.ps 60,80 .lm 5 .rm 75 .spr 5,,3 .cc .ap .blank 2 .c;Submissions From HATFIELD PACKING COMPANY .blank 2 .c;submitted by: .blank 2 .c;Jim Shelly .c;HATFIELD PACKING COMPANY .c;2700 Funks Rd. P.O. Box 70 Hatfield Pa., 19440 .c;(215)368-2500 ext. 315 (05:30 - 14:30 EST) .blank 2 .ft .fl bold .fl comment .c;^*DISKFRAG\* .s 2 ^*GETTING STARTED\* Edit DISKFRAG.COM and change the value of WHAT_FORM. WHAT_FORM should be the name of a form associated with 8.5" x 11" paper. Also edit the line: .s 1 .c;$ WRITE COMMAND_FILE "$ RUN DISKFRAG" .s 1 to include the directory where DISKFRAG.EXE will reside. DISKFRAG assumes that you and all the files it needs are in same directory. .s 2 ^*HOW TO USE\* To execute DISKFRAG type @DISKFRAG. DISKFRAG will respond with: .s 1 ^*Which disk:\* .s 1 Enter a logical name pointing to a disk or a literal disk device ($255$DUA0 or DRA1 for example). .s 1 ^*Which printer:\* .s 1 .nfl DISKFRAG requests the name of a print queue for the output. Enter a " " to send the output to your default system print queue. DISKFRAG builds a command procedure in your login directory whose file name is in the format of "diskname"_FRAGMENTS.COM and whose output has a filename of "diskname"_FRAGMENTS.LIS. The command procedure is then submitted to your system default batch queue. An example of the output is in the file DISKFRAG.LIS. It's not fancy but can be modified pretty easily and should give a good indication of how fragmented the files on that disk are.