That *does* do it, but I can't figure out where
they go. I could put it
in the
STARTS.COM file that's loaded by the SJ monitor when it kicks
off, but it doesn't appear to have been done that way. Even if I rename
STARTS.COM so it never runs, the drives are set up correctly.
By the way, the reason the drives are set up correctly is because
the SET commands have actually altered the on-disk copy of the
handler. That mapping will stay in effect, across boots, until
you change it.
As an experiment, try issuing a SET command for a device when the
system disk is write-locked. You'll get an error when it tries to
write out the updated portions of the specified device handler to
the system device.
Megan Gentry
Former RT-11 Developer
+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| Megan Gentry, EMT/B, PP-ASEL,ST| email: mbg at
world.std.com |
| Member of Technical Staff | megan at
savaje.com |
| SavaJe Technologies, Inc. | (s/ at /@/) |
| 100 Apollo Drive | URL:
http://world.std.com/~mbg/ |
| Chelmsford, MA 01824 | "pdp-11 programmer - some assembler |
| (978) 256 6521 (DEC '77-'98) | required." - mbg KB1FCA |
+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------+