›››› DISKMASTER was copyrighted in 1989 by Barry Kolbe, Bryan Schappel, AND› ANALOG Computing. To that end I have created DSKMAMOD.OBJ. This file will› alter DISKMASTER such that it's potential is more nearly met. There should be› no restrictions that would apply to DSKMAMOD.OBJ other than my own, and I place› none upon it. It is shareware at a bargin price. If you find that you actualy› use it a lot I would appreciate a $5 token of your appreciation, but otherwise› you owe me nothing. › › DSKMAMOD.OBJ was written to work with DOS 2, DOS 2.5, and OS/A+, any other› DOS will likely yeild worse than bad results when writing disassembly text files› to disk. If you can't work around this problem then send me your DOS and a› couple of bucks and I'll try to rewrite DSKMAMOD.OBJ for you. If it doesn't› work out, you'll get your disk and dollars back. › › Boot up with DOS 2.5 on board. Make it such that you have on this disk both› DISKMASTER and DSKMAMOD.OBJ. Then you will need to create a MEM.SAV file by› choosing option N. Then (L)Load DISKMASTER with a slash N at the end of the› line (ie. D1:DISKMAST.OBJ/N). The slash N prevents the program from running and› returns to DOS. If you have never used MEM.SAV before be prepared for the› mulitiple reads and writes, eventually you will be returned to DOS. Then› (L)Load DSKMAMOD.OBJ. It needs no /N as it can't run anyway. Then, (K)Save the› modified file back to disk. I use the name L, as it makes for fast and easy› loading. An example of dealing with all the promts of (K)Save is definitly in› order. Filename.ext,3000,54FE,,3000. I do it like - L,3000,54FE,,3000 - notice› the double commas, please. Now delete MEM.SAV and reboot in order to "clear" the› floating point routines, and you're in business. › › You now have a disk disassembler that will not create one huge file that› won't load into your wordprocessor AND you get to continue disassembly onto as› many disks as necessary. One that supports unmodified computers and single› drive systems. The disk editor is also much improved and is quite powerful.› Press the HELP key to see your command choices while in the disk editor. › › Documentation is supplied as files PG1-6. Use DOS to print them out on an› 80 column printer one page at a time.› › Example- C› COPY--FROM, TO?› PG1,P:› ›