Difference between revisions of "CMD.EXE"

From EDM2
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 1: Line 1:
With this statement you can 'delay' the initialisation of the presentation manager. The effect is the same as if you would press 'ALT F1' during boot (as long 'OS/2' is visible on the left upper corner of the display) and then selecting the command-line option (F2 in Warp4). After typing 'exit' the command-line will be closed and boot-up finishes. Useful if you have to delete locked files (specially locked DLL's).
+
With this statement you can 'delay' the initialisation of the presentation manager. The effect is the same as if you would press 'ALT F1' during boot (as long 'OS/2' is visible on the left upper corner of the display) and then selecting the command-line option (F2 in Warp 4). After typing 'exit' the command-line will be closed and boot-up finishes. Useful if you have to delete locked files (specially locked DLLs).
 
  CALL=\OS2\CMD.EXE <parameters>
 
  CALL=\OS2\CMD.EXE <parameters>
 
ex:
 
ex:
Line 5: Line 5:
 
For starting another instance of the command processor and executing programs
 
For starting another instance of the command processor and executing programs
  
See RUN CACHE386.EXE and CALL MPTSTART.CMD
+
See RUN [[CACHE386.EXE]] and CALL [[MPTSTART.CMD]]
 
+
 
{|class="wikitable"
 
{|class="wikitable"
 
|+Platform Support:
 
|+Platform Support:

Revision as of 22:40, 7 October 2018

With this statement you can 'delay' the initialisation of the presentation manager. The effect is the same as if you would press 'ALT F1' during boot (as long 'OS/2' is visible on the left upper corner of the display) and then selecting the command-line option (F2 in Warp 4). After typing 'exit' the command-line will be closed and boot-up finishes. Useful if you have to delete locked files (specially locked DLLs).

CALL=\OS2\CMD.EXE <parameters>

ex:

CALL=C:\OS2\CMD.EXE /Q /C C:\MPTN\BIN\MPTSTART.CMD >NUL

For starting another instance of the command processor and executing programs

See RUN CACHE386.EXE and CALL MPTSTART.CMD

Platform Support:
OS/2 2.x OS/2 3.0 OS/2 4.0 OS/2 4.5x
Yes Yes Yes Yes