INFORMATION ON THE DOS ENVIRONMENT PATH STRING ---------------------------------------------- All versions of PC and MS DOS above 1.x maintain an area in memory called the environment. The environment contains a series of text strings that are used by DOS and applications programs for various purposes. You can see what strings are currently in the enviroment by typing SET and pressing from the DOS level. As a minimum, the environment will contain the string COMSPEC= followed by a DOS directory path and (usually) COMMAND.COM. Most hard disk equipped machines will show the following COMSPEC string: COMSPEC=C:\COMMAND.COM Other strings that frequently appear in the environment are the PROMPT= and PATH= strings. Control of the environment is effected through the DOS SET command, which may be entered at the DOS level or from a batch (like AUTOEXEC.BAT) file. For example, if a user desired that DOS used a copy of COMMAND.COM that was in a directory named C:\DOS, he/she might place the command SET COMSPEC=C:\DOS\COMMAND.COM in the AUTOEXEC.BAT file. After booting, DOS would load COMMAND.COM from C:\DOS each time it needed to reload the command interpreter. All other copies of COMMAND.COM in the system would be superfluous and ignored by DOS. One very useful string that can be placed in the DOS environment by the user is the PATH= string. When the name of an executable file is issued from the DOS level, DOS will first look in the current subdirectory for the file. If it finds it, it loads and executes it and all is fine. If it cannot find the file in the current directory, DOS will search the environment for the PATH= designator. If one exists, DOS will start searching the system directories that are in the PATH= string for the executable file. For example, suppose that the AUTOEXEC.BAT contains the command SET PATH=C:\DOS;D:\UTIL;E:\JUNK. Note that directory path names are separated by semicolons and can (and should) include the drive designator. Now further suppose that the user is in a directory named D:\SOMENAME and desires to run the program MYPROG.EXE but MYPROG.EXE is not resident in D:\SOMENAME. When the user enters MYPROG, DOS, unable find it in the current directory, starts searching the directories in the PATH= string starting with C:\DOS. If MYPROG.EXE was in D:\UTIL, DOS would load and execute the program and D:\UTIL would be the active directory when the program received control from DOS. Obviously, if DOS cannot find MYPROG.EXE in any of directories in the PATH= string, the message BAD COMMAND OR FILENAME will be displayed. The exact same sequence is followed if a running program calls DOS to execute a program but with one possible important difference. For technical reasons, some programs (like ZipMaster) need to load a secondary copy of COMMAND.COM and then pass the name of the program to be executed to COMMAND.COM. This is accomplished by searching the environment string for the COMSPEC= string to locate COMMAND.COM, changing to that directory, and telling DOS to load COMMAND.COM. The command passed to DOS might look somethin like this: COMMAND.COM MYPROG.EXE This tells DOS to run COMMAND.COM and for COMMAND.COM to load and execute MYPROG.EXE. Even if MYPROG.EXE were located in the active directory when the applications program passed this command to DOS, COMMAND.COM might not find MYPROG.EXE because the applications program switched to the directory where COMMAND.COM was located in order to start things rolling. Therefore, unless MYPROG.EXE was in a directory contained in the PATH= string or in the same directory as COMMAND.COM, DOS would not find it. Each Identifier in the DOS path string MUST be unique. For example, consider the path identifier C:\UTIL\DOS\MYDIR. Placing this string in the DOS path string will NOT automatically place the the dirctories C:\UTIL and C:\UTIL\DOS in the DOS path. Each must be uniquely identified by the correct path name. For each of these directories to be identified in the DOS path, the following would be entered: C:\UTIL;C:\UTIL\DOS;C:\UTIL\DOS\MYDIR ZipMaster depends upon the presence of an archive system's executable files (PKZIP.EXE, PKUNZIP.EXE, etc.). It calls these programs by using the command sequence just described and therefore cannot function properly unless these programs are in a directory specified in the PATH= string. The simplest thing to do is to place your archive system files and LIST.COM in one subdirectory and place its DOS path name in the environment. For example, suppose you are using PKWare and you place PKZIP, PKUNXIP, and LIST in a directory named C:\ARCUTILS. Placing the following line in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file and rebooting will ensure that ZipMaster will function properly: PATH=C:\ARCUTILS Obviously, the PATH= string can contain other directory path names and you may already have a PATH= command in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file. If so, just add the directory containing the archive system files to the string. For maximum speed, make it the first directory name in the string. When ZipMaster loads it will check your system environment to see if a PATH= string exists. If so, it will search each directory in the string to see if any of the supported archive system files can be found in the directories defined in the PATH.