[Coco] The difference between /SD0 and /D0
Bill Pierce
ooogalapasooo at aol.com
Wed Nov 5 16:45:11 EST 2014
I was under the assumption that the CocoSDC was a WD1773 emulation, therefore /d0 should work on it as an RBF/wd1773 descriptor. I may be wrong in this assumption, as I don't have the SDC myself, but I thought that was the whole reason it was built.
Bill Pierce
"Today is a good day... I woke up" - Ritchie Havens
My Music from the Tandy/Radio Shack Color Computer 2 & 3
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E-Mail: ooogalapasooo at aol.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Gault <robert.gault at att.net>
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts <coco at maltedmedia.com>
Sent: Wed, Nov 5, 2014 9:20 am
Subject: Re: [Coco] The difference between /SD0 and /D0
Well I would not call it "right". :) What you are seeing should never happen as
there are two different sets of drivers for /SD0 and /D0. I have a different
pak, microSD by Roger Taylor, which has no problems handling pseudo drives on
the microSD, drives on DW4, hardware hard drives on a Ken-Ton interface, and
hardware floppies all at the same time.
There is no way I can test any of the SDC software without hardware. I also
can't distinguish between software failure or SDC hardware failure.
Based on the NitrOS-9 source code, your OS9Boot file should include, rbsuper,
llcocosdc, and sd0 for the SDC; rbdw, dwio, and x#s for DW4; rb1773, and D#s for
floppies. These different sets should be invisible to each other.
If the SDC wants to emulate both floppies and hard drives, it ought to use the
SD# descriptors for both and distinguish the format in the descriptors.
What do you see with
ident OS9Boot
===============================
Yes ed is the terrible editor that came with OS-9. There are several third party
editors available. What you pick will depend on whether you want to write
letters and document or source code.
I use scred very often as I normally write source code.
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