ALL CMD COMMANDS
APPEND
Sets the path to be searched for data files or displays the
current search path. The APPEND command is similar to the PATH command that
tells DOS where to search for program files (files with a .COM, .EXE, or .BAT
filename extension). The APPEND command guides the search for data files (such
as text files).
ASSIGN
The command redirects requests for disk operations on one
drive to a different drive. It can also display drive assignments or reset all
drive letters to their original assignments. The command is available in MS-DOS
5.00.
ATTRIB
Attrib changes or views the attributes of one or more files.
It defaults to displaying the attributes of all files in the current directory.
The file attributes available include read-only, archive, system, and hidden
attributes. The command has the capability to process whole folders and
subfolders of files.
BACKUP and RESTORE
These are commands to backup and restore files from an
external disk. These appeared in version 2, and continued to PC DOS 5 and
MS-DOS 6 (PC DOS 7 had a deversioned check). In DOS 6, these were replaced by
commercial programs (CPBACKUP, MSBACKUP), which allowed files to be restored to
different locations. These commands are not given here. For getting the syntax
of this command you need to check another website.
BASIC and BASICA
An implementation of the BASIC programming language for PCs.
Implementing BASIC in this way was very common in operating systems on 8- and
16-bit machines made in the 1980s.
IBM computers had BASIC 1.1 in ROM, and IBM's versions of
BASIC used code in this ROM-BASIC, which allowed for extra memory in the code
area. BASICA last appeared in IBM PC DOS 5.02, and in OS/2 (2.0 and later), the
version had ROM-BASIC moved into the program code.
Microsoft released GW-BASIC for machines with no ROM-BASIC.
Some OEM releases had basic.com and basica.com as loaders for GW-BASIC.EXE.
Basic was dropped after MS-DOS 4, and PC DOS 5.02. OS/2
(which uses PC DOS 5), has it, while Microsoft Windows NT (MS-DOS 5) does not.
CALL
Starts a batch file from within another batch file and
returns when that one ends.
CD and CHDIR
The CHDIR (or the alternative name CD) command either
displays or changes the current working directory.
CHCP
The command either displays or changes the active code page used
to display character glyphs in a console window.
CHKDSK
CHKDSK verifies a storage volume (for example, a hard disk,
disk partition or floppy disk) for file system integrity. The command has the
ability to fix errors on a volume and recover information from defective disk
sectors of a volume.
CHOICE
The CHOICE command is used in batch files to prompt the user
to select one item from a set of single-character choices. Choice was
introduced as an external command with MS-DOS 6.0; Novell DOS 7[3] and PC DOS
7.0. Earlier versions of DR DOS supported this function with the built-in
switch command (for numeric choices) or by beginning a command with a question
mark. This command was formerly called ync (yes-no-cancel).[citation needed]
CLS
The CLS or CLRSCR command clears the terminal screen.
COPY
Copies files from one location to another. The destination
defaults to the current directory. If multiple source files are indicated, the
destination must be a directory, or an error will result. COPY has the ability to
concatenate files. The command can copy in text mode or binary mode; in text
mode, copy will stop when it reaches the EOF character; in binary mode, the
files will be concatenated in their entirety, ignoring EOF characters.
Files may be copied to devices. For example, copy file con
outputs file to the screen console. Devices themselves may be copied to a
destination file, for example, copy con file takes the text typed into the
console and puts it into FILE, stopping when EOF (Ctrl+Z) is typed.
CTTY
Defines the terminal device (for example, COM1) to use for
input and output.
DATE
Displays the system date and prompts the user to enter a new
date. Complements the TIME command.
DEFRAG
The command has the ability to analyze the file
fragmentation on a disk drive or to defragment a drive. The command is called
DEFRAG in MS-DOS/PC DOS and disk opt in DR-DOS.
DEL and ERASE
DEL (or the alternative form ERASE) is used to delete one or
more files.
DELTREE
Deletes a directory along with all of the files and subdirectories
that it contains. Normally, it will ask for confirmation of the potentially
dangerous action.
The deltree command is included in certain versions of
Microsoft Windows and Microsoft DOS Operating Systems. It is specifically
available only in versions of MS-DOS 6.0 and higher, and in Microsoft Windows
9x. In Windows NT, the functionality provided exists but is handled by the
command rd or rmdir which has slightly different syntax. This command has been
deprecated for Windows 7.
DIR
The DIR command displays the contents of a directory. The
contents comprise the disk's volume label and serial number; one directory or
filename per line, including the filename extension, the file size in bytes,
and the date and time the file was last modified; and the total number of files
listed, their cumulative size, and the free space (in bytes) remaining on the
disk. The command is one of the few commands that exist from the first versions
of DOS. The command can display files in subdirectories. The resulting directory
listing can be sorted by various criteria and filenames can be displayed in a
chosen format.
ECHO
The ECHO command prints its own arguments back out to the
DOS equivalent of the standard output stream. Usually, this means directly to
the screen, but the output of echo can be redirected, like any other command,
to files or devices. Often used in batch files to print text out to the user.
Another important use of the echo command is to toggle
echoing of commands on and off in batch files. Traditionally batch files begin
with the @echo off statement. This says to the interpreter that echoing of
commands should be off during the whole execution of the batch file, thus
resulting in a "tidier" output (the @ symbol declares that this
particular command (echo off) should also be executed without echo.)
EDIT
EDIT is a full-screen text editor, included with MS-DOS 5
and 6, OS/2 and Windows NT to 4.0 The corresponding program in Windows 95 and
later, and W2k and later is Edit v2.0. PC DOS 6 and later use the DOS E Editor
and DR-DOS used editor up to version 7.
EDLIN
DOS line-editor. It can be used with a script file, like
debug, this makes it of some use even today. The absence of a console editor in
MS-DOS/PC DOS 1-4 created an after-market for third-party editors.
In DOS 5, an extra command "?" was added to give
the user much needed help.
DOS 6 was the last version to contain EDLIN, for MS-DOS 6,
it's on the supplemental disks, PC DOS 6 had it in the base install. Windows NT
32-bit, and OS/2 have Edwin.
EXE2BIN
Converts an executable (.exe) file into a binary file with
the extension .com, which is a memory image of the program.
The size of the resident code and data sections combined in
the input .exe file must be less than 64 KB. The file must also have no stack
segment.
EXIT
Exits the current command processor. If the exit is used at
the primary command, it has no effect unless in a DOS window under Microsoft
Windows, in which case the window is closed and the user returns to the
desktop.
FASTOPEN
FC and COMP
Show differences between any two files, or any two sets of
files.
FDISK
The FDISK command manipulates hard disk partition tables.
The name derives from IBM's habit of calling hard drives fixed disks. FDISK has
the ability to display information about, create, and delete DOS partitions or
logical DOS drive. It can also install a standard master boot record on the
hard drive.
FIND
The FIND command is a filter to find lines in the input data
stream that contain or don't contain a specified string and send these to the
output data stream. It may also be used as a pipe.
C:\>find /V "any string" FileName
FOR
The FOR loop can be used to parse a file or the output of a
command.
FORMAT
Deletes the FAT entries and the root directory of the
drive/partition, and reformats it for MS-DOS. In most cases, this should only
be used on floppy drives or other removable media. This command can potentially
erase everything on a computer's hard disk.
GRAPHICS
A TSR program to enable the sending of graphical screen dump
to printer by pressing <Print Screen>.
HELP
Gives help about DOS commands.
MS-DOS
Help 'command' would give help on a specific command. By
itself, it lists the contents of DOSHELP.HLP.
MS-DOS 6.xx help command uses QBASIC to view a quickhelp
HELP.HLP file, which contains more extensive information on the commands, with
some hyperlinking etc. The MS-DOS 6.22 help system is included on Windows 9x
cdrom versions as well.
PC DOS
PC DOS 5,6 help is the same form as MS-DOS 5 help command.
PC DOS 7.xx help uses view.exe to open OS/2 style .INF files
(cmdref.inf, dosrexx.inf and doserror.inf), opening these to the appropriate
pages.
DR-DOS
In DR-DOS, help is a batch file that launches DR-DOS'
reference, dosbook.
Microsoft Windows
Windows NT, all versions, uses DOS 5 style help, but
versions before VISTA have also a Windows help file (NTCMDS.HLP or NTCMDS.INF)
in a similar style to MS-DOS 6.
INTERSVR and INTERLNK
In MS-DOS; filelink in DR-DOS.
Network PCs using a null modem cable or LapLink cable. The
server-side version of InterLnk, it also immobilizes the machine it's running
on as it is an active app (As opposed to a TSR app) which must be running for
any transfer to take place. DR-DOS' filelink is executed on both the client and
server.
New in PC DOS 5.02, MS-DOS 6.0
JOIN
The JOIN command attaches a drive letter to a specified
directory on another drive.[4] The opposite can be achieved via the SUBST
command.
LABEL
Main article: label (command)
Changes the label on a logical drive, such as a hard disk
partition or a floppy disk.
LOADFIX
Loads a program above the first 64K of memory, and runs the
program. The command is included only in MS-DOS/PC DOS. DR-DOS used memmax,
which opened or closed lower, upper, and video memory access, to block the
lower 64K of memory.
LOADHIGH and LH
hiload in DR-DOS.
MD or MKDIR
Makes a new directory. The parent of the directory specified
will be created if it does not already exist.
MEM
Displays memory usage. It is capable of displaying program
size and status, memory in use, and internal drivers.It is internal command.
MEMMAKER
Starting with version 6, MS-DOS included the external
program MemMaker which was used to free system memory (especially Conventional
memory) by automatically reconfiguring the AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS files.
This was usually done by moving TSR programs and device drivers to the upper
memory. The whole process required two system restarts. Before the first
restart the user was asked whether he/she wanted to enable EMS Memory, since
use of expanded memory required a reserved 64KiB region in upper memory. The
first restart inserted the SIZER.EXE program which gauged the memory needed by
each TSR or Driver. MemMaker would then calculate the optimal Driver and TSR
placement in upper memory and modify the AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS
accordingly, and reboot the second time.
MEMMAKER.EXE and SIZER.EXE were developed for Microsoft by
Helix Software Company and were eliminated starting in MS DOS 7 / Windows 95.
PC DOS uses another program RamBoost to optimize memory, working either with PC
DOS's HIMEM/EMM386 or a third-party memory manager. RamBoost was licensed to
IBM by Central Point Software.
MODE
Configures system devices. Changes graphics modes, adjusts
keyboard settings, prepares code pages, and sets up port redirection.
MORE
The MORE command paginates text, so that one can view files
containing more than one screen of text. More may also be used as a filter.
MOVE
Main article: move (command)
Moves files or renames directories. DR-DOS used a separate
command for renaming directories, rendir.
MSD
Main article: Microsoft Diagnostics
The MSD command provides detailed technical information
about the computer's hardware and software. MSD was new in MS-DOS 6;[8] the PC
DOS version of this command is QCONFIG.[citation needed] The command appeared
first in Word2, and then in Windows 3.10.
PATH
Displays or sets a search path for executable files.
PAUSE
Suspends processing of a batch program and displays the
message 'Press any key to continue. . .', if not given other text to display.
PRINT
The PRINT command adds or removes files in the print queue.
This command was introduced in MS-DOS version 2. Before that there was no
built-in support for background printing files. The user would usually use the
copy command to copy files to LPT1.
RD or RMDIR
Remove a directory (delete a directory); by default the
directories must be empty of files for the command to succeed. The deltree
command in some versions of MS-DOS and all versions of Windows 9x removes
non-empty directories.
RECOVER
REM
Remark (comment) command, normally used within a batch file,
and for DR-DOS, PC/MS-DOS 6 and above, in CONFIG.SYS. This command is processed
by the command processor. Thus, its output can be redirected to create a
zero-byte file. REM is useful in logged sessions or screen-captures. One might
add comments by way of labels, usually starting with double-colon (::). These
are not processed by the command processor.
REN
The REN command renames a file. Unlike the move command,
this command cannot be used to rename subdirectories, or rename files across
drives. Mass renames can be accomplished by the use of wildcards.
SCANDISK
Disk diagnostic utility. Scandisk was a replacement for the
chkdsk utility, starting with later versions of MS-DOS. Its primary advantages
over chkdsk is that it is more reliable and has the ability to run a surface
scan which finds and marks bad clusters on the disk. It also provided mouse
point-and-click TUI, allowing for interactive session to complement
command-line batch run. chkdsk had surface scan and bad cluster detection
functionality included, and was used again on Windows NT based operating
systems.
SET
Sets environment variables. cmd.exe in Windows NT 2000,
4DOS, 4OS2, 4NT, and a number of third-party solutions allow direct entry of
environment variables from the command prompt. From at least Windows 2000, the
set command allows for the evaluation of strings into variables, thus providing
inter alia a means of performing integer arithmetic.
SETVER
SetVer is a TSR program designed to return a different value
to the version of DOS that is running. This allows programs that look for a
specific version of DOS to run under a different DOS.
Setver appeared in version 4, and has been in every version
of DOS, OS/2 and Windows NT since.
SHARE
Main article: share (command)
Installs support for file sharing and locking capabilities.
SMARTDRIVE
SORT
A filter to sort lines in the input data stream and send
them to the output data stream. Similar to the Unix command sort. Handles files
up to 64k. This sort is always case insensitive.
SUBST
A utility to map a subdirectory to a drive letter.[4] The
opposite can be achieved via the JOIN command.
SYS
Main article: SYS (command)
A utility to make a volume bootable. Sys rewrites the Volume
Boot Code (the first sector of the partition that SYS is acting on) so that the
code, when executed, will look for IO.SYS. SYS also copies the core DOS system
files, IO.SYS, MSDOS.SYS, and COMMAND.COM, to the volume. SYS does not rewrite
the Master Boot Record, contrary to widely held belief.
TIME
Display the system time and waits for the user to enter a
new time. Complements the DATE command.
TITLE
Enables a user to change the title of their MS-DOS window.
TREE
It is an external command, graphically displays the path of
each directory and sub-directories on the specified drive.
TRUENAME
The TRUENAME command will expand the name of a file,
directory, or drive, and display the result. It will expand an abbreviated form
which the command processor can recognise into its full form. It can see
through SUBST and JOIN to find the actual directory.
MS-DOS can find files and directories given their names,
without full path information, if the search object is on a path specified by
the environment variable PATH. For example, if PATH includes C:\PROGRAMS, and
file MYPROG.EXE is on this directory, then if MYPROG is typed at the command
prompt, the command processor will execute C:\PROGRAMS\MYPROG.EXE. In this
case,
TRUENAME MYPROG
would display
C:\PROGRAMS\MYPROG.EXE
This command displays the UNC pathnames of mapped network or
local CD drives. This command is an undocumented DOS command. The help switch
"/?" defines it as a "Reserved command name". It is
available in MS-DOS 5.00.0. This command is similar to the Unix which command,
which, given an executable found in $PATH, would give a full path and name. The
C library function realpath performs this function. The Microsoft Windows
command processors do not support this command.
TYPE
Displays a file. The more command is frequently used in conjunction
with this command, e.g. type long-text-file | more. TYPE can be used to
concatenate files (type file1 file2 > file3); however this won't work for
large files[dubious – discuss][citation needed]—use copy command instead.
UNDELETION
Restores file previously deleted with del. By default all
recoverable files in the working directory are restored; options are used to
change this behavior. if the MS-DOS mirror TSR program is used, then deletion
tracking files are created and can be used by undelete.
VER
An internal DOS command, that reports the DOS version
presently running, and since MS-DOS 5, whether DOS is loaded high. The
corresponding command to report the Windows version is winver. Values returned:
• MS-DOS up
to 6.22, typically derive the DOS version from the DOS kernel. This may be
different from the string it prints when it starts.
• PC DOS
typically derive the version from an internal string in command.com (so PC DOS
6.1 command.com reports the version as 6.10, although the kernel version is 6.00.)
• DR-DOS
reports whatever value the environment variable OSVER reports.
• OS/2
command.com reports an internal string, with the OS/2 version. The underlying
kernel here is 5.00, but modified to report x0.xx (where x.xx is the OS/2
version).
• Windows
9x command.com report a string from inside command.com. The build version (e.g.
2222), is also derived from there.
• Windows
NT command.com reports either the 32-bit processor string (4nt, cmd), or under
some loads, MS-DOS 5.00.500, (for all builds). The underlying kernel reports
5.00 or 5.50 depending on the interrupt. MS-DOS 5.00 commands run unmodified on
NT.
• The
Winver command usually displays a Windows dialog showing the version, with some
information derived from the shell. In windows before Windows for workgroups
3.11, running winver from DOS reported an embedded string in winver.exe.
VERIFY
Enables or disables the feature to determine if files have
been correctly written to disk. If no parameter is provided, the command will
display the current setting.
XCOPY
Copy entire directory trees. Xcopy is a version of the copy
command that can move files and directories from one location to another.
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