bionic (1) atari-hd-image.1.gz

Provided by: hatari_2.1.0+dfsg-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       atari-hd-image - tool for creating a harddisk image for use with Hatari

SYNOPSIS

       atari-hd-image size [filename] [partition name] [directory]

DESCRIPTION

       Create  an ACSI/IDE harddisk image for Hatari with a single Atari compatible DOS partition (using sfdisk,
       mkdosfs, atari-convert-dir, mcopy and dd).

OPTIONS

       size   Harddisk image size in megabytes, 8-512.   512MB  is  largest  partition  size  supported  by  TOS
              versions before v4.x and by mkdosfs (for Atari compatible partition formatting).

       filename
              Name for the harddisk image (default: hd.img)

       partition name
              Name for the single partition (default: DOS)

       directory
              directory  for  initial  content  copied  to the image. HINT: use atari-convert-dir tool first, to
              detect long file names that aren't anymore unique when clipped!

EXAMPLES

       16MB 'hd.img' HD image:
              atari-hd-image 16

       8MB image with partition named 'TEST', and files from content/:
              atari-hd-image 8 8mb-disk.img TEST content/

SEE ALSO

       atari-convert-dir(1), hmsa(1), zip2st(1), hatari(1), mkdosfs(1), sfdisk(1), dd(1)

AUTHOR

       Written by Eero Tamminen <oak at helsinkinet fi>.

       This manual page was written by Teemu  Hukkanen  <tjhukkan@iki.fi>  for  the  Debian  project  and  later
       modified by Eero Tamminen to suit the latest version of Hatari.

LICENSE

       This  program  is  free  software;  you  can  redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
       General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License,  or
       (at your option) any later version.

NO WARRANTY

       This  program  is  distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
       the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General  Public
       License for more details.