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From: | David Winfrey <dlw AT adams DOT patriot DOT net> |
Newsgroups: | comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
Subject: | Re: BIOS 13h disk i/o buffers |
Date: | Mon, 05 Jan 2004 23:32:30 -0000 |
Organization: | Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com |
Message-ID: | <vvjt0e24br51d3@corp.supernews.com> |
References: | <vvjh4soe8ib093 AT corp DOT supernews DOT com> <200401052022 DOT i05KM4A6005335 AT envy DOT delorie DOT com> <vvjit3maq0rob2 AT corp DOT supernews DOT com> <200401052048 DOT i05Km5t3005614 AT envy DOT delorie DOT com> |
User-Agent: | tin/1.5.8-20010221 ("Blue Water") (UNIX) (Linux/2.4.23 (i686)) |
X-Complaints-To: | abuse AT supernews DOT com |
Lines: | 13 |
To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
DJ-Gateway: | from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
Reply-To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
DJ Delorie <dj AT delorie DOT com> wrote: : :> Thanks. My understanding of the 13h/02h and 13h/03h BIOS interrupts :> is that the user-supplied buffer must not cross a 64K DMA :> boundary. How does the DJGPP code handle this, or am I misreading :> the BIOS documentation? : : We don't handle this; it just works. Might be old documentation. It must be; I just tried some BIOS sector i/o with a buffer forced to just under a 64K boundary, and it worked fine in a Win98 DOS box. Thanks for the clarification.
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