![]() ![]() You might also transfer files for graphic and sound drivers (watch part 18 to download). ![]() diskimgN.img This can be any number of floppy disk images. When you have mounted the windows.img, transfer the WIN3 Folder to it. Mount image as c: and cd with win95 setup files as d. Run FDISK and make partition on hard drive. Mount drive image by imgmount and boot from dos 6.x bootable diskiette image. Is there a way to mount a CD-ROM in DOSBox with audio tracks, not from the actual physical CD, but from files? I've tried making an ISO from the disk, but all it does is make a data-only ISO without the audio tracks. DOSBoxs internal IMGMOUNT tool to mount the image (the CUE sheet). First you must make a hdd image by bximage on bochs. DOSBox doesn't currently support mounting multiple disk images onto a single drive letter, so, to install a program that requires multiple floppies, do the following: Boot up DOSBox. You can mount the image file directly in DOSBox: In this example, the ISO image game.iso is in c:\games In DOSBox, type imgmount e c:\games\game. I can play the game with no music or cutscene audio if I mount a D drive with the CD-ROM's files (which I have), but I really would rather have that audio content. Type, IMGMOUNT A file.img -t floppy In DOSBox, type 'MOUNT A C:\DISK' and hit enter. My issue is with disc image filenames and image formats. I have my application running automatically from the DOSbox config file - autoexec section. dosemu does not seem to work on CentOS 7 so I moved to DOSbox. I have been running it in dosemu on CentOS 6 since 2010. bat to launch the game, then exit automatically when finished). I am using DOSbox for exactly ONE old FoxPro for DOS application which I wrote back in the early 1980s. conf file tells Dosbox to issue commands upon launching (mount C, imgmount D when needed, run a games. everything in your screenshot) to somewhere acceptable on your hard drive. bat which tells Dosbox to run with a specified. However, I don't have a disk drive in my current computer (who does these days anyway), and while I can borrow a plug-in CD/DVD reader to copy all my stuff with, using it to play the game isn't really an option (and I'd rather not be messing with disks like that anyway). Copy the files and folders from the ISO (i.e. Originally, you'd insert the CD, which was required to play the game anyway, and it would get the audio from there. The thing about this one specific game is: its soundtrack and cutscene audio comes as audio tracks in the CD it came with. I've got the game Dark Sun: Wake of the Ravager from the "AD&D Masterpiece Collection" circa 1996, still in the original CD, and I'd like to copy it all to my HD and play it exclusively from there. ![]()
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