulation nor the DOS commands EDIT DEBUG and EDLIN that come with 32 bit Windows The DOS version returns 5 00 or 5 50 depending on which API function is used to determine it Utilities from MS DOS 5 00 run in this emulation without modification The very early beta programs of NT show MS DOS 30 00 but programs running in MS DOS 30 00 would assume that OS 2 was in control The OS 2 emulation is handled through OS2SS EXE and OS2 EXE and DOSCALLS DLL OS2 EXE is a version of the OS 2 shell CMD EXE which passes commands down to the OS2SS EXE and input output to the Windows NT shell Windows 2000 was the last version of NT to support OS 2 The emulation is OS 2 1 30 POSIX is emulated through the POSIX shell but no emulated shell the commands are handled directly in CMD EXE The Command Prompt is often called the MS DOS Prompt In part this was the official name for it in Windows 9x and early versions of Windows NT NT 3 5 and earlier and in part because the SoftPC emulation of DOS redirects output into it Actually only COMMAND COM and other 16 bit commands run in an NTVDM with AUTOEXEC NT and CONFIG NT initialization determined by a href Program information file html title Program information file DEFAULT PIF a optionally permitting the use of Win32 console applications and internal commands with an NTCMDPROMPT directive Win32 console applications use CMD EXE as their command prompt shell This confusion does not exist under OS 2 because there are separate DOS and OS 2 prompts and running a DOS program under OS 2 will launch a separate DOS window to run the application All versions of Windows for Itanium no longer sold by Microsoft and x86 64 architectures no longer include the NTVDM and can therefore no longer natively run DOS or 16 bit Windows applications There are alternatives such as virtual machine emulators such as Microsoft s own Virtual PC as well as VMware DOSBox etc unofficial compatibility layers such as NTVDMx64 OTVDM WineVDM Win3mu and others End of life Edit As of 2011 update MS DOS is still used in some enterprises to run legacy applications such as this US Navy food service management system The introduction of Windows 3 0 in 1990 with an easy to use graphical user interface marked the beginning of the end for the command line driven MS DOS With the release of Windows 95 and continuing in the Windows 9x product line through to Windows Me an integrated version of MS DOS was used for bootstrapping troubleshooting and backwards compatibility with old DOS software particularly games and no longer released as a standalone product 79 In Windows 95 the DOS called MS DOS 7 can be booted separately without the Windows GUI this capability was retained through Windows 98 Second Edition Windows Me removed the capability to boot its underlying MS DOS 8 0 alone from a hard disk but retained the ability to make a DOS boot floppy disk called an Emergency Boot Disk and can be hacked to restore full access to the underlying DOS On December 31 2001 Microsoft declared all versions of MS DOS 6 22 and older obsolete and stopped providing support and updates for the system 80 As MS DOS 7 0 was a part of Windows 95 support for it also ended when Windows 95 extended support ended on December 31 2001 81 As MS DOS 7 10 and MS DOS 8 0 were part of Windows 98 and Windows ME respectively support ended when Windows 98 and ME extended support ended on July 11 2006 thus ending support and updates of MS DOS from Microsoft 82 In contrast to the Windows 9x series the Windows NT derived 32 bit operating systems Windows NT 2000 XP and newer developed alongside the 9x series do not contain MS DOS compatibility as a core component of the operating system nor do they rely on it for bootstrapping as NT was not with the level of support for legacy MS DOS and Win16 apps that Windows 9x was 79 but does provide limited DOS emulation called NTVDM NT Virtual DOS Machine to run DOS applications and provide DOS like command prompt windows 64 bit versions of Windows NT prior to Windows 11 do not provide DOS emulation and cannot run DOS applications natively 83 Windows XP contains a copy of the Windows Me boot disk stripped down to bootstrap only This is accessible only by formatting a floppy as an MS DOS startup disk Files like the driver for the CD ROM support were deleted from the Windows Me bootdisk and the startup files AUTOEXEC BAT and CONFIG SYS no longer had content This modified disk was the base for creating the MS DOS image for Windows XP Some of the deleted files can be recovered with an undelete tool 84 When booting up an MS DOS startup disk made with Windows XP s format tool the version number and the VER internal command reports as Windows Millennium and 5 1 respectively and not as MS DOS 8 0 which was used as the base for Windows Me but never released as a stand alone product though the API still says Version 8 0 When creating a DOS startup disk on Windows Vista the files on the startup disk are dated April 18 2005 but are otherwise unchanged including the string MS DOS Version 8 Copyright 1981 1999 Microsoft Corp inside a href COMMAND COM html title COMMAND COM COMMAND COM a Windows 7 8 and 8 1 can also create a MS DOS startup disk Starting with Windows 10 the ability to create a DOS startup disk has been removed and so either a virtual machine running MS DOS or an older version in a virtual machine or dual boot must be used to format a floppy disk or an image must be obtained from an external source Other solutions include using DOS compatible alternatives such as FreeDOS or even copying the required files and boot sector themselves Starting with Windows 11 the operating system removed NTVDM entirely from the system as it no longer offers 32 bit versions of the operating system being solely offered in 64 bit versions only thus removing any traces of MS DOS from Windows and Microsoft which in turn ended the 40 year legacy of MS DOS MS DOS 6 22 was the last standalone version produced by Microsoft for Intel 8088 Intel 8086 and Intel 80286 processors which remain available for download via their MSDN 85 volume license and OEM license partner websites for customers with valid login credentials MS DOS is still used in embedded x86 systems due to its simple architecture and minimal memory and processor requirements though some current products have switched to the still maintained open source alternative FreeDOS In 2018 Microsoft released the source code for MS DOS 1 25 and 2 0 on GitHub The purpose of this according to Microsoft is mainly for education and experimentation with historic operating systems and for new programmers to gain an understanding of how low level software works both historic and current According to program manager Rich Turner the other versions could not be open sourced due to third party licensing restrictions 86 Due to the historical nature of the software Microsoft will not accept any pull requests to the code only pull requests for modified and translated documentation will be accepted Users however are allowed and fully encouraged to fork the repository containing the MS DOS source code and make their own modifications and do whatever they like with it Legacy compatibility EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message From 1983 onwards various companies worked on graphical user interfaces GUIs capable of running on PC hardware However this required duplicated effort and did not provide much consistency in interface design even between products from the same company Later in 1985 Microsoft Windows 1 0 was released as Microsoft s first attempt at providing a consistent user interface for applications The early versions of Windows ran on top of MS DOS At first Windows met with little success but this was also true for most other companies efforts as well for example GEM After version 3 0 Windows gained market acceptance Windows 9x used MS DOS to boot the Windows kernel in protected mode Basic features related to the file system such as long file names were only available to DOS applications when running through Windows Windows NT runs independently of DOS but includes NTVDM a component for simulating a DOS environment for legacy applications Related systems EditMain article DOS MS DOS compatible systems include IBM PC DOS DR DOS Novell DOS OpenDOS FreeDOS PTS DOS ROM DOSMicrosoft manufactured IBM PC DOS for IBM It and MS DOS were identical products that eventually diverged starting with MS DOS version 6 0 Digital Research did not follow Microsoft s version numbering scheme For example MS DOS 4 released in July 1988 was followed by DR DOS 5 0 in May 1990 MS DOS 5 0 came in April 1991 and DR DOS 6 0 was released the following June 87 These products are collectively referred to as DOS even though Disk Operating System is a generic term used on other systems unrelated to the x86 and IBM PC MS DOS can also be a generic reference to DOS on IBM PC compatible computers Microsoft s control of the Windows platform and their programming practices which intentionally made Windows appear as if it ran poorly on competing versions of DOS crippled the ability of other DOS makers to continue to compete with MS DOS 74 Digital Research had to release interim releases to circumvent Windows limitations inserted artificially 74 designed specifically to provide Microsoft with a competitive advantage 74 See also Edit Computer programming portal4DOS designed to replace the default command interpreter COMMAND COM Bad command or file name DOSBox History of Microsoft Windows Towns OS an MS DOS adaptation by Fujitsu for FM Towns Tao ExDOS commercial solution for DOS software on new Windows systems Win32 console an environment provided by Windows operating systems to support character mode applications List of DOS commandsNotes Edit Confirmed that there was Compaq Personal Computer DOS 3 31 aside from MS DOS 3 31 Up to 512 MB only Only if boot record of source floppy disk contains volume serial number also References Edit Paterson Tim June 1983 An Inside Look at MS DOS Seattle Computer Products Seattle Archived from the original on May 6 2017 Retrieved April 16 2016 a b c Turner Rich September 28 2018 Re Open Sourcing MS DOS 1 25 and 2 0 Windows Command Line Tools For Developers Retrieved September 29 2018 a b c MS DOS A Brief Introduction The Linux Information Project Archived from the original on December 14 2017 Retrieved December 14 2017 Obsolete Products Life Cycle Policy Support Microsoft July 30 2009 Archived from the original on July 6 2006 Retrieved April 6 2010 a b c Allan Roy A 2001 Microsoft in the 1980s part III 1980s The IBM Macintosh era A history of the personal computer the people and the technology London Ontario Allan Pub p 14 ISBN 0 9689108 0 7 Archived from the original on July 2 2006 Retrieved December 5 2009 1 Archived July 15 2006 at the Wayback Machine A Compilation of 8 Historical Essays Retrieved January 30 2016 dead link Conner Doug Father of DOS Still Having Fun at Microsoft patersontech com Micronews Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved December 5 2009 A history of Windows microsoft com Microsoft November 2013 Archived from the original on May 10 2015 Retrieved May 10 2015 Antov Leven 1996 History of MS DOS Digital Research Archived from the original on October 2 2017 Retrieved May 6 2015 Personal Computer Announced by IBM PDF ibm com IBM Retrieved September 27 2014 Freiberger Paul August 23 1982 Bill Gates Microsoft and the IBM Personal Computer InfoWorld p 22 Retrieved January 29 2015 Swaine Michael August 23 1982 MS DOS examining IBM PC s disk operating system InfoWorld p 24 Retrieved January 29 2015 Morgan Chris January 1982 Of IBM Operating Systems and Rosetta Stones BYTE p 6 Retrieved October 19 2013 Fiedler Ryan October 1983 The Unix Tutorial Part 3 Unix in the Microcomputer Marketplace BYTE p 132 Retrieved January 30 2015 Before you bet your business software on an OS look who s betting on MS DOS and XENIX InfoWorld advertisement June 27 1983 p 44 Retrieved January 31 2015 Paterson Tim December 19 2013 1983 05 17 Microsoft DOS V1 1 and V2 0 msdos v11source MSDOS ASM Computer History Museum Microsoft Retrieved March 25 2014 NB While the publishers claim this would be MS DOS 1 1 and 2 0 it actually is SCP MS DOS 1 25 and a mixture of Altos MS DOS 2 11 and TeleVideo PC DOS 2 11 Shustek Len March 24 2014 Microsoft MS DOS early source code Software Gems The Computer History Museum Historical Source Code Series Retrieved March 29 2014 NB While the author claims this would be MS DOS 1 1 and 2 0 it actually is SCP MS DOS 1 25 and a mixture of Altos MS DOS 2 11 and TeleVideo PC DOS 2 11 Levin Roy March 25 2014 Microsoft makes source code for MS DOS and Word for Windows available to public Official Microsoft Blog Retrieved March 29 2014 NB While the author claims this would be MS DOS 1 1 and 2 0 it actually is SCP MS DOS 1 25 and a mixture of Altos MS DOS 2 11 and TeleVideo PC DOS 2 11 Phipps Simon March 26 2014 Psych Microsoft didn t really open source MS DOS InfoWorld Retrieved March 27 2014 Peters Luke April 1 2015 Microsoft launches MS DOS Mobile Microsoft Lumia Microsoft Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved April 2 2015 The MS DOS Mobile preview is an essential download a b c d e f g h Allen Paul Gates Bill King Adrian Larson Chris Letwin Gordon O Rear Bob Paterson Tim Peters Chris Phillips Bruce Reynolds Aaron Stillmaker Betty Zbikowski Mark 1986 Technical advisors MS DOS Versions 1 0 3 2 Technical Reference Encyclopedia By Bornstein Howard Bredehoeft Lawrence Duncan Ray Morris Carol Rose David Socha John Tomlin Jim Vian Kathleen Wolverton Van Beley Jim Preppernau Barry Beason Pam Lewis Andrea Rygmyr David eds Microsoft Reference Library Vol 1 Original withdrawn ed Redmond Washington USA Microsoft Press ISBN 0 914845 69 1 LCCN 86 8640 OCLC 635600205 xvii 1053 pages 29 cm NB This original edition contains flowcharts of the internal workings of the system It was withdrawn by Microsoft before mass distribution in 1986 because it contained many factual errors as well as some classified information which should not have been published Few printed copies survived It was replaced by a completely reworked edition in 1988 2 a b Zbikowski Mark Allen Paul Ballmer Steve Borman Reuben Borman Rob Butler John Carroll Chuck Chamberlain Mark Chell David Colee Mike Courtney Mike Dryfoos Mike Duncan Rachel Eckhardt Kurt Evans Eric Farmer Rick Gates Bill Geary Michael Griffin Bob Hogarth Doug Johnson James W Kermaani Kaamel King Adrian Koch Reed Landowski James Larson Chris Lennon Thomas Lipkie Dan McDonald Marc McKinney Bruce Martin Pascal Mathers Estelle Matthews Bob Melin David Mergentime Charles Nevin Randy Newell Dan Newell Tani Norris David O Leary Mike O Rear Bob Olsson Mike Osterman Larry Ostling Ridge Pai Sunil Paterson Tim Perez Gary Peters Chris Petzold Charles Pollock John Reynolds Aaron Rubin Darryl Ryan Ralph Schulmeisters Karl Shah Rajen Shaw Barry Short Anthony Slivka Ben Smirl Jon Stillmaker Betty Stoddard John Tillman Dennis Whitten Greg Yount Natalie Zeck Steve 1988 Technical advisors The MS DOS Encyclopedia versions 1 0 through 3 2 By Duncan Ray Bostwick Steve Burgoyne Keith Byers Robert A Hogan Thom Kyle Jim Letwin Gordon Petzold Charles Rabinowitz Chip Tomlin Jim Wilton Richard Wolverton Van Wong William Woodcock JoAnne Completely reworked ed Redmond Washington USA Microsoft Press ISBN 1 55615 049 0 LCCN 87 21452 OCLC 16581341 xix 1570 pages 26 cm NB This edition was published in 1988 after extensive rework of the withdrawn 1986 first edition by a different team of authors 3 Programmtechnische Beschreibung Arbeitsplatzcomputer A 7150 Betriebssystem DCP 1700 Kompendium PDF 3 20 in German Dresden East Germany VEB Robotron Projekt Dresden December 1987 C3013 0001 1 M3030 Ag 706 169 88 5749 Archived PDF from the original on January 23 2017 Retrieved December 3 2021 Anwenderdokumentation Anleitung fur den Systemprogrammierer MOS DCP 1700 PDF 3 20 in German Dresden East Germany VEB Robotron Projekt Dresden January 29 1988 C3013 0000 0 M3030 Textdiskette DCP1700 T1 2 C3010 9991 2M3020 Disk Nr 5962 88 ROBOTRON PROJEKT DRESDEN KA2 DD DS 80 16 256 Archived PDF from the original on August 29 2021 Retrieved December 3 2021 Computer P8000 compact robotrontechnik de in German February 10 2020 Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved December 3 2021 4 Kurth Rudiger Gross Martin Hunger Henry November 29 2016 2007 Betriebssystem DCP www robotrontechnik de in German Archived from the original on April 3 2019 Retrieved April 28 2019 Microsoft DOS Version Features EMS Professional Software and Specialty Services Archived from the original on August 29 2017 Retrieved August 29 2017 DOS history Pcmuseum tripod com Archived from the original on August 29 2017 Retrieved August 29 2017 16BitOS MS DOS Version 1 12 Compaq OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 1 13 Texas Instruments OEM Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Microsoft MS DOS Informatie ultrawindows nl Archived from the original on August 9 2011 Retrieved September 27 2012 16BitOS MS DOS Version 1 25 Zenith OEM Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Mueller Scott 1995 Upgrading and Repairing PCs 5th ed Que Corporation p 784 ISBN 0 7897 0321 1 The limit of 16 MB did not come from the FAT but from the high level DOS FORMAT command Most vendors supplied modified high level format programs that permitted partitions of up to 32 MB to be formatted properly Short History of MS DOS Retrieved July 8 2018 DOS 2 0 and 2 1 Hello UNIX OS 2 Museum Retrieved July 29 2018 DOS 2 OPEN Open Existing File Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved July 10 2018 DOS 2 DUP Duplicate File Handle Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved June 10 2018 DOS 2 EXEC Load And Or Execute Program Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved June 10 2018 DOS 2 Terminate And Stay Resident Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved June 10 2018 History of DOS PC DOS Retro Retrieved July 29 2018 a b Standard Floppy Disk Formats Supported by MS DOS Microsoft Support Microsoft Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 11 2018 Rose David DOS Marches On PC The Independent Guide to IBM Personal Computers Vol 1 no 12 pp 108 125 Retrieved July 8 2018 16BitOS MS DOS Version 2 00 NCR OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 2 02 Compaq OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 2 05 Digital OEM Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 2 11 ITT OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 Personal Computer M19 PDF in Italian Olivetti Retrieved December 29 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link 16BitOS MS DOS Version 2 13 Zenith OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 Toshiba Pasopia 16 T300 PAP old computers com Retrieved December 29 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b DOS 3 0 3 1 and 3 2 The Networked PC AT OS 2 Museum Somerson Paul October 16 1984 DOS 3 0 Is Bigger but Only Manual is Better PC The Independent Guide to the IBM Personal Computer Vol 3 no 20 p 40 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 00 Compaq OEM Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 DOS 3 1 IOCTL Check If Handle Is Remote Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved June 10 2018 DOS 3 1 network Get Network Printer Setup String Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved June 10 2018 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 10 Multitech OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 20 Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 21 Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 DOS 3 3 The Mature DOS OS 2 Museum DOS 3 3 FFLUSH Commit File Ralf Brown s Interrupt List Retrieved June 10 2018 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 30 Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 30A DTK OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 30T Tandy OEM Retrieved March 3 2021 16BitOS MS DOS Version 3 31 Compaq OEM Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Shultz Greg November 6 2006 Dinosaur Sightings Installing MS DOS 4 TechRepublic CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 29 2017 Retrieved August 29 2017 a b MS DOS Partitioning Summary Support Microsoft Retrieved June 11 2018 a b DOS 4 0 the apparent cul de sac OS 2 Museum 16BitOS MS DOS Version 4 00 Retrieved March 3 2021 DOS 4 0 About volume serial number Faqs org Retrieved September 27 2012 16BitOS MS DOS Version 4 01 Retrieved March 3 2021 Brown Ralf D December 29 2002 The x86 Interrupt List Retrieved October 14 2011 via Carnegie Mellon University Paul Matthias R July 30 1997 1994 05 01 II 16 iv Landessprachliche Unterstutzung Codeseiten II 16 iv National language support Codepages NWDOS TIPs Tips amp Tricks rund um Novell DOS 7 mit Blick auf undokumentierte Details Bugs und Workarounds NWDOSTIPs Tips amp tricks for Novell DOS 7 with special focus on undocumented details bugs and workarounds MPDOSTIP Release 157 in German 3 ed Archived from the original on June 6 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 5 MS DOS 6 Technical Reference TechNet Microsoft Retrieved February 13 2014 Country MS DOS 6 Technical Reference Microsoft ANSI SYS Retrieved April 1 2014 via TechNet a b c d e f g Schulman Andrew Brown Ralf D Maxey David Michels Raymond J Kyle Jim 1994 November 1993 Undocumented DOS A programmer s guide to reserved MS DOS functions and data structures expanded to include MS DOS 6 Novell DOS and Windows 3 1 2 ed Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 63287 X xviii 856 vi pages 3 5 floppy Errata 6 7 How Safe is Disk Compression BYTE Magazine February 1994 Archived from the original on June 19 2008 Exhibits to Microsoft s Cross Motion for Summary Judgment in Novell WordPerfect Case Groklaw November 23 2009 Retrieved October 22 2011 What was the role of MS DOS in Windows 95 The Old New Thing December 24 2007 Retrieved June 30 2021 MsDos 7 0 from Windows 95 98 Computer Tyme Retrieved July 24 2022 a b Goldstein Phil October 27 2017 MS DOS Became Synonymous with PC Operating Systems in the 1980s BizTech Magazine Archived from the original on January 26 2018 Retrieved January 26 2018 Obsolete Products Life Cycle Policy Support Microsoft July 30 2009 Archived from the original on July 6 2006 Retrieved April 6 2010 Microsoft Support Lifecycle Microsoft Retrieved February 7 2015 Montalbano Elizabeth April 13 2006 Microsoft support for Windows 98 ME to end in July Computerworld Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved February 16 2021 List of limitations in 64 Bit Windows Support Microsoft October 11 2007 Retrieved May 26 2016 Sedory Daniel B March 9 2018 Windows XP MS DOS Startup Disk The Starman s Realm Supplemental Disk MS DOS 6 Technical Reference Microsoft Developer Network Archived from the original on September 2 2017 Retrieved January 26 2018 Where is source code of 3 30 and 5 0 versions Issue 424 microsoft MS DOS GitHub Retrieved March 3 2021 Comerford M DOS Timeline Part One 1980 to 1993 PowerLoad Archived from the original on February 24 2006 Retrieved June 18 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to MS DOS MS DOS Source MS DOS 1 1 and MS DOS 2 0 Source Code on GitHub Current License Agreement Policies for MS DOS and Windows Tim Paterson on DOS Archived April 15 2016 at the Wayback Machine Paterson wrote the QDOS OS DOSBox a multiplatform DOS emulator Archive Org MS Dos Emulator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MS DOS amp oldid 1131532251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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