CBMFS

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The CBM File System was used by disk drives made by Commodore Business Machines for the  PET, VIC-20, C64 and C128 range of computers. These drives were called 'intelligent peripherals' meaning the DOS (Disk Operating System) was runs in the drive itself, not on the computer the drive was attached to.
+
The '''CBM File System''' was used by disk drives made by Commodore Business Machines for the  PET, VIC-20, C64 and C128 range of computers. These drives were called 'intelligent peripherals' meaning the DOS (Disk Operating System) was run in the drive itself, not on the computer the drive was attached to.
  
The most popular CBM drive was the 1541, which supported 35 tracks using GCR encoding. The D64 format is most frequently used to capture 1541 disk images, it consists of a sector-for-sector copy of a 1540/1541 disk.  The standard D64 is a 174848 byte file comprised of 256 byte sectors arranged in 35 tracks with a varying number of  sectors  per  track for a total of 683 sectors. Track counting starts at 1, not 0, and goes  up
+
The most popular CBM drive was the [[Commodore 1541 disk|1541]], which supported 35 tracks using [[GCR encoding]]. A later drive, the [[Commodore 1571 disk|1571]] disk, used a double-sided format for twice the space. 3 1/2" disks were later introduced to the Commodore via the [[Commodore 1581 disk|1581]] format, which used a variant of CBMFS (see [[Commodore 1581 filesystem]]).
 +
 
 +
== D64 File Format ==
 +
 
 +
The [[D64]] format is most frequently used to capture 1541 disk images, it consists of a sector-for-sector copy of a 1540/1541 disk.  The standard D64 is a 174848 byte file comprised of 256 byte sectors arranged in 35 tracks with a varying number of  sectors  per  track for a total of 683 sectors. Track counting starts at 1, not 0, and goes  up
 
to 35. Sector counting starts at 0, not 1, for the first sector,  therefore a track with 21 sectors will go from 0 to 20.
 
to 35. Sector counting starts at 0, not 1, for the first sector,  therefore a track with 21 sectors will go from 0 to 20.
 +
 +
== Physical media ==
  
 
The original media (a 5.25" disk) has the tracks  laid  out  in  circles, with track 1 on the very outside of the disk  (closest  to  the  sides)  to track 35 being on the inside of the disk (closest to the inner  hub  ring). Commodore, in their infinite wisdom, varied the number of sectors per track and data densities across the disk to optimize available storage, resulting in the chart below. It shows the sectors/track for a  standard  D64.  Since the outside diameter of a circle is  the  largest  (versus  closer  to  the center), the outside tracks have the largest amount of storage.
 
The original media (a 5.25" disk) has the tracks  laid  out  in  circles, with track 1 on the very outside of the disk  (closest  to  the  sides)  to track 35 being on the inside of the disk (closest to the inner  hub  ring). Commodore, in their infinite wisdom, varied the number of sectors per track and data densities across the disk to optimize available storage, resulting in the chart below. It shows the sectors/track for a  standard  D64.  Since the outside diameter of a circle is  the  largest  (versus  closer  to  the center), the outside tracks have the largest amount of storage.
  
        Track   Sectors/track   # Sectors   Storage in Bytes
+
{| class='wikitable'
        -----  -------------  ---------  ----------------
+
! Track
        1-17       21           357           7820
+
! Sectors/track
        18-24       19           133           7170
+
! # Sectors
        25-30       18           108           6300
+
! Storage in Bytes
        31-40(*)     17             85           6020
+
|-
                                  ---
+
| 1-17
                                  683 (for a 35 track image)
+
| 21
 +
| 357
 +
| 7820
 +
|-
 +
| 18-24
 +
| 19
 +
| 133
 +
| 7170
 +
|-
 +
| 25-30
 +
| 18
 +
| 108
 +
| 6300
 +
|-
 +
| 31-40(*)
 +
| 17
 +
| 85
 +
| 6020
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
683 Sectors (for a 35 track image)
  
  Track #Sect #SectorsIn D64 Offset   Track #Sect #SectorsIn D64 Offset
+
{| class='wikitable'
  ----- ----- ---------- ----------  ----- ----- ---------- ----------
+
! Track !! #Sect !! #SectorsIn !! D64 Offset !! Track   !! #Sect !! #SectorsIn !! D64 Offset
    1     21      0       $00000     21     19     414       $19E00
+
|-
    2     21      21       $01500     22     19    433      $1B100
+
|    1 ||    21 ||       0   ||    $00000 ||    21   ||  19 ||    414     ||  $19E00
    3     21      42       $02A00     23     19     452       $1C400
+
|-
    4     21      63       $03F00     24     19     471       $1D700
+
|    2 ||    21 ||     21   ||    $01500 ||     22  ||  19 ||    433     ||  $1B100
    5     21      84       $05400     25     18     490       $1EA00
+
|-
    6     21    105       $06900     26     18     508       $1FC00
+
|    3 ||    21 ||     42   ||    $02A00 ||     23  ||  19 ||    452     ||  $1C400
    7     21    126       $07E00     27     18     526       $20E00
+
|-
    8     21    147       $09300     28     18     544       $22000
+
|    4 ||    21 ||     63   ||    $03F00 ||     24  ||  19 ||    471     ||  $1D700
    9     21    168       $0A800     29     18     562       $23200
+
|-
  10     21    189       $0BD00     30     18     580       $24400
+
|    5 ||    21 ||     84   ||    $05400 ||     25  ||  18 ||    490     ||  $1EA00
  11     21    210       $0D200     31     17     598       $25600
+
|-
  12     21    231       $0E700     32     17     615       $26700
+
|    6 ||    21 ||     105   ||    $06900 ||     26  ||  18 ||    508     ||  $1FC00
  13     21    252       $0FC00     33     17     632       $27800
+
|-
  14     21    273       $11100     34     17     649       $28900
+
|    7 ||    21 ||     126   ||    $07E00 ||     27  ||  18 ||    526     ||  $20E00
  15     21    294       $12600     35     17     666       $29A00
+
|-
  16     21    315       $13B00     36(*) 17     683       $2AB00
+
|    8 ||    21 ||     147   ||    $09300 ||     28  ||  18 ||    544     ||  $22000
  17     21    336       $15000     37(*) 17     700       $2BC00
+
|-
  18     19    357       $16500     38(*) 17     717       $2CD00
+
|    9 ||    21 ||     168   ||    $0A800 ||     29  ||  18 ||    562     ||  $23200
   19     19     376       $17800     39(*) 17     734       $2DE00
+
|-
  20     19    395       $18B00     40(*) 17     751       $2EF00
+
10 ||    21 ||     189   ||    $0BD00 ||     30  ||  18 ||    580     ||  $24400
 +
|-
 +
11 ||    21 ||     210   ||    $0D200 ||     31  ||  17 ||    598     ||  $25600
 +
|-
 +
12 ||    21 ||     231   ||    $0E700 ||     32  ||  17 ||    615     ||  $26700
 +
|-
 +
13 ||    21 ||     252   ||    $0FC00 ||     33  ||  17 ||    632     ||  $27800
 +
|-
 +
14 ||    21 ||     273   ||    $11100 ||     34  ||  17 ||    649     ||  $28900
 +
|-
 +
15 ||    21 ||     294   ||    $12600 ||     35  ||  17 ||    666     ||  $29A00
 +
|-
 +
16 ||    21 ||     315   ||    $13B00 ||    36(*)||  17 ||    683     ||  $2AB00
 +
|-
 +
17 ||    21 ||     336   ||    $15000 ||    37(*)||  17 ||    700     ||  $2BC00
 +
|-
 +
18 ||    19 ||     357   ||    $16500 ||    38(*)||  17 ||    717     ||  $2CD00
 +
|-
 +
|  19  ||   19 ||     376   ||    $17800 ||    39(*)||  17 ||    734     ||  $2DE00
 +
|-
 +
20 ||    19 ||     395   ||    $18B00 ||    40(*)||  17 ||    751     ||  $2EF00
 +
|}
  
  (*)Tracks 36-40 apply to 40-track images only
+
(*)Tracks 36-40 apply to 40-track images only
  
 +
==CBM DOS Directory Structure ==
 
The directory track should be contained totally on track 18. Sectors 1-18
 
The directory track should be contained totally on track 18. Sectors 1-18
 
contain the entries and sector 0 contains the BAM (Block Availability  Map)
 
contain the entries and sector 0 contains the BAM (Block Availability  Map)
Line 126: Line 174:
 
17/8, 17/18, etc.
 
17/8, 17/18, etc.
  
Note: No GEOS entries are listed in the above description. See [[GEOS]] for GEOS info.
+
Note: No GEOS entries are listed in the above description. See [[GEOS VLIR]] for GEOS info.
  
  
Line 224: Line 272:
 
from bytes $02-$34.
 
from bytes $02-$34.
  
    1       2       3       4       5       6
+
{| class='wikitable'
  ----    -----  -----  -----  -----  -----
+
! 1
  17/0   17/10  17/20  17/1    17/11    0/52
+
! 2
(11/00) (11/0A) (11/14) (11/01) (11/0B) (0/34)
+
! 3
 
+
! 4
 
+
! 5
 +
! 6
 +
|-
 +
| 17/0 (11/00)
 +
| 17/10 (11/0A)
 +
| 17/20 (11/14)
 +
| 17/1 (11/01)
 +
| 17/11 (11/0B)
 +
| 0/52 (0/34)
 +
|}
  
 
== Variations on the D64 layout ==
 
== Variations on the D64 layout ==
Line 255: Line 312:
 
35 or 40 tracks, with or without error bytes.
 
35 or 40 tracks, with or without error bytes.
  
    Disk type                 Size
+
{| class='wikitable'
    ---------                  ------
+
! Disk type
    35 track, no errors       174848
+
! Size
    35 track, 683 error bytes 175531
+
|-
    40 track, no errors       196608
+
| 35 track, no errors
    40 track, 768 error bytes 197376
+
| 174848
 
+
|-
 +
| 35 track, 683 error bytes
 +
| 175531
 +
|-
 +
| 40 track, no errors
 +
| 196608
 +
|-
 +
| 40 track, 768 error bytes
 +
| 197376
 +
|}
  
 
The following table (provided by Wolfgang Moser) outlines the differences
 
The following table (provided by Wolfgang Moser) outlines the differences
Line 269: Line 335:
 
explanation of these bytes.
 
explanation of these bytes.
  
        Disk format             |Tracks|Header 7/8|Dos type|DiskDos
+
{| class='wikitable'
                                |      |allsechdrs|        |vs.type
+
! Disk format !! Tracks !! Header 7/8 allsechdrs !! Dos type !! DiskDos vs. type
       ============================================================
+
|-
        Original CBM DOS v2.6  |  35  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|       Original CBM DOS v2.6  ||  35  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
      ------------------------------------------------------------
+
|-
        SpeedDOS+              |  40  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|        SpeedDOS+              ||  40  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
      ------------------------------------------------------------
+
|-
        ProfessionalDOS Initial |  35  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|        ProfessionalDOS Initial ||  35  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
          (Version 1/Prototype) |  40  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|-
      ------------------------------------------------------------
+
|          (Version 1/Prototype) ||  40  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
        ProfDOS Release        |  40  | $0f  $0f |  "4A"  |$41/'A'
+
|-
      ------------------------------------------------------------
+
|        ProfDOS Release        ||  40  || $0f  $0f ||  "4A"  ||$41/'A'
        Dolphin-DOS 2.0/3.0    |  35  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|-
        Dolphin-DOS 2.0/3.0    |  40  | $0d  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|        Dolphin-DOS 2.0/3.0    ||  35  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
      ------------------------------------------------------------
+
|-
        PrologicDOS 1541        |  35  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|        Dolphin-DOS 2.0/3.0    ||  40  || $0d  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
        PrologicDOS 1541        |  40  | $0f  $0f |  "2P"  |$50/'P'
+
|-
        ProSpeed 1571 2.0      |  35  | $0f  $0f |  "2A"  |$41/'A'
+
|        PrologicDOS 1541        ||  35  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
        ProSpeed 1571 2.0      |  40  | $0f  $0f |  "2P"  |$50/'P'
+
|-
      ------------------------------------------------------------
+
|        PrologicDOS 1541        ||  40  || $0f  $0f ||  "2P"  ||$50/'P'
 
+
|-
 +
|        ProSpeed 1571 2.0      ||  35  || $0f  $0f ||  "2A"  ||$41/'A'
 +
|-
 +
|        ProSpeed 1571 2.0      ||  40  || $0f  $0f ||  "2P"  ||$50/'P'
 +
|}
  
 
The location of the extra BAM information in sector 18/0,  for  40  track
 
The location of the extra BAM information in sector 18/0,  for  40  track
Line 370: Line 440:
 
errors very unreliable.
 
errors very unreliable.
  
    Code Error Type   1541 error description
+
{| class='wikitable'
    ----  -----  ----  ------------------------------
+
! Code
    03   21   Seek   No SYNC sequence found.
+
! Error
                        Each  sector  data  block  and  header  block  are
+
! Type
                        preceeded by SYNC marks. If *no* sync  sequence  is
+
! 1541 error
                        found within 20 milliseconds (only ~1/10 of a  disk
+
! Error description
                        rotation!) then this error is generated. This error
+
|-
                        used to mean the entire track is bad, but  it  does
+
| 03  
                        not have to be the case. Only a small area  of  the
+
| 21
                        track needs to be without  a  SYNC  mark  and  this
+
| Seek
                        error will be generated.
+
| No SYNC sequence found.
                        Converting this error to a D64 is very  problematic
+
| Each  sector  data  block  and  header  block  are preceeded by SYNC marks. If *no* sync  sequence  is found within 20 milliseconds (only ~1/10 of a  disk rotation!) then this error is generated. This error used to mean the entire track is bad, but  it  does not have to be the case. Only a small area  of  the track needs to be without  a  SYNC  mark  and  this error will be generated.<br/> Converting this error to a D64 is very  problematic because it depends on where the physical head is on the disk when a read attempt is made. If it  is  on valid header/sectors then it  won't  occur.  If  it happens over an area without SYNC  marks,  it  will happen.
                        because it depends on where the physical head is on
+
|-
                        the disk when a read attempt is made. If it  is  on
+
| 02
                        valid header/sectors then it  won't  occur.  If  it
+
| 20
                        happens over an area without SYNC  marks,  it  will
+
| Seek
                        happen.
+
| Header descriptor byte not found (HEX $08, GCR $52)
    02   20   Seek   Header descriptor byte not found (HEX $08, GCR $52)
+
| Each sector is preceeded by an  8-byte  GCR  header block, which starts with the value  $52  (GCR).  If this value is not found  after  90  attempts,  this error is generated.<br/> Basically, what a track  has  is  SYNC  marks,  and possibly valid data blocks,  but  no  valid  header descriptors.
                        Each sector is preceeded by an  8-byte  GCR  header
+
|-
                        block, which starts with the value  $52  (GCR).  If
+
| 09
                        this value is not found  after  90  attempts,  this
+
| 27
                        error is generated.
+
| Seek
                        Basically, what a track  has  is  SYNC  marks,  and
+
| Checksum error in header block
                        possibly valid data blocks,  but  no  valid  header
+
| The  header  block  contains  a  checksum  value, calculated by [[Exclusive Or|XOR'ing]] the TRACK,  SECTOR,  ID1  and ID2 values. If this checksum is wrong,  this  error is generated.
                        descriptors.
+
|-
    09   27   Seek   Checksum error in header block
+
| 0B
                        The  header  block  contains  a  checksum  value,
+
| 29
                        calculated by XOR'ing the TRACK,  SECTOR,  ID1  and
+
| Seek
                        ID2 values. If this checksum is wrong,  this  error
+
| Disk sector ID mismatch
                        is generated.
+
| The ID's from the header  block  of  the  currently read sector are compared against the ones from  the low-level header of 18/0. If there is  a  mismatch, this error is generated.
    0B   29   Seek   Disk sector ID mismatch
+
|-
                        The ID's from the header  block  of  the  currently
+
| 02
                        read sector are compared against the ones from  the
+
| 20
                        low-level header of 18/0. If there is  a  mismatch,
+
| Seek
                        this error is generated.
+
| Header block not found
    02   20   Seek   Header block not found
+
| This error can be reported again when searching for the correct header block. An image of the header is built and searched for, but not found after 90 read attempts.  Note  the  difference  from  the  first occurance. The first one only searches for a  valid ID, not the whole header.
                        This error can be reported again when searching for
+
|}
                        the correct header block. An image of the header is
+
                        built and searched for, but not found after 90 read
+
                        attempts.  Note  the  difference  from  the  first
+
                        occurance. The first one only searches for a  valid
+
                        ID, not the whole header.
+
  
 
Note that error 20 occurs twice during this phase. The first time is when
 
Note that error 20 occurs twice during this phase. The first time is when
Line 424: Line 489:
 
Therefore the data, checksum and off bytes are available.
 
Therefore the data, checksum and off bytes are available.
  
    Code Error Type   1541 error description
+
{| class='wikitable'
    ----  -----  ----  ------------------------------
+
! Code
    04   22   Read   Data descriptor byte not found (HEX $07, GCR $55)
+
! Error
                        Each sector data block is preceeded  by  the  value
+
! Type
                        $07, the "data block" descriptor. If this value  is
+
! 1541 error
                        not there, this error is  generated.  Each  encoded
+
! Error description
                        sector  has  actually  260  bytes.  First  is  the
+
|-
                        descriptor byte, then  follows  the  256  bytes  of
+
| 04
                        data, a checksum, and two "off" bytes.
+
| 22
    05   23   Read   Checksum error in data block
+
| Read
                        The checksum of  the  data  read  of  the  disk  is
+
| Data descriptor byte not found (HEX $07, GCR $55)
                        calculated, and compared against the one stored  at
+
| Each sector data block is preceeded  by  the  value $07, the "data block" descriptor. If this value  is not there, this error is  generated.  Each  encoded sector  has  actually  260  bytes.  First  is  the descriptor byte, then  follows  the  256  bytes  of data, a checksum, and two "off" bytes.
                        the end of the sector. If  there's  a  discrepancy,
+
|-
                        this error is generated.
+
| 05
    0F   74   Read   Drive Not Ready (no disk in drive or no device 1)
+
| 23
 +
| Read
 +
| Checksum error in data block
 +
| The checksum of  the  data  read  of  the  disk  is calculated, and compared against the one stored  at the end of the sector. If  there's  a  discrepancy, this error is generated.
 +
|-
 +
| 0F
 +
| 74
 +
| Read
 +
| Drive Not Ready (no disk in drive or no device 1)
 +
|
 +
|}
  
 
These errors only  apply  when  writing  to  a  disk.  I  don't  see  the
 
These errors only  apply  when  writing  to  a  disk.  I  don't  see  the
Line 444: Line 519:
 
disk.
 
disk.
  
    Code Error Type   1541 error description
+
{| class='wikitable'
    ----  -----  ----  ------------------------------
+
! Code
    06   24   Write Write verify (on format)
+
! Error
    07   25   Write Write verify error
+
! Type
                        Once the GCR-encoded sector  is  written  out,  the
+
! 1541 error
                        drive waits for the sector to come around again and
+
! Error description
                        verifies the whole 325-byte GCR block.  Any  errors
+
|-
                        encountered will generate this error.
+
| 06
    08   26   Write Write protect on
+
| 24
                        Self explanatory. Remove the write-protect tab, and
+
| Write
                        try again.
+
| Write verify (on format)
    0A   28   Write Write error
+
|
                        In actual fact, this error never occurs, but it  is
+
|-
                        included for completeness.
+
| 07
 +
| 25
 +
| Write
 +
| Write verify error
 +
| Once the GCR-encoded sector  is  written  out,  the drive waits for the sector to come around again and verifies the whole 325-byte GCR block.  Any  errors encountered will generate this error.
 +
|-
 +
| 08
 +
| 26
 +
| Write
 +
| Write protect on
 +
| Self explanatory. Remove the write-protect tab, and try again.
 +
|-
 +
| 0A
 +
| 28
 +
| Write
 +
| Write error
 +
| In actual fact, this error never occurs, but it  is included for completeness.
 +
|}
  
 
This is not an error at all, but when gets reported when the  read  of  a
 
This is not an error at all, but when gets reported when the  read  of  a
 
sector is ok.
 
sector is ok.
  
    Code Error Type   1541 error description
+
{| class='wikitable'
    ----  -----  ----  ------------------------------
+
! Code
    01   00   N/A   No error.
+
! Error
                        Self explanatory. No errors were  detected  in  the
+
! Type
                        reading and decoding of the sector.
+
! 1541 error
 +
! Error description
 +
|-
 +
| 01
 +
| 00
 +
| N/A
 +
| No error.
 +
| Self explanatory. No errors were  detected  in  the reading and decoding of the sector.
 +
|}
  
 
The advantage with using the 35 track D64  format,  regardless  of  error
 
The advantage with using the 35 track D64  format,  regardless  of  error
Line 474: Line 574:
 
also native to the C64, with many books explaining the disk layout and  the
 
also native to the C64, with many books explaining the disk layout and  the
 
internals of the 1541.
 
internals of the 1541.
 
  
 
== What it takes to support D64 ==
 
== What it takes to support D64 ==
Line 524: Line 623:
 
(Content taken from [http://unusedino.de/ec64/technical/formats/d64.html D64.TXT] in Peter Scheper's excellent compendium of C64 file format information).
 
(Content taken from [http://unusedino.de/ec64/technical/formats/d64.html D64.TXT] in Peter Scheper's excellent compendium of C64 file format information).
  
 +
== Commodore C64 CP/M Filesystem ==
 +
 +
A D64 file written by the Commodore 64 port of [[CP/M]] will contain a [[CP/M file system]]. This has the following characteristics:
 +
* 34 tracks
 +
* 2 system tracks
 +
* 17 256-byte sectors per track (appearing to CP/M as 34 128-byte sectors)
 +
* 1k blocks
 +
* 2 directory blocks
 +
 +
The CP/M filesystem is found on the first 17 sectors of each track (except track 18, which is skipped). CP/M numbers tracks from zero, so tracks 1-17 are accessed as 0-16, and tracks 19-35 as 17-33.
 +
 +
The CBMFS block availability map marks all sectors as used. The disk name is usually "CP/M DISK".
 +
 +
On a boot disk, the first sector contains a BASIC bootloader (present in the CBMFS directory as the file "CPM"). The remaining sectors of tracks 1 and 2 contain the 6502 host code and the CP/M BIOS, BDOS and CCP.
 +
 +
== Utilities ==
 +
* [http://style64.org/dirmaster DirMaster: reads C64 disk images / archives / files in Windows]
  
 
[[Category:Commodore computers]]
 
[[Category:Commodore computers]]

Latest revision as of 09:38, 21 November 2024

File Format
Name CBMFS
Ontology

The CBM File System was used by disk drives made by Commodore Business Machines for the PET, VIC-20, C64 and C128 range of computers. These drives were called 'intelligent peripherals' meaning the DOS (Disk Operating System) was run in the drive itself, not on the computer the drive was attached to.

The most popular CBM drive was the 1541, which supported 35 tracks using GCR encoding. A later drive, the 1571 disk, used a double-sided format for twice the space. 3 1/2" disks were later introduced to the Commodore via the 1581 format, which used a variant of CBMFS (see Commodore 1581 filesystem).

Contents

[edit] D64 File Format

The D64 format is most frequently used to capture 1541 disk images, it consists of a sector-for-sector copy of a 1540/1541 disk. The standard D64 is a 174848 byte file comprised of 256 byte sectors arranged in 35 tracks with a varying number of sectors per track for a total of 683 sectors. Track counting starts at 1, not 0, and goes up to 35. Sector counting starts at 0, not 1, for the first sector, therefore a track with 21 sectors will go from 0 to 20.

[edit] Physical media

The original media (a 5.25" disk) has the tracks laid out in circles, with track 1 on the very outside of the disk (closest to the sides) to track 35 being on the inside of the disk (closest to the inner hub ring). Commodore, in their infinite wisdom, varied the number of sectors per track and data densities across the disk to optimize available storage, resulting in the chart below. It shows the sectors/track for a standard D64. Since the outside diameter of a circle is the largest (versus closer to the center), the outside tracks have the largest amount of storage.

Track Sectors/track # Sectors Storage in Bytes
1-17 21 357 7820
18-24 19 133 7170
25-30 18 108 6300
31-40(*) 17 85 6020

683 Sectors (for a 35 track image)

Track #Sect #SectorsIn D64 Offset Track #Sect #SectorsIn D64 Offset
1 21 0 $00000 21 19 414 $19E00
2 21 21 $01500 22 19 433 $1B100
3 21 42 $02A00 23 19 452 $1C400
4 21 63 $03F00 24 19 471 $1D700
5 21 84 $05400 25 18 490 $1EA00
6 21 105 $06900 26 18 508 $1FC00
7 21 126 $07E00 27 18 526 $20E00
8 21 147 $09300 28 18 544 $22000
9 21 168 $0A800 29 18 562 $23200
10 21 189 $0BD00 30 18 580 $24400
11 21 210 $0D200 31 17 598 $25600
12 21 231 $0E700 32 17 615 $26700
13 21 252 $0FC00 33 17 632 $27800
14 21 273 $11100 34 17 649 $28900
15 21 294 $12600 35 17 666 $29A00
16 21 315 $13B00 36(*) 17 683 $2AB00
17 21 336 $15000 37(*) 17 700 $2BC00
18 19 357 $16500 38(*) 17 717 $2CD00
19 19 376 $17800 39(*) 17 734 $2DE00
20 19 395 $18B00 40(*) 17 751 $2EF00

(*)Tracks 36-40 apply to 40-track images only

[edit] CBM DOS Directory Structure

The directory track should be contained totally on track 18. Sectors 1-18 contain the entries and sector 0 contains the BAM (Block Availability Map) and disk name/ID. Since the directory is only 18 sectors large (19 less one for the BAM), and each sector can contain only 8 entries (32 bytes per entry), the maximum number of directory entries is 18 * 8 = 144. The first directory sector is always 18/1, even though the t/s pointer at 18/0 (first two bytes) might point somewhere else. It then follows the same chain structure as a normal file, using a sector interleave of 3. This makes the chain links go 18/1, 18/4, 18/7 etc.

Note that you can extend the directory off of track 18, but only when reading the disk or image. Attempting to write to a directory sector not on track 18 will cause directory corruption.

Each directory sector has the following layout (18/1 partial dump):

   00: 12 04 81 11 00 4E 41 4D 45 53 20 26 20 50 4F 53 <- notice the T/S link
   10: 49 54 A0 A0 A0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 15 00 <- to 18/4 ($12/$04)
   20: 00 00 84 11 02 41 44 44 49 54 49 4F 4E 41 4C 20 <- and how its not here
   30: 49 4E 46 4F A0 11 0C FE 00 00 00 00 00 00 61 01 <- ($00/$00)

The first two bytes of the sector ($12/$04) indicate the location of the next track/sector of the directory (18/4). If the track is set to $00, then it is the last sector of the directory. It is possible, however unlikely, that the directory may *not* be competely on track 18 (some disks do exist like this). Just follow the chain anyhow.

When the directory is done, the track value will be $00. The sector link should contain a value of $FF, meaning the whole sector is allocated, but the actual value doesn't matter. The drive will return all the available entries anyways. This is a breakdown of a standard directory sector and entry:

 Bytes: $00-1F: First directory entry
         00-01: Track/Sector location of next directory sector ($00 $00 if
                not the first entry in the sector)
            02: File type.
                Typical values for this location are:
                  $00 - Scratched (deleted file entry)
                   80 - DEL
                   81 - SEQ
                   82 - PRG
                   83 - USR
                   84 - REL
                Bit 0-3: The actual filetype
                         000 (0) - DEL
                         001 (1) - SEQ
                         010 (2) - PRG
                         011 (3) - USR
                         100 (4) - REL
                         Values 5-15 are illegal, but if used will produce
                         very strange results. The 1541 is inconsistent in
                         how it treats these bits. Some routines use all 4
                         bits, others ignore bit 3,  resulting  in  values
                         from 0-7.
                Bit   4: Not used
                Bit   5: Used only during SAVE-@ replacement
                Bit   6: Locked flag (Set produces ">" locked files)
                Bit   7: Closed flag  (Not  set  produces  "*", or "splat"
                         files)
         03-04: Track/sector location of first sector of file
         05-14: 16 character filename (in PETASCII, padded with $A0)
         15-16: Track/Sector location of first side-sector block (REL file
                only)
            17: REL file record length (REL file only, max. value 254)
         18-1D: Unused (except with GEOS disks)
         1E-1F: File size in sectors, low/high byte  order  ($1E+$1F*256).
                The approx. filesize in bytes is <= #sectors * 254
         20-3F: Second dir entry. From now on the first two bytes of  each
                entry in this sector  should  be  $00  $00,  as  they  are
                unused.
         40-5F: Third dir entry
         60-7F: Fourth dir entry
         80-9F: Fifth dir entry
         A0-BF: Sixth dir entry
         C0-DF: Seventh dir entry
         E0-FF: Eighth dir entry

Files, on a standard 1541, are stored using an interleave of 10. Assuming a starting track/sector of 17/0, the chain would run 17/0, 17/10, 17/20, 17/8, 17/18, etc.

Note: No GEOS entries are listed in the above description. See GEOS VLIR for GEOS info.


The layout of the BAM area (sector 18/0) is a bit more complicated...

     00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F
     -----------------------------------------------
 00: 12 01 41 00 12 FF F9 17 15 FF FF 1F 15 FF FF 1F
 10: 15 FF FF 1F 12 FF F9 17 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 20: 00 00 00 00 0E FF 74 03 15 FF FF 1F 15 FF FF 1F
 30: 0E 3F FC 11 07 E1 80 01 15 FF FF 1F 15 FF FF 1F
 40: 15 FF FF 1F 15 FF FF 1F 0D C0 FF 07 13 FF FF 07
 50: 13 FF FF 07 11 FF CF 07 13 FF FF 07 12 7F FF 07
 60: 13 FF FF 07 0A 75 55 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 70: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 08 00 00 03 02 48 00
 80: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01
 90: 53 48 41 52 45 57 41 52 45 20 31 20 20 A0 A0 A0
 A0: A0 A0 56 54 A0 32 41 A0 A0 A0 A0 00 00 00 00 00
 B0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 C0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 D0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 E0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 F0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 Bytes:$00-01: Track/Sector location of the first directory sector (should
               be set to 18/1 but it doesn't matter, and don't trust  what
               is there, always go to 18/1 for first directory entry)
           02: Disk DOS version type (see note below)
                 $41 ("A")
           03: Unused
        04-8F: BAM entries for each track, in groups  of  four  bytes  per
               track, starting on track 1 (see below for more details)
        90-9F: Disk Name (padded with $A0)
        A0-A1: Filled with $A0
        A2-A3: Disk ID
           A4: Usually $A0
        A5-A6: DOS type, usually "2A"
        A7-AA: Filled with $A0
        AB-FF: Normally unused ($00), except for 40 track extended format,
               see the following two entries:
        AC-BF: DOLPHIN DOS track 36-40 BAM entries (only for 40 track)
        C0-D3: SPEED DOS track 36-40 BAM entries (only for 40 track)

Note: The BAM entries for SPEED, DOLPHIN and ProLogic DOS use the same layout as standard BAM entries.

One of the interesting things from the BAM sector is the byte at offset $02, the DOS version byte. If it is set to anything other than $41 or $00, then we have what is called "soft write protection". Any attempt to write to the disk will return the "DOS Version" error code 73 ,"CBM DOS V 2.6 1541". The 1541 is simply telling you that it thinks the disk format version is incorrect. This message will normally come up when you first turn on the 1541 and read the error channel. If you write a $00 or a $41 into 1541 memory location $00FF (for device 0), then you can circumvent this type of write-protection, and change the DOS version back to what it should be.

The BAM entries require a bit (no pun intended) more of a breakdown. Take the first entry at bytes $04-$07 ($12 $FF $F9 $17). The first byte ($12) is the number of free sectors on that track. Since we are looking at the track 1 entry, this means it has 18 (decimal) free sectors. The next three bytes represent the bitmap of which sectors are used/free. Since it is 3 bytes (8 bits/byte) we have 24 bits of storage. Remember that at most, each track only has 21 sectors, so there are a few unused bits.

  Bytes: 04-07: 12 FF F9 17   Track 1 BAM
         08-0B: 15 FF FF FF   Track 2 BAM
         0C-0F: 15 FF FF 1F   Track 3 BAM
         ...
         8C-8F: 11 FF FF 01   Track 35 BAM

These entries must be viewed in binary to make any sense. We will use the first entry (track 1) at bytes 04-07:

    FF=11111111, F9=11111001, 17=00010111

In order to make any sense from the binary notation, flip the bits around.

                  111111 11112222
       01234567 89012345 67890123
       --------------------------
       11111111 10011111 11101000
       ^                     ^
   sector 0              sector 20

Since we are on the first track, we have 21 sectors, and only use up to the bit 20 position. If a bit is on (1), the sector is free. Therefore, track 1 has sectors 9,10 and 19 used, all the rest are free. Any leftover bits that refer to sectors that don't exist, like bits 21-23 in the above example, are set to allocated.

Each filetype has its own unique properties, but most follow one simple structure. The first file sector is pointed to by the directory and follows a t/s chain, until the track value reaches $00. When this happens, the value in the sector link location indicates how much of the sector is used. For example, the following chain indicates a file 6 sectors long, and ends when we encounter the $00/$34 chain. At this point the last sector occupies from bytes $02-$34.

1 2 3 4 5 6
17/0 (11/00) 17/10 (11/0A) 17/20 (11/14) 17/1 (11/01) 17/11 (11/0B) 0/52 (0/34)

[edit] Variations on the D64 layout

These are some variations of the D64 layout:

1. Standard 35 track layout but with 683 error bytes added on to the end of the file. Each byte of the error info corresponds to a single sector stored in the D64, indicating if the sector on the original disk contained an error. The first byte is for track 1/0, and the last byte is for track 35/16.

2. A 40 track layout, following the same layout as a 35 track disk, but with 5 extra tracks. These contain 17 sectors each, like tracks 31-35. Some of the PC utilities do allow you to create and work with these files. This can also have error bytes attached like variant #1.

3. The Commodore 128 allowed for "auto-boot" disks. With this, t/s 1/0 holds a specific byte sequence which the computer recognizes as boot code. See the document C128BOOT.TXT for more info.


Below is a small chart detailing the standard file sizes of D64 images, 35 or 40 tracks, with or without error bytes.

Disk type Size
35 track, no errors 174848
35 track, 683 error bytes 175531
40 track, no errors 196608
40 track, 768 error bytes 197376

The following table (provided by Wolfgang Moser) outlines the differences between the standard 1541 DOS and the various "speeder" DOS's that exist. The 'header 7/8' category is the 'fill bytes' as the end of the sector header of a real 1541 disk See G64 for a better explanation of these bytes.

Disk format Tracks Header 7/8 allsechdrs Dos type DiskDos vs. type
Original CBM DOS v2.6 35 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
SpeedDOS+ 40 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
ProfessionalDOS Initial 35 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
(Version 1/Prototype) 40 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
ProfDOS Release 40 $0f $0f "4A" $41/'A'
Dolphin-DOS 2.0/3.0 35 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
Dolphin-DOS 2.0/3.0 40 $0d $0f "2A" $41/'A'
PrologicDOS 1541 35 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
PrologicDOS 1541 40 $0f $0f "2P" $50/'P'
ProSpeed 1571 2.0 35 $0f $0f "2A" $41/'A'
ProSpeed 1571 2.0 40 $0f $0f "2P" $50/'P'

The location of the extra BAM information in sector 18/0, for 40 track images, will be different depending on what standard the disks have been formatted with. SPEED DOS stores them from $C0 to $D3, DOLPHIN DOS stores them from $AC to $BF and PrologicDOS stored them right after the existing BAM entries from $90-A3. PrologicDOS also moves the disk label and ID forward from the standard location of $90 to $A4. 64COPY and Star Commander let you select from several different types of extended disk formats you want to create/work with.

All three of the speeder DOS's mentioned above don't alter the standard sector interleave of 10 for files and 3 for directories. The reason is that they use a memory cache installed in the drive which reads the entire track in one pass. This alleviates the need for custom interleave values. They do seem to alter the algorithm that finds the next available free sector so that the interleave value can deviate from 10 under certain circumstances, but I don't know why they would bother.


Below is a HEX dump of a Speed DOS BAM sector. Note the location of the extra BAM info from $C0-D3.

       00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F       ASCII
       -----------------------------------------------  ----------------
 0070: 12 FF FF 03 12 FF FF 03 12 FF FF 03 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 0080: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 0090: A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0  ????????????????
 00A0: A0 A0 30 30 A0 32 41 A0 A0 A0 A0 00 00 00 00 00  ??00?2A?????????
 00B0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ????????????????
 00C0: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 00D0: 11 FF FF 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ????????????????


Below is a HEX dump of a Dolphin DOS BAM sector. Note the location of the extra BAM info from $AC-BF.

       00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F       ASCII
       -----------------------------------------------  ----------------
 0070: 12 FF FF 03 12 FF FF 03 12 FF FF 03 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 0080: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 0090: A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0  ????????????????
 00A0: A0 A0 30 30 A0 32 41 A0 A0 A0 A0 00 11 FF FF 01  ??00?2A?????????
 00B0: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 00C0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ????????????????
 00D0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ???????????????? 


Below is a HEX dump of a PrologicDOS BAM sector. Note that the disk name and ID are now located at $A4 instead of starting at $90.

       00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F       ASCII
       -----------------------------------------------  ----------------
 0070: 12 FF FF 03 12 FF FF 03 12 FF FF 03 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 0080: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 0090: 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01 11 FF FF 01  ????????????????
 00A0: 11 FF FF 01 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0  ????????????????
 00B0: A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 A0 30 30 A0 32 50 A0 A0 A0 A0 00  ??????00?2P?????
 00C0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ????????????????
 00ED: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ????????????????


Here is the meaning of the error bytes added onto the end of any extended D64. The CODE is the same as that generated by the 1541 drive controller... it reports these numbers, not the error code we usually see when an error occurs.

Some of what comes below is taken from Immers/Neufeld book "Inside Commodore DOS". Note the descriptions are not completely accurate as to what the drive DOS is actually doing to seek/read/decode/write sectors, but serve as simple examples only. The "type" field is where the error usually occurs, whether it's searching for any SYNC mark, any header ID, any valid header, or reading a sector.

These first errors are "seek" errors, where the disk controller is simply reading headers and looking at descriptor bytes, checksums, format ID's and reporting what errors it sees. These errors do *not* necessarily apply to the exact sector being looked for. This fact makes duplication of these errors very unreliable.

Code Error Type 1541 error Error description
03 21 Seek No SYNC sequence found. Each sector data block and header block are preceeded by SYNC marks. If *no* sync sequence is found within 20 milliseconds (only ~1/10 of a disk rotation!) then this error is generated. This error used to mean the entire track is bad, but it does not have to be the case. Only a small area of the track needs to be without a SYNC mark and this error will be generated.
Converting this error to a D64 is very problematic because it depends on where the physical head is on the disk when a read attempt is made. If it is on valid header/sectors then it won't occur. If it happens over an area without SYNC marks, it will happen.
02 20 Seek Header descriptor byte not found (HEX $08, GCR $52) Each sector is preceeded by an 8-byte GCR header block, which starts with the value $52 (GCR). If this value is not found after 90 attempts, this error is generated.
Basically, what a track has is SYNC marks, and possibly valid data blocks, but no valid header descriptors.
09 27 Seek Checksum error in header block The header block contains a checksum value, calculated by XOR'ing the TRACK, SECTOR, ID1 and ID2 values. If this checksum is wrong, this error is generated.
0B 29 Seek Disk sector ID mismatch The ID's from the header block of the currently read sector are compared against the ones from the low-level header of 18/0. If there is a mismatch, this error is generated.
02 20 Seek Header block not found This error can be reported again when searching for the correct header block. An image of the header is built and searched for, but not found after 90 read attempts. Note the difference from the first occurance. The first one only searches for a valid ID, not the whole header.

Note that error 20 occurs twice during this phase. The first time is when a header ID is being searched for, the second is when the proper header pattern for the sector being searched for is not found.

From this point on, all the errors apply to the specific sector you are looking for. If a read passed all the previous checks, then we are at the sector being searched for.

Note that the entire sector is read before these errors are detected. Therefore the data, checksum and off bytes are available.

Code Error Type 1541 error Error description
04 22 Read Data descriptor byte not found (HEX $07, GCR $55) Each sector data block is preceeded by the value $07, the "data block" descriptor. If this value is not there, this error is generated. Each encoded sector has actually 260 bytes. First is the descriptor byte, then follows the 256 bytes of data, a checksum, and two "off" bytes.
05 23 Read Checksum error in data block The checksum of the data read of the disk is calculated, and compared against the one stored at the end of the sector. If there's a discrepancy, this error is generated.
0F 74 Read Drive Not Ready (no disk in drive or no device 1)

These errors only apply when writing to a disk. I don't see the usefulness of having these as they cannot be present when only *reading* a disk.

Code Error Type 1541 error Error description
06 24 Write Write verify (on format)
07 25 Write Write verify error Once the GCR-encoded sector is written out, the drive waits for the sector to come around again and verifies the whole 325-byte GCR block. Any errors encountered will generate this error.
08 26 Write Write protect on Self explanatory. Remove the write-protect tab, and try again.
0A 28 Write Write error In actual fact, this error never occurs, but it is included for completeness.

This is not an error at all, but when gets reported when the read of a sector is ok.

Code Error Type 1541 error Error description
01 00 N/A No error. Self explanatory. No errors were detected in the reading and decoding of the sector.

The advantage with using the 35 track D64 format, regardless of error bytes, is that it can be converted directly back to a 1541 disk by either using the proper cable and software on the PC, or send it down to the C64 and writing it back to a 1541. It is the best documented format since it is also native to the C64, with many books explaining the disk layout and the internals of the 1541.

[edit] What it takes to support D64

The D64 layout is reasonably robust, being that it is an electronic representation of a physical 1541 disk. It shares *most* of the 1541 attributes and it supports all file formats, since all C64 files came from here. The only file I have found that can't be copied to a D64 is a T64 FRZ (FRoZen files), since you lose the extra file type attribute.

Since the D64 layout seems to be an exact byte copy of a 1541 floppy, it would appear to be the perfect format for *any* emulator. However, it does not contain certain vital bits of information that, as a user, you normally don't have access to.

Preceeding each sector on a real 1541 disk is a header block which contains the sector ID bytes and checksum. From the information contained in the header, the drive determines if there's an error on that header (27-checksum error, 29-disk ID mismatch). The sector itself also contains info (data block signature, checksum) that result in error detection (23 checksum, 22 data block not present, etc). The error bytes had to be added on to the D64 image, "extending" the format to take into account the missing info.

The disk ID is important in the copy protection of some programs. Some programs fail to work properly since the D64 doesn't contain these ID's. These bytes would be an addition to the format which has never been done and would be difficult to do. (As an aside, the 4-pack ZipCode files do contain the original master disk ID, but these are lost in the conversion of a ZipCode to a D64. Only storing *one* of the ID's is not enough, all the sector ID's should be kept.)

The extended track 1541 disks also presented a problem, as there are several different formats (and how/where to store the extra BAM entries in a sector that was not designed for them, yet still remain compatible). Because of the additions to the format (error bytes and 40 tracks) there exists 4 different types of D64's, all recognizeable by their size.

It is also the only format that uses the sector count for the file size rather than actual bytes used. This can present some problems when converting/copying the to another format because you may have to know the size before you begin (see LBR format).

It also contains no consistent signature, useful for recognizing if D64 is really what it claims to be. In order to determine if a file is a D64, you must check the file size.

(Content taken from D64.TXT in Peter Scheper's excellent compendium of C64 file format information).

[edit] Commodore C64 CP/M Filesystem

A D64 file written by the Commodore 64 port of CP/M will contain a CP/M file system. This has the following characteristics:

  • 34 tracks
  • 2 system tracks
  • 17 256-byte sectors per track (appearing to CP/M as 34 128-byte sectors)
  • 1k blocks
  • 2 directory blocks

The CP/M filesystem is found on the first 17 sectors of each track (except track 18, which is skipped). CP/M numbers tracks from zero, so tracks 1-17 are accessed as 0-16, and tracks 19-35 as 17-33.

The CBMFS block availability map marks all sectors as used. The disk name is usually "CP/M DISK".

On a boot disk, the first sector contains a BASIC bootloader (present in the CBMFS directory as the file "CPM"). The remaining sectors of tracks 1 and 2 contain the 6502 host code and the CP/M BIOS, BDOS and CCP.

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