OS4 DepotLogo by Nickman 
(anonymous IP: 18.222.20.3,2258) 
 HomeRecentStatsSearchSubmitUploadsMirrorsContactInfoDisclaimerConfigAdmin
 Menu

 Features
   Crashlogs
   Bug tracker
   Locale browser
 

 Categories

   o Audio (343)
   o Datatype (51)
   o Demo (203)
   o Development (602)
   o Document (24)
   o Driver (97)
   o Emulation (149)
   o Game (1011)
   o Graphics (500)
   o Library (118)
   o Network (234)
   o Office (66)
   o Utility (932)
   o Video (69)

Total files: 4399

Full index file
Recent index file

 Links

  Amigans.net
  OpenAmiga
  Aminet
  IntuitionBase


Support the site


 Readme for:  Driver » Handler » mem-handler.lha

Mem-handler

Description: Handler for accessing memory as a file
Download: mem-handler.lha       (TIPS: Use the right click menu if your browser takes you back here all the time)
Size: 15kb
Version: 52.2
Date: 22 Sep 2010
Author: Fredrik Wikström
Submitter: Fredrik Wikström
Email: fredrik/a500 org
Homepage: http://www.a500.org/
Category: driver/handler
Replaces: driver/handler/mem-handler.lha
License: BSD
Distribute: yes
Min OS Version: 4.0
FileID: 5963
 
Comments: 0
Snapshots: 0
Videos: 0
Downloads: 601  (Current version)
708  (Accumulated)
Votes: 0 (0/0)  (30 days/7 days)

Show comments Show snapshots Show videos Show content Show crashlogs Replace file 
This handler works more or less the same as Peter Corlett's MEM-Handler on
Aminet: http://aminet.net/package/disk/misc/MEM-Handler371

It can be useful when programming, f.e. when you might have some data in memory
and for some reason you need to be able to access it as a file but do not want
to create a temporary file on disk or in "T:".

Installation:

1. Drag'n'drop MEM into DEVS:DOSDrivers
2. Copy MEM-Handler to L:

Usage:

MEM:<LENGTH/A>/<BASE>/<RO=READONLY/S>

LENGTH/A - size of the file to create
BASE - base address of memory for file (if not provided, MEM-Handler will
allocate MEMF_PRIVATE|MEMF_CLEAR memory using AllocVec)
RO=READONLY/S - if this is used the created file will be write protected

LENGTH and BASE can be in either decimal (no prefix), octal (beginning with
"0") or hexadecimal (beginning with "0x" or "$") number system.

Example (can cause DSIs, don't run!):

Read 13 bytes beginning at address 0x590eb038 to the file "RAM:test.bin":
copy MEM:13/0x590eb038 RAM:test.bin

Changes:

52.2 (22-Sep-2010)
 - Added support for ACTION_SHUTDOWN and ACTION_GET_DISK_FSSM packets

52.1 (26-Jun-2009)
 - First released version



Copyright © 2004-2024 by Björn Hagström All Rights Reserved