💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › computers › muf161.txt captured on 2023-11-14 at 09:13:01.
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-06-14)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
The Fabulous #### #### ### ### ########## ##### ##### ### ### ########## ### ## ## ### ### ### ### ### ## ## ### ### ### ######## ### ### ### ### ### ######## ### # ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ## ########## ## ### ## ### ### ## ######## ## ### ## List (MicroSoft's Undocumented Features) Volume 1 Number 6 =============================================================================== 1) TRUENAME Internal DOS 5.0 command. Canonicalize a filename or path (using DOS interrupt 21h, function 60) prints the actual directory. SYNTAX TRUENAME filename prints the complete path to file TRUENAME directory prints the complete path to directory Note: If the path is in a network, it starts with a \\machine-name Michael Larsson TRUENAME is analogous to the "whence" command in the UNIX Korn shell. It returns the real fully qualified pathname for a command. TRUENAME is useful in networks, where a physical drive may be mapped to a logical volume, and the user needs to know the physical location of the file. It ignores the DOS SUBST, and JOIN commands, or network MAPped drives. It is an undocumented MS/DOS feature, but is documented in 4DOS as follows: SYNTAX (Internal DOS 5.0 / 4DOS) TRUENAME [d:][path]filename PURPOSE Returns a fully qualified filename. COMMENTS TRUENAME will see "through" JOIN and SUBST commands, and requires MS-DOS 3.0 or above. EXAMPLE The following command uses TRUENAME to get the true pathname for a file: c:\> subst d: c:\util\test c:\> truename d:\test.exe c:\util\test\test.exe Dennis McCunney TRUENAME : will reveal the full name drive and path of the filename. If you specify a wildcard ('*') in the filename, it will expand the filename to use question marks instead. If the path includes the ..\ sequence, TRUENAME will examine the directory structure and calculate the path. Stranger still, the line: TRUENAME \CRONK\FLIBBET\..\ART produces the response: C:\CRONK\ART even if the directories \CRONK\FLIBBET and the file ART don't exist! Don't expect this command to work across networks. PC Magazine #212 Pg. 48-49 Forwarded by: Rodney Atkins ===============================================================================