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NEC CP/M-86 - Chapter 1 CP;M-86 System Overview; Cp;M-86 General Characteristics

NEC CP/M-86
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Chapter 1
CP
IM-86
System Overview
CP/M-86
GENERAL
CHARACTERISTICS
CP/M-86
consists
of
all
the
facilities
of
CP/M-80
with
additional
features
to
account
for
increased
processor
address
space
of
up
to
one
megabyte (1,048,576)
of
main
memory.
CP/M-86
maintains
file
compatibility
with all previous versions
of
CP/M.
It
uses
the
file
structure
of
CP/M
Version 2, allowing as
many
as
sixteen
drives
with
up
tb
eight megabytes
on
each
drive.
CP/M-80
and
CP/M-86
programs
may
exchange files
without
any
modification
to
the
file formats.
CP/M-86
resides in
the
file
CPM.SYS,
which
is
loaded
into
memory
by
a
cold
start
loader
during
system initialization.
The
cold
start
loader
resides
on
the
first
two
tracks
of
the system disk. CPM.SYS
contains
three
program
modules:
the
Console
Command
Processor (CCP),
the
Basic
Disk
Operating
System
(BDOS),
and
the
Basic
Input/Output
System (BIOS).
The
BIOS
distributed
on
the
CP/M
system
diskette
has
been
configured
for
the
APC
and
is called
the
Customized
BIOS,
or
CBIOS.
It
is
made
up
of
three
parts:
the
standard
BIOS, the
APC
escape sequence
functions,
and
the
extended BIOS.
The
CCP
and
BDOS
portions
occupy
approxi-
mately
10K bytes,
and
the
BIOS is
approximately
22 bytes.
The
operating
system
executes in
memory
above
the
reserved
interrupt
locations.
The
remainder
of
the
address
space
may
be
partitioned
into
eight
non-contiguous
regions, as
defined
in a
BIOS table. Unlike
CP/M-80,
CP/M-86
does
not
allow
the
CCP
area
to
be
used
as a
data
area
subsequent
to
transient
program
load.
All
CP/M-86
modules
remain
in
memory
at
all times
and
are
not
reloaded
at
a
warm
start.
Like
CP/M-80,
CP/M-86
loads
and
executes
memory
image files
from
disk.
Memory
image files are preceded
by
a header record, defined in
Chapter
3, which
provides
information
required
for
proper
program
loading
and
execution.
Memory
image files
under
CP/M-86
are
identified
by
the
CMD
file type exte.nsion.
1-1

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