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IO.SYS is an essential part of MS-DOS and Windows 9x. It contains the default MS-DOS device drivers (hardware interfacing routines) and the DOS initialization program.
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In the PC bootup sequence, the first sector of the boot disk is loaded into memory and executed. If this is the DOS boot sector, it loads the first three sectors of IO.SYS into memory and transfers control to it. IO.SYS then:
IBM PC-DOS and DR DOS uses the file IBMBIO.COM for the same purpose. Which in turn loads IBMDOS.COM.
However v3.3 allows sector 4 and higher to be fragmented. v5.0 allows the first 3 sectors of IO.SYS to be allocated anywhere (as long as they are contiguous). [1][2] COMMAND.COM can be treated like any ordinary file.
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