Interrupt List - Release 61 (16jul00)
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Disk Spool II v4.0x
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RBIL61 - Disk Spool II v4.0x
Bibliography
{#idx167245}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x - ENABLE/DISABLE
{#idx39009}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x - GET
SPOOL
(Simultaneous Peripheral Operation OnLine) The process of performing output to a slow peripheral such as a printer while other tasks continue running on the CPU. This term dates back to mainframe days before the invention of timesharing.
FILE STATUS
{#idx39050}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x - GET
SPOOL
(Simultaneous Peripheral Operation OnLine) The process of performing output to a slow peripheral such as a printer while other tasks continue running on the CPU. This term dates back to mainframe days before the invention of timesharing.
FILES
{#idx39045}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x - GET STATUS
{#idx39020}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x -
SPOOL
(Simultaneous Peripheral Operation OnLine) The process of performing output to a slow peripheral such as a printer while other tasks continue running on the CPU. This term dates back to mainframe days before the invention of timesharing.
EXISTING FILE
{#idx39070}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x -
SPOOL
(Simultaneous Peripheral Operation OnLine) The process of performing output to a slow peripheral such as a printer while other tasks continue running on the CPU. This term dates back to mainframe days before the invention of timesharing.
EXISTING FILE???
{
undocumented
Information about a product which is not publicly available from the manufacturer, and must be determined by reverse-engineering (disassembly, trial-and-error, etc.). Undocumented information tends to change -- often dramatically -- between successive revisions of a product, since the manufacturer has no obligation to maintain compatibility in behavior which is not explicitly stated.
}
{#idx39075}
INT 1A - Disk Spool II v4.0x - UPDATE
SPOOL
(Simultaneous Peripheral Operation OnLine) The process of performing output to a slow peripheral such as a printer while other tasks continue running on the CPU. This term dates back to mainframe days before the invention of timesharing.
FILE
{#idx39065}