Date: Thu, 27 Sep 2001 23:55:01 -0700 From: "Alan S." Subject: looking for defrag from a stand-alone command prompt with lfn & FAT32 support To: opendos AT delorie DOT com Message-id: <3BB41EC5.811A29C7@cornell.edu> MIME-version: 1.0 X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.78 [en] (Win98; U) Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit X-Accept-Language: en Reply-To: opendos AT delorie DOT com On my Windows PC, I also have a bootable 'maintenance partition' from which I run PowerQuest's PartitionMagic and DriveImage (PQDI) using copies of the two products' rescue disks. The only part of Windows on the partition is the three Win98SE system boot files [SYS'd from a Win98SE recovery floppy]; there is NO Windows GUI or GUI support files. I keep DriveImage recovery files on an 8000MB FAT32 partition. The PQDI files have 'DOS' (8.3) short filenames, but I also sometimes store other large and rarely used files which may have long filenames on that drive. It's not convenient to make the recovery partition visible to a full Windows (GUI) environment just to use the Windows defrag program. So I would like to defrag the partition from the [stand-alone] MS-DOS 8 command prompt. Because of possible long filenames, I can't use SPEEDDISK from Norton Utilities 8 for DOS (although there is a *remote* possibility I may be able to use the long filename enabled version of SPEEDDISK for DOS -- named SDEFRAG -- that is part of Stacker 4.1 for DOS/Win3x/Win95, which I already own -- if I can somehow circumvent the requirement to stac the partition!). So I'm looking for a basic defrag program which can run from a MS-DOS 8 command prompt; it must work with long filenames and FAT32. Suggestions? Thanks, Alan S. 9/27/2001