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Commodore PC
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30
MS-DOS
User's
Reference
U
The
Backup
switches
You
can
specify
the
following
switches
with
backup:
/s
Backs
up
subdirectories
also.
<
\
/m
Backs
up
only
those
files
that
have
changed
since
the
last
backup.
/a
Adds
the
files
to
be
backed
up
to
those
already
on
the
(
J
backup
disk.
It
does
not
erase
old
files
on
the
backup
^"^^
disk.
/d
Backs
up
only
those
files
that
you
last
modified
on
or
t
j
after
date.
^"^
/t
Backs
up
only
those
files
that
you
last
modified
at
or
after
a
certain
time.
i
j
/L
Makes
a
backup
log
entry
in
the
specified
file.
If
you
do
not
specify
a
filename,
backup
places
a
file
called
backup.log
in
the
root
directory
of
the
disk
that
con.
i
j
tains
the
files
being
backed
up.
The
first
line
of
the
entry
in
the
file
contains
[date
time]
where
date
and
time
are
the
backup
dates
and
times.
Each
subsequent
,
>
line
in
the
entry
corresponds
to
a
backed
up
file.
These
v—/
lines
each
consist
of
a
filename
and
the
number
of
the
disk
that
contains
the
file.
You
can
use
this
information
when
you
need
to
restore
a
particular
file
from
a
[^J
floppy
disk,
but
you
must
specify
which
disk
to
restore
so
that
backup
does
not
have
to
search
for
files.
If
the
backup
log
file
already
exists,
backup
appends
the
ti
current
entry
to
the
file.
Backup
displays
the
name
of
each
file
as
it
is
backed
up.
You
^J
should
label
and
number
each
backup
disk
consecutively
to
help
you
restore
the
files
properly
with
the
restore
command.
If
you
are
sharing
files,
you
can
back
up
only
the
files
that
you
V_y
have
access
to.
Note
You
should
not
use
the
backup
command
if
the
drive
you
are
backing
up
has
been
assigned,
joined,
or
substituted
with
the
assign,
join,
or
subst
command.
If
you
do,
you
may
not
be
able
, .
to
restore
the
files
with
the
restore
command.
^—

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