                                  RESTORE
             Restores backed up files from one disk to another
                             See also <BACKUP>

COMMAND TYPE: External                  VERSION: 2.0 and up

RESTORE is used to restore files that were copied using the BACKUP
command.  Options control which files are to be restored.

USE:  RESTORE d: [d:][path]filename [/S][/P] [/B:mm:dd:yy] [/A:mm:dd:yy]
              [/M][/N] [/L:time] [/E:time]
d: specifies the drive that contains the backed up files (files
   created using the <BACKUP> command).
d: path filename specifies the names of the files that you want to
   restore and where you want to put them.
/S restores the files in all subdirectories.  If /S is not
   specified, only the current directory is restored.
/P causes RESTORE to prompt you before restoring files that have
   changed since they were backed up.  /P will also cause RESTORE to
   prompt you before it restores a read-only file.

(DOS 3.3 and later)
/B:mm-dd-yy restores all files modified on or before the date
            specified by mm-dd-yy.
/A:mm-dd-yy restores all files modified on or after the date
            specified by mm-dd-yy.
/M          restores files modified or deleted since they were backed up.
/N          restores files that no longer exist on the target disk.
/L:time     restores only those files that were modified at or later
            than the given time.
/E:time     restores only those files that were modified at or earlier
            than the given time.

EXAMPLE: RESTORE A: C:\*.* /S
will restore all files on drive A: (which had previously been backed
up using <BACKUP>) to drive C:.  All subdirectories will be restored.
