On Sat, Jun 25, 2016 at 4:02 PM, Karen Lewellen
<klewel...@shellworld.net> wrote:

> I have a rather Unusual question about directory trees in dos.
> I have a zip compressed file that contains rather a large number of .txt
> files.
> the files  are of stories, and series, with the person who put the materials
>  together using  some major breakdown, for example an item might
> look like this.
> d:\stories\abandoned\series\the-end-of-time.txt
> Now when I ran pkunzip on the archive, the directory tree was created
> correctly.
> By which I mean  there is a directory for abandoned, then a sub-directory
> for series, then the stories underneath.
> However in allot of cases the actual directory holding the .txt file is
> different.
> for the record, I am using word perfect to read the files.
> My question is this. is there a limit to the number of branches so to speak,
> one can have in a dos directory tree?

I am unaware of one.  There *is* a limit on the number of files you
can have in the root of a DOS drive, but there's no limit I'm aware of
on the number of files or directories in directories created off of
root.

> Frankly I have never seen this problem before.  I do have lfn loaded, so do
> not think it is the names of the files, especially since some of the
> content is present, and I got no error when I was unzipping the archive.

I don't understand the problem.  What do you mean when you say "actual
directory holding the .txt file is different."  Different from what?

Are you saying if you look at the archive with PKUNZIP -T, the
directories listed as components of the archive have different names
from the ones that are created on disk when you extract the archive?
Can you provide an example of the name in the archive and the name
created on disk, or a listing created by PKUNZIP of the archive
contents?

(And using Word Perfect to read the files is irrelevant to the issue.
The key is the files *can* be read and are intact.)

> Thoughts?

See above.  Worst case, since the files are intact (and presumably
extracted under the names they were created with), you could go back
and rename the extracted directories to correspond to what you believe
the names ought to be.

> Thanks,
> Karen
______
Dennis

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