Hi,
the INI in the DriverPacks have to match the folder structure, so... IF you move content and merge it in a greatly reduced number of folders (which is what I did for that experimental discc.), the INI has to be edited so the scripts know where the drivers are so as to be able to do the things (the exceptions) these lines were written for.
For the method ONE, the $OEM$ folder then had a small number of subfolders, and the path was shorter than 4096.
I used winmerge or araxis to merge folders (to spot file duplicates and determine wether or not I could allow an overwrite..), and editing the foldername in an INI is actually quite simple. But, it took work and concentration, and what looks easy to me may very well be a daunting task for somebody less familiar with how the DriverPacks and DriverPacks BASE work.
Since then, DriverPacks BASE has been overhauled, many DriverPacks were updated, and I should make myself another super short experimental.
Jeff knows I put a lot of work in making foldernames as short as possible, and the newer team members also try keep them short.
One thing though, you do not always need all the DriverPacks, so you might stay under the 4096 limit.
DriverPacks BASE tells you when you get over that number.
By the way, the folder limit only affected method 1, but since M1 had one great merit (it could do repair/upgrade) we did not drop it.
I had few machines to play with for a long time, and I have to catch up with the latest developments.
The answer was 42?
Kind regards, Jaak.