Operation with dos – Ampro Corporation 486E User Manual

Page 103

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Product Reference

2–87

Operation with DOS

The Little Board/486e CPU supports IBM’s PC-DOS or Microsoft’s MS-DOS, Version 3.3 or later, or
any version of Digital Research’s DR DOS as the disk operating system. Any differences between
these similar operating systems are noted in the text where applicable.

Caution

Sometimes MS-DOS is customized by a manufacturer for a specific
system and may not work on the Little Board/486e CPU. Use DR DOS
(supplied by Ampro), IBM PC-DOS (supplied by IBM), or the generic
version of MS-DOS (supplied by Microsoft on an OEM basis).

EMS Option—The Little Board/486e CPU can emulate the Lotus-Intel-Microsoft Expanded
Memory Specification Version 4.0 (LIM EMS 4.0), with the memory management capability of the
80486DX2/4 CPU, under control of a device driver. Such drivers are available with the newer
versions of DOS. With Microsoft MS-DOS, the driver is called EMM386.EXE.

Serial Ports—DOS normally supports the board’s four serial ports as COM1, COM2, COM3, and
COM4.

At boot time, DOS initializes the serial ports, assigning them their COM port designations and
their communication parameter settings. Although this might vary with different types and
versions of DOS, typical communication parameter settings are 2400 baud, even parity, 7 bits, and
1 stop bit.

Usually an application program that uses a serial port will access the port’s hardware and
reinitialize the communication parameters to other values, based on settings that the user has
entered when configuring the application program.

Parallel Port—The Parallel Printer port is normally the DOS LPT1 device. Most application
software uses LPT1 as the default printer port. If you enable the port, printing to it is automatic.

The following DOS commands can be used to test printing with the parallel printer:

A>COPY CONFIG.SYS LPT1

Prints contents of CONFIG.SYS

A>DIR >LPT1

Prints the directory

In addition, the <PrtSc> (Print Screen) key will print the contents of the video screen to the LPT1
device. Also, you can use the Printer Echo function to print all characters typed on the keyboard.
The command <Ctrl-P> enables the Printer Echo function. Entering <Ctrl-P> again disables
Printer Echo.

Disk Drives—Older versions of DOS require you to divide disk drives larger than 32M bytes into
more than one partition. More recent versions permit drives to be up to 2G bytes, though IDE
drives are BIOS limited to 512M bytes. Larger IDE drives typically provide a driver to get around
the BIOS limit.

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