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List of DOS commands

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Contents
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1 Resident and transient commands 2 Command line arguments 3 Windows command prompt 4 Commands o 4.1 append o 4.2 assign o 4.3 attrib o 4.4 backup and restore o 4.5 BASIC and BASICA o 4.6 Call o 4.7 cd or chdir o 4.8 chcp o 4.9 chkdsk o 4.10 choice o 4.11 cls o 4.12 copy o 4.13 ctty o 4.14 defrag o 4.15 del or erase o 4.16 deltree o 4.17 dir o 4.18 echo o 4.19 edit o 4.20 edlin o 4.21 exe2bin o 4.22 exit o 4.23 fastopen o 4.24 fc or comp o 4.25 fdisk o 4.26 find o 4.27 for o 4.28 format o 4.29 help o 4.30 intersvr & interlnk o 4.31 join o 4.32 label o 4.33 loadfix o 4.34 loadhigh, lh o 4.35 md or mkdir o 4.36 mem

4.37 memmaker 4.38 mode 4.39 more 4.40 move 4.41 msd 4.42 path 4.43 pause 4.44 pcpark 4.45 print 4.46 rd or rmdir 4.47 rem 4.48 ren 4.49 scandisk 4.50 set 4.51 setver 4.52 share 4.53 smartdrive 4.54 sort 4.55 subst 4.56 sys 4.57 time and date 4.58 tree 4.59 truename 4.60 type 4.61 undelete 4.62 Ver 4.63 verify 4.64 xcopy 5 See also 6 References 7 External links

o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o

In the personal computer operating systems MS-DOS and PC-DOS, a number of standard system commands were provided for common tasks such as listing files on a disk or moving files. Some commands were built-in to the command interpreter, others existed as transient commands loaded into memory when required. Over the several generations of MS DOS, commands were added for the additional functions of the operating system. In the current Microsoft Windows operating system a text-mode command prompt window can still be used. Some DOS commands carry out functions equivalent to those in a UNIX system but always with differences in details of the function.

Resident and transient commands


The command interpreter for MS DOS runs when no application programs are running. When an application exits, if the command interpreter in memory was overwritten, MS DOS will reload it from disk. The command interpreter is usually stored in a file called "COMMAND.COM". Some commands are built-into COMMAND.COM, others are stored

on disk in the same way as application programs. When the user types a line of text at the operating system command prompt, COMMAND.COM will parse the line, and attempt to match a command name to a built-in command or to the name of an excecutable program file or batch file on disk. If no match is found, an error message is printed and the command prompt is refreshed. Resident commands varied slightly between revisions of MS DOS. Typically, the functions DIR (list directory), ERASE or DEL (erase a file or directory), COPY (copy files), DATE (display or set date), TIME (display or set time), CD (change working directory), MD (make a directory on the current disk), REN (rename a file or directory) and some others were resident in COMMAND.COM. Transient commands were too large to keep in the command processor, or were less frequently used. Such utility programs would be stored on disk and loaded just like regular application programs, but were distributed with the operating system. Copies of these utility command programs had to be on an accessible disk, either on the current logged-in floppy drive or on the command path set in the command interpreter.

Command line arguments


Main article: Command-line interface

Parts of an MS DOS command line, showing a system prompt, command and command line arguments, drive letters, file spec with wildcard character and command line switches. In the list below, when a command can accept more than one filename, or a filename including wildcards (* and ?), it is said to accept a filespec parameter. Commands that can accept only a single filename are said to accept a filename parameter. Additionally, zero or more command line switches, or other parameter strings, can be supplied on the command line. Spaces, and symbols such as a "/" or a "-" may be used to allow the command processor to parse the command line into file names, file specifications, and other options. In DOS commands, unlike Unix, lower-case and capital letters are equivalent for file name specifiers; DOS commands preserve case, but do not require file specifiers to match case. Often parameters or arguments are also independent of case, especially in those programs developed only for DOS. Utility programs that also have versions running under UNIX-like operating systems often use upper and lower case arguments to mean different things. Sometimes a hyphen ("-") may be used instead of a slash ("/"); very early versions of DOS made the setting of the delimiter character a user-controlled option. Commands which are not built into the command interpreter may follow the same conventions. For some commands, a UNIX command with similar functions is given. Comparisons are approximate. While many commands are the same across many DOS systems (MS-DOS, PCDOS, DR-DOS, FreeDOS, etc.) some differ in command syntax or name.

Windows command prompt


Microsoft Windows supports a number of commands which may be invoked by typing them in a command window; they are usually similar to their MS-DOS equivalents. Typing help followed by a carriage return at a command prompt will list the commands. File and path names used as arguments may be long, unlike MS-DOS names in "8.3" form, and may contain embedded spaces; names with spaces must be enclosed between a pair of doublequote characters ("). Two command-line interfaces can be used in original DOS systems. Since this 16-bit executable is based on the DOS command.com, it does not support all the extended file-name syntax of Windows.

Commands
A partial list of the most common commands for DOS follows.

append
Display or sets the search path for data files. DOS will search the specified path(s) if the file is not found in the current path. This had some creative uses, such as allowing non-CD based games to be run from the CD, with configuration/save files stored on the HD.
append; append [d:]path[;][d:]path[...] append [/X:on|off][/E]

assign
The command redirects requests for disk operations on one drive to a different drive.
assign [x[:]=y[:]... assign /STATUS

Options:

x The drive letter to reassign. y The drive letter that x: will be assigned to. /STATUS Displays the current drive assignments. If typed without parameters then all drive letters are reset to original assignments. The command is available in MS-DOS 5.00.

attrib
Change or view the attributes of one or more files. It defaults to displaying the attributes of all files in the current directory.
ATTRIB [+R|-R] [+A|-A] [+S|-S] [+H|-H][drive:][path][filename] [/S [/D]]

Options:

To add an attribute attach a '+' in front of it. To remove an attribute attach a '-' in front of it Attributes include o R - Read-only o A - Archive o S - System o H - Hidden o /D - Process folders as well. o /S - Process matching files in the current folder and all subfolders.

Note: Everything inside a brace [option] is an optional item. Roughly equivalent to the Unix commands chattr and lsattr.

backup and restore


Programs to back up and restore files from an external disk. These appeared in version 2, and continued to PC-DOS 5 and MS-DOS 6 (PC-DOS 7 had a deversioned check). In DOS 6, these were replaced by commercial programs (CPBACKUP, MSBACKUP), which allowed files to be restored to different locations.

BASIC and BASICA


An implementation of the BASIC programming language for PCs. IBM computers had BASIC 1.1 in ROM, and IBM's versions of BASIC used code in this ROM-BASIC, which allowed for extra memory in the code area. BASICA last appeared in IBMDOS 5.02, and in OS/2 (2.0 and later), the version had ROMBASIC moved into the program code. Microsoft released GW-BASIC for machines with no ROM-BASIC. Some OEM releases had basic.com and basica.com as loaders for GW-BASIC.EXE.

Call
Calls one batch program from another. A new batch file context is created with the specified arguments and control is passed to the statement after the label specified. Syntax:
call [filespec][batch file parameters]

filespec: name and if necessary path of the new batch file parameters: switches

cd or chdir
Change current working directory. Displays the current working directory when used without a path parameter.
cd

displays the current working directory on the current drive.

cd directory

changes the working directory on the current drive to directory.


chdir e:directory

changes the working directory on E: to directory.


cd ..

changes the working directory to the parent directory (up one directory level).
cd \

changes the working directory to the root (top level) directory of the current drive. Equivalent to the Unix command cd (with a path parameter), or pwd (without a parameter). cd .. changes to the parent directory.

chcp
Changes the code page used to display character glyphs in a console window.
chcp [codepage]

With a numeric parameter, this command changes the codepage setting to codepage. Without a parameter, the command displays the currently active codepage.

chkdsk
Verifies a storage volume (hard disk, partition, floppy disk, flash drive, etc) for file system integrity. Options:

/F : Fixes errors on the volume (without /F , chkdsk only detects errors) /P : Forces a full verification /R : Searches for defective sectors and recovers legible information (applies /F) /X : Unmounts the volume before processing if needed. (Note: Unmounting temporarily invalidates all pointers/handlers to the volume until process is completed)

chkdsk volume letter: [[path]filename] [/F] [/P] [/R] [/X] Equivalent to the Unix command fsck

choice
Allows for batch files to prompt the user to select one item from a set of singlecharacter choices. Introduced in MS-DOS 6;[1] DR-DOS 7.03.[2] Earlier versions of DR-DOS supported this function with the switch command (for numeric choices) or by beginning a command with a question mark.[2]

This command was formerly called ync. (yes-no-cancel).

cls
Clears the screen.
cls

Equivalent to the Unix clear.

copy
Copies files from one location to another. The destination defaults to the current directory. If multiple source files are indicated, the destination must be a directory, or an error will result. Syntax:
copy from [source\filename] to [destination\folder] Files may be copied to devices. For example, copy file lpt1 sends the file to the printer on LPT1. copy file con outputs file to the screen ("console"), which can also be done using type file. Devices themselves may be copied: copy con file

takes the text typed into the console and puts it into file, stopping when EOF (Ctrl+Z) is typed. Files may be concatenated using +. For example, copy file1+file2 file_cat will concatenate the files and output them as file_cat. There are two switches to modify the command's behaviour, /a (text mode, the default) and /b (binary mode). In text mode, copy will stop when it reaches the EOF character; in binary mode, the files will be concatenated in their entirety, ignoring EOF characters. Examples of usage:
copy /a alpha.txt + beta.txt gamma.txt copy /b alpha.mpg + beta.mpg gamma.mpg Equivalent Unix commands are cp (for copying) and cat (for concatenation). Device files may be copied in Unix as well, e.g. cp file /dev/tty will display a file on the screen (but cat file is more commonly used here). Equivalent RT-11/RSX-11/OpenVMS command is copy.

Examples of usage:
copy con filename.extension

Everything typed at the console is sent to the file, until a control Z character is typed.

ctty
Defines the device to use for input and output. Syntax:
ctty device

device: The terminal device to be used. Example of usage:

ctty COM1 hello

defrag

(in MS/PC-DOS; diskopt in DR-DOS) Defragments a disk drive. Options:


-A -F -V -H

Analyses the fragmentation of a disk drive Force defragmentation even if disk space is low Verbose output mode Defrag hidden files

Example of usage:
defrag driveletter: -a -v

No Unix equivalent.

del or erase
Deletes one or more files. This command is used to delete a particular or more files. Syntax:
del filename erase filename

Options
*.* All files in current folder *.* /s all files in current folder and sub folders, Equivalent to the Unix command rm.

Equivalent in RT-11/RSX-11/OpenVMS operating systems line is delete command which can be contracted to del.

deltree
Deletes a directory along with all of the files and subdirectories that it contains. Normally, it will ask for confirmation of such a drastic action.
deltree [/y] directory

The /y parameter, if present, tells the deltree command to carry out without first prompting for confirmation. The deltree command is not included in recent Microsoft Windows operating systems. Deleting a non-empty directory in those versions of Windows where the command is not included, can be achieved by using the rmdir command as in the following example:
rmdir /s [/q] directory

In Unix, the functionality of deltree is provided by the rm command with the parameter -r (or -rf for the /y switch).

dir
Lists the contents of a directory. The dir command typed by itself, displays the disk's volume label and serial number; one directory or filename per line, including the filename extension, the file size in bytes, and the date and time the file was last modified; and the total number of files listed, their cumulative size, and the free space (in bytes) remaining on the disk. The command is one of the few commands that exist from the first versions of DOS.
dir [drive:][path][filename] [parameters]

Most commonly used parameters of dir include:


/W

: Displays the listing in wide format, with as many as five filenames or directory names on each line. /P : Pause at every page /S : Also look in subdirectories /Axx: Display files with the specified attributes only /Oxx: Modifies sort order /B : Uses bare format (no heading information or summary) > [drive:][path]filename : To Store Result in a text file;(c:\dir > c:\fileList.txt) (this is not a parameter, it is output redirection)

Possible attributes for the A parameter are D (directories), R (read-only files), H (hidden files), A (files/directories with the archive bit on), and S (system files). The prefix - negates an attribute; attributes can be combined (e.g. /A:DA means directories with the archive bit on). Possible sort orders are N (name), S (size), E (extension), D (date and time), A (last access date), and G (group directories first). The prefix - reverses the order. Other less commonly used parameters of dir include:
/D /L /N /Q /X

: Display wide format but sorted by column : Display forced into lowercase : Display forced into long file name format instead of 8.3 : Displays the owner of each file : Display shows 8.3 names next to long file names

The default parameters of dir can be set using the DIRCMD environment variable. Equivalent to the Unix command ls (the option -l is "long" list format, it works in the opposite manner to /w.) Equivalent in RT-11/RSX-11/OpenVMS operating systems line is directory command which can be contracted to dir.

echo

Prints its own arguments back out to the DOS equivalent of the standard output stream. Usually, this means directly to the screen, but the output of echo can be redirected like any other command. Often used in batch files to print text out to the user.
echo this is text echo. Outputs 'this is text' Outputs a blank line

Another important use of the echo command is to toggle echoing of commands on and off in batch files.
echo on echo off

Traditionally batch This says to the interpreter that echoing of commands should be off during the whole execution of the batch file thus resulting in a "tidier" output. The @ symbol declares that this particular command (echo off) should also be executed without echo. For example the following 2 batch files are equivalent: Batch1.bat:
@echo off echo The files in your root directory: dir /b /a-d c:\

turns on echoing of commands turns off echoing of commands files begin with the @echo off statement.

Batch2.bat:
@echo The files in your root directory: @dir /b /a-d c:\

Echo can be used to write to files directly from the console, by redirecting the output stream:
echo text > filename

Echo can also be used to append to files directly from the console, again by redirecting the output stream:
echo text >> filename

To type more than one line from the console into a file, use copy con (above). Equivalent to the Unix command echo.

edit
Full-screen text editor, included with MS-DOS 5 and 6, OS/2 and Windows NT to 4.0

Windows 95 and later, and W2k and later use Edit v 2.0 PC-DOS 6 and later use the DOS E Editor. DR-DOS used editor up to version 7.

edlin
DOS line-editor. It can be used with a script file, like debug, this makes it of some use even today. The absence of a console editor in MS/PC-DOS 1-4 created an aftermarket for third-party editors. In DOS 5, an extra command "?" was added to give the user much needed help. DOS 6 was the last version to contain EDLIN, for MS-DOS 6, it's on the supplemental disks, PC-DOS 6 had it in the base install. Windows NT 32-bit, and OS/2 have Edlin.

exe2bin

Converts an executable (.exe) file into a binary file with the extension .com, which is a memory image of the program. The size of the resident code and data sections combined in the input .exe file must be less than 64KB. The file must also have no stack segment.

exit
Exits the current command processor. If the exit is used at the primary command, it has no effect unless in a DOS window under Microsoft Windows, in which case the window is closed and the user returns to the desktop.
exit [/B] /B When used within a batch script, exits the script without closing the calling DOS window

Exit also exists in Unix-shells. If an exit command is used in the primary command shell under Unix, however, it will logoff the user, similar to the control-D keystroke.

fastopen
Main article: FASTOPEN

fc or comp
Compares two files or sets of files and displays the differences between them.
FC [/A] [/C] [/L] [/LBn] [/N] [/T] [/W] [/nnnn] [drive1:][path1]filename1 [drive2:][path2]filename2 FC /B [drive1:][path1]filename1 [drive2:][path2]filename2 /A Displays only first and last lines for each set of differences. /B Performs a binary comparison. /C Disregards the case of letters. /L Compares files as ASCII text. /LBn Sets the maximum consecutive mismatches to the specified number of lines. /N Displays the line numbers on an ASCII comparison. /T Does not expand tabs to spaces. /W Compresses white space (tabs and spaces) for comparison. /nnnn Specifies the number of consecutive lines that must match after a mismatch. [drive1:][path1]filename1 Specifies the first file or set of files to compare. [drive2:][path2]filename2 Specifies the second file or set of files to compare.[citation needed] Equivalent to the Unix commands comm, cmp and diff.

fdisk
Manipulates hard disk partition tables. The name derives from IBM's habit of calling hard drives fixed disks. When run from the command line, it displays a menu of various partitioning operations:
1. Create DOS partition or Logical DOS Drive 2. Set active partition 3. Delete partition or Logical DOS Drive 4. Display partition information 5. Change current fixed disk drive (only available if the computer has more than one hard drive)

FDISK /MBR installs a standard master boot record on the hard drive. FDISK /MBR #: where # is other partition on system. Completes above command on indicated partition.
e.g.: "C:\FDISK /MBR D:" would install boot record on D:\ partition.

Fdisk exists under Unix with the same name, but it is an entirely different program. However they share purposes.

find
A filter to find lines in the input data stream that contain or don't contain a specified string and send these to the output data stream. Find may also be used as a pipe.
find "keyword" < ''inputfilename'' > ''outputfilename'' Searches for a text string in a file or files. FIND [/V] [/C] [/N] [/I] "string" [[drive:][path]filename[ ...]] /V Displays all lines NOT containing the specified string. /C Displays only the count of lines containing the string. /N Displays line numbers with the displayed lines. /I Ignores the case of characters when searching for the string. "string" Specifies the text string to find. [drive:][path]filename Specifies a file or files to search. If a pathname is not specified, FIND searches the text typed at the prompt or piped from another command. Equivalent to the Unix command grep. The Unix command find performs an entirely different function analogous to dir /s.

for
The FOR loop can be used to parse a file or the output of a command.
FOR [switches] %variable IN (set) DO command [parameters for command] /D Use for finding directory names if (set) contains wildcards and is a dir command /R [[drive:]path] Use to recursively search directory tree /L Changes set to (start,step,end) and is used for number sequences /F ["options"] ["options"] eol=c Set the end of line character skip=n Number of lines to skip before processing delims=xxx set the delimiters to use (default are space and tab) tokens=x,y,m-n Can be used to return single,multiple or range of tokens With this switch (set) can be a list of files,"quoted string",command. If a list of files is used each file will be parsed using the ["options"] [switches]

%variable (set) command

Use a single letter preceded by %% List of data to parse command to execute

Example:
for /f "Skip=4 tokens=1" %%i in ('NET FILES') do if not "%%i" EQU "The" NET FILE %%i /CLOSE Will close open network shared files

format
Delete all the files on the disk and reformat it for MS-DOS In most cases, this should only be used on floppy drives or other removable media. This command can potentially erase everything on a computer's hard disk. /autotest and /backup are undocumented features. Both will format the drive without a confirmation prompt.
format [options] drive FORMAT drive: [/V[:label]] [/Q] [/F:size] [/B | /S] [/C] FORMAT drive: [/V[:label]] [/Q] [/T:tracks /N:sectors] [/B | /S] [/C] FORMAT drive: [/V[:label]] [/Q] [/1] [/4] [/B | /S] [/C] FORMAT drive: [/Q] [/1] [/4] [/8] [/B | /S] [/C] /V[:label] Specifies the volume label. /Q Performs a quick format. /F:size Specifies the size of the floppy disk to format (such as 160, 180, 320, 360, 720, 1.2, 1.44, 2.88). /B Allocates space on the formatted disk for system files. /S Copies system files to the formatted disk. /T:tracks Specifies the number of tracks per disk side. /N:sectors Specifies the number of sectors per track. /1 Formats a single side of a floppy disk. /4 Formats a 5.25-inch 360K floppy disk in a high-density drive. /8 Formats eight sectors per track. /C Tests clusters that are currently marked "bad."

There is also an undocumented /u parameter for "unconditional" that will write strings of zeros on every sector. This is now an official switch in Windows Vista and 7 but with the parameter /p instead. Equivalent to the Unix command mkfs. Equivalent in RT-11/RSX-11/OpenVMS operating systems line is format command which can not create filesystem. After formatting one should use initialize (contracted to init) command to create filesystem (Equivalent to MS-DOS command format /q or "quick format").

help
Gives help about DOS. MS-DOS help 'command' would give help on a specific command. By itself, it lists the contents of DOSHELP.HLP. Help for a specific command invokes the command with the /? option. In MS-DOS 6.x this command exists as FASTHELP. MS-DOS 6.xx help command uses QBASIC to view a quickhelp HELP.HLP file, which contains more extensive information on the commands, with some

hyperlinking etc. The MS-DOS 6.22 help system is included on Windows 9x cdrom versions as well. PC-DOS PC-DOS 5,6 help is the same form as MS-DOS 5 help command. PC-DOS 7.xx help uses view.exe to open OS/2 style .INF files (cmdref.inf, dosrexx.inf and doserror.inf), opening these to the appropriate pages. DR-DOS In DR-DOS, help is a batch file that launches DR-DOS' reference, dosbook. Microsoft Windows Windows NT, all versions, uses DOS 5 style help, but versions before VISTA have also a Windows help file (NTCMDS.HLP or NTCMDS.INF) in a similar style to MSDOS 6. FreeDOS FreeDOS uses an HTML help system, which views HTML help files on a specified path. The path is stored in HELPPATH environment variable, if not specified, default path is \HELP on the drive which HELP is placed. Partially equivalent to the Unix command man.

intersvr & interlnk


(in MS-DOS; filelink in DR-DOS) Network PCs using a null modem cable or LapLink cable. The server-side version of InterLnk, it also immobilizes the machine it's running on as it is an active app (As opposed to a TSR) which must be running for any transfer to take place. DR-DOS' filelink is executed on both the client and server. New in PC-DOS 5.02, MS-DOS 6.0[3] No direct Unix equivalent, though some Unices offer the ability to network computers with TCP/IP through null modem or Laplink cables using PLIP or SLIP.

join
Attaches a drive letter to a specified directory on another drive.[3]
JOIN d: [d:\path] JOIN [/D] (removes drive assignment) If JOIN a: c:\floppy were executed,

c:\floppy would display the contents of the a: drive. The opposite can be achieved via the subst command.

label
Changes the label on a logical drive, such as a hard disk partition or a floppy disk. In Unix and Unix-like systems, this differs from filesystem to filesystem. e2label can be used for ext2 partitions.

loadfix
Loads a program above the first 64K of memory, and runs the program.
loadfix [drive:][path]filename

Included only in MS/PC-DOS. DR-DOS used memmax, which opened or closed lower, upper, and video memory access, to block the lower 64K of memory.[4]

loadhigh, lh
Main article: loadhigh hiload in DR-DOS.

md or mkdir
Makes a new directory. The parent of the directory specified will be created if it does not already exist.
md directory

Equivalent to the Unix command mkdir.

mem
Displays memory usage.
mem

Options:

/CLASSIFY or /C - Lists the size of programs, provides a summary of memory in use and lists largest memory block available. /DEBUG or /D - Displays status of programs, internal drivers, and other information. /PROGRAM or /P Displays status of programs currently loaded in memory. Equivalent to the Unix command free.

memmaker
Starting from version 6, MS-DOS included the external program MemMaker which was used to free system memory (especially Conventional memory) by automatically reconfiguring the AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS files. This was usually done by moving TSR Programs to the Upper memory. The whole process required three system restarts. Before the first restart the user was asked whether he/she wanted to enable EMS Memory or not. The use of MemMaker was popular among gamers who wanted to enable or disable Expanded memory in order to run a game which required EMS or not. Better results could be achieved by an experienced user manually configuring the startup files to achieve greater free memory yield. Options:

/BATCH Runs MemMaker in batch (unattended) mode. In batch mode, MemMaker takes the default action at all prompts. /UNDO Instructs MemMaker to undo its most recent changes. PC-DOS uses another program RamBoost to optimize memory, either the HIMEM/EMM386 or a third-party memory manager.

mode

Configures system devices. Changes graphics modes, adjusts keyboard settings, prepares code pages, and sets up port redirection.[5]

more
Pages through the output so that you can view more than one screen of text.
command | more

Equivalent to the Unix commands more and less. More may also be used as a filter.
more < inputfilename

move
Moves files or renames directories.
move filename newname move driveletter:\olddir driveletter:\newdir

Example of usage:
move c:\old c:\new

Equivalent to the Unix command mv. DR-DOS used a separate command for renaming directories, rendir.

msd
Main article: Microsoft Diagnostics Provides detailed technical information about the computer's hardware and software.
msd

New in MS-DOS 6;[6] the PC-DOS version of this command is QCONFIG.[citation needed] The command appeared first in Word2, and then in Windows 3.10. No Unix equivalent, however in GNU/Linux similar type of information may be obtained from various text files in /proc directory.

path
Displays or sets a search path for executable files.

pause
Suspends processing of a batch program and displays the message 'Press any key to continue. . .'. This command exists in all versions of Microsoft Windows and has the exact same function.

pcpark
Parks the hard disk heads in order to enable safe shutdown; only used on early versions.
pcpark

No Unix equivalent. MS-DOS 3.2 (and possibly others) used the command HHSET

print

Adds a file in the print queue. Options:


/D device : Specifies the name of the print devices. Default value is LPT1 /P filename : Add files in the print queue /T : Removes all files from the print queue /C filename : Removes a file from the print queue

This command was introduced in MS-DOS version 2. Before that there was no built-in support for background printing files. The user would usually use the copy command to copy files to LPT1. Equivalent to the Unix commands lp and lpr.

rd or rmdir
Remove a directory, which by default must be empty of files for the command to succeed. The DELTREE command in DOS removes non-empty directories. In Windows NT's CMD.EXE, rd /s functions in the same way as deltree.

rem
Remark statement, normally used within a batch file, or for DOS 6 and above, in CONFIG.SYS.
rem This creates a zero-byte file in some command processors. rem > newfilename :: This never creates a file :: > filename.ext

Redirecting the output from a rem command produces a zero-byte file in some command processors. REM is also useful in logged sessions or screen-captures. In Unix, the # sign can be used to start a comment.

ren
Renames a file. Unlike the move command, this command cannot be used to rename subdirectories, or rename files across drives.
ren filename newname

You can rename files in another directory by using the PATH parameter:
ren [[path\]filename] [newfilename]

This example renames c:\windows\filex.txt to c:\windows\filey.txt


ren c:\Windows\filex.txt filey.txt

Using a path in the destination newname will move the file to the new path, if this is on the same device. This renames the file to the c:\temp directory.
ren c:\windows\filex.txt \temp\filey.txt

On DOS with long filename support, care must be taken when directories have spaces in their names like "Documents and Settings". In these cases double-quotes are used to enclose them. Note it is necessary only to enclose blocks including spaces.
ren c:\"Documents and Settings"\"All Users"\Desktop\filex.txt filey.txt ren "c:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Desktop\filex.txt" filey.txt

Wildcards in the destination are replaced by the corresponding part of the original name, so the command below will change the extension of the file from .doc to .txt, here myfile.doc becomes myfile.txt.
ren myfile.doc *.txt

Mass renames can be accomplished by the use of wildcards. For example, the following command will change the extension of all files in the current directory which currently have the extension htm to html:
ren *.htm *.html

In Unix, this functionality of a simple move is provided by the mv command, while batch renames can be done using the rename command.

scandisk
Disk diagnostic utility. Scandisk was a replacement for the chkdsk utility, starting with later versions of MS-DOS. Its primary advantages over chkdsk is that it is more reliable and has the ability to run a surface scan which finds and marks bad clusters on the disk. It also provided mouse point-and-click TUI, allowing for interactive session to complement command-line batch run.
chkdsk

had surface scan and bad cluster detection functionality included, and was used again on Windows NT based operating systems. Equivalent to the Unix command fsck.

set
Sets environmental variables. See Environment variable. CMD.EXE in Windows NT 2000, 4DOS, 4OS2, 4NT, and a number of third-party solutions allow direct entry of environment variables from the command prompt, in the manner of set /p.
set /p choice=Type your text. echo You typed: "%choice%"

From at least Windows 2000, the set command with the /A switch allows the evaluation of strings into variables, thus providing inter alia a means of performing integer arithmetic.[7]

setver
TSR designed to return a different value to the version of DOS that is running. This allows programs that look for a specific version of DOS to run under a different DOS. Setver appeared in version 4, and has been in every version of DOS, OS/2 and Windows NT since.

share
Installs support for file sharing and locking capabilities.
share [/F:space] [/L:locks] /F:space Allocates file space (in bytes) for file-sharing information. /L:locks Sets the number of files that can be locked at one time.

smartdrive
Main article: SmartDrive

sort
A filter to sort lines in the input data stream and send them to the output data stream.
sort < inputfilename > outputfilename Similar to the Unix command sort. Handles

files up to 64k. This sort is always case

insensitive.

[8]

subst
A utility to map a subdirectory to a drive letter.[3]
subst <d:> <path> subst <d:> /D (Deletes the substitute drive) If SUBST e: c:\edrive were executed, a new drive letter e:

would be created, showing the contents of c:\edrive. The opposite can be achieved via the join command.

sys
A utility to make a volume bootable. Sys rewrites the Volume Boot Code (the first sector of the partition that Sys is acting on) so that the code, when executed, will look for Io.sys. Sys also copies the core DOS system files, Io.sys, Msdos.sys, and Command.com, to the volume. Sys does NOT rewrite the Master Boot Record, contrary to widely-held belief.

time and date


Display and set the time and date
time date

When these commands are called from the command line or a batch file, they will display the time or date and wait for the user to type a new time or date and press RETURN. The commands time /t and date /t will display output without waiting for input. The Unix command date displays both the time and date, but does not allow the normal users to change either. Users with superuser privileges may use date -s <new-date-time> to change the time and date. The Unix command time performs a different function.

tree
Shows the directory tree of the current directory Syntax:
tree [options] [directory]

Options:

/F (Displays the names of the files in each folder.)

/A (Use ASCII instead of the extended characters.) /? (Shows the help)

Note: Does not work on some computers with Windows 7 OS.

truename
truename or truename drivename or truename filename or truename directory

If typed without a parameter then the current active drive pathname is displayed. MS-DOS can find files and directories given their names, without full path information, if the search object is on a path specified by the environment variable PATH. For example, if PATH includes C:\PROGRAMS, and file MYPROG.EXE is on this directory, then if MYPROG is typed at the command prompt, the command processor will execute C:\PROGRAMS\MYPROG.EXE the TRUENAME command will expand a name in an abbreviated form which the command processor can recognise into its full form, and display the result. It can see through SUBST and JOIN to find the actual directory. In the above example,
TRUENAME MYPROG

would display
C:\PROGRAMS\MYPROG.EXE

and for a substituted drive set up by


subst d: c:\util\test

the command
truename d:\test.exe

will display
c:\util\test\test.exe

This command also displays the UNC pathnames of mapped network or local CD drives. This command is an undocumented DOS command. The help switch "/?" defines it as a "Reserved command name". It is available in MS-DOS 5.00. This command is similar to the Unix which command, which, given an executable found in $PATH, would give a full path and name. The C library function realpath performs this function. The Microsoft Windows command processors do not support this command.

type
Display a file. The more command is frequently used in conjunction with this command, e.g. type long-text-file | more.
type filename

Equivalent to the Unix command cat. Note that you can use this to concatenate files (type file1 file2 > file3) however this won't work for large files--use copy command instead.

undelete

Restores file previously deleted with del. By default all recoverable files in the working directory are restored. The options are used to change this behavior. if the MS-DOS mirror TSR program is used, then deletion tracking files are created and can be used by undelete. Syntax:
undelete [filespec] [/list|/all][/dos|/dt]

Options:

/list : lists the files that can be undeleted. /all : Recovers all deleted files without prompting. Uses a number sign for missing first character. /dos : Recover only MS-DOS aware files, ignore deletion tracking file. /dt : Recover only deletion tracking file aware files. In Unix and Unix-like systems this differs from filesystem to filesystem. People who use the ext2 filesystem can try the command e2undel.

Ver
An internal DOS command, that reports the DOS version presently running, and since MS-DOS 5, whether DOS is loaded high. The corresponding command to report the Windows version is winver. Options: DOS 5 and later

/r : revision level, also shows whether DOS is loaded high /? : shows command line help.

Value returned:

MS-DOS up to 6.22, typically derive the DOS version from the DOS kernel. This may be different from the string it prints when it starts. PC-DOS typically derive the version from an internal string in command.com (so PCDOS 6.1 command.com reports the version as 6.10, although the kernel version is 6.00.) DR-DOS reports whatever value the environment variable OSVER reports. OS/2 command.com reports an internal string, with the OS/2 version. The underlying kernel here is 5.00, but modified to report x0.xx (where x.xx is the OS/2 version). Windows 9x command.com report a string from inside command.com. The build version (e.g. 2222), is also derived from there. Windows NT command.com reports either the 32-bit processor string (4nt, cmd), or under some loads, MS-DOS 5.00.500, (for all builds). The underlying kernel reports 5.00 or 5.50 depending on the interrupt. MS-DOS 5.00 commands run unmodified on NT. The Winver command usually displays a Windows dialog showing the version, with some information derived from the shell. In windows before Windows for workgroups 3.11, running winver from DOS reported an embedded string in winver.exe.

verify
Enables or disables the feature to determine if files have been correctly written to disk. If no parameter is provided, the command will display the current setting.[9]
verify [on|off]

xcopy
Copy entire directory trees. Xcopy is a version of the copy command that can move files and directories from one location to another.
xcopy directory [destination-directory] Equivalent to the Unix command cp when

used with -r parameter.

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