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MCT260-Operating Systems I Operating Systems I Routine File Management Part One.

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Presentation on theme: "MCT260-Operating Systems I Operating Systems I Routine File Management Part One."— Presentation transcript:

1 MCT260-Operating Systems I Operating Systems I Routine File Management Part One

2 MCT260-Operating Systems I 2 Primary Learning Objective Perform Routine File Management in Windows XP and CLI

3 MCT260-Operating Systems I 3 Specific Learning Objectives Discuss how files are stored on disk Recognize standard file naming conventions Discuss the purpose of file extensions Identify common file extensions Copy/move files and folders Create directories using MD command Copy files using COPY and XCOPY commands Move files using the MOVE command

4 MCT260-Operating Systems I 4 Two Storage Types

5 MCT260-Operating Systems I 5 Windows File Systems FAT 16 –DOS –Windows 95/98 –Windows NT –Windows 2000 –Windows XP FAT 32 –Windows 95/98 –Windows 2000 –Windows XP NTFS –Windows NT –Windows 2000 –Windows XP Windows XP & 2000 provides read and write support for the NTFS, FAT16, and FAT32 file systems.

6 MCT260-Operating Systems I 6 A cluster or allocation unit, made up of one or more sectors is the smallest space allocated for a file. The FAT 16 Filing System

7 MCT260-Operating Systems I 7 Organization of folders on a Hard Drive

8 MCT260-Operating Systems I 8 Organizing Files and Folders Store your document folders and files in My Documents Limit the use of the root directory (top-level folder) to system folders and files Store software and documents (data) in separate folders Do not move, modify, or rename folders that contain installed software

9 MCT260-Operating Systems I 9 Organizing Files and Folders Limit your folder structure to no more than three levels below the root folder. Subdivide document folders when the number of files gets too large Select folders names carefully Periodically evaluate your current folder structure

10 MCT260-Operating Systems I 10 File Names OS’s after Win95 (1995) use long file names that are up to 255 characters long and can include most special symbols and characters Early OS’s and current ones like IBM and UNIX still require 8.3 file names (a short or MS-DOS file name) An alias or truncated file name is required for long file names that are used in the 8.3 OS’s An alias is the 1 st 6 characters of the long name, a tilde (~), a number, a period, & the 1 st 3 letters of the extension.

11 MCT260-Operating Systems I 11 File Types & Extensions The three letter extensions tells the OS what type of file it is so it can open the file in the program that created it. Since the newer OS’s assign a picture or icon to a file the default is not to show the extensions. Some common extensions are shown on the next slide and in the XP book on page 53 A more complete list of extensions is found on pages 57-60 in the CLI book.

12 MCT260-Operating Systems I 12 File Types & Extensions

13 MCT260-Operating Systems I 13 Create/Remove/Restore Files and Folders In the GUI Using MD in CLI

14 MCT260-Operating Systems I 14 Copy/Move Files and Folders In the GUI –Copy –Cut (Move) Using COPY, XCOPY and MOVE in CLI XCOPY copies not only files but also the directory structure to include empty directories and does a regular copy on large files much quicker than COPY

15 MCT260-Operating Systems I 15 Review Storage Types File Systems Organizing Files File Names, Types, and Extensions Create/Remove/Restore Files and Folders Copy and Move Files and Folders

16 MCT260-Operating Systems I 16 Homework Assignment Reading –Windows XP Textbook – pp 60-94 –CLI Textbook - pp. 79-84, 117-122 Lab Exercise 5: File Management 1 Homework 4: Working with Files Due Date: Next Tuesday


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