To loop through all drive letters without explicitly stating them you could use forfiles
(which is delivered with all Windows versions past Vista, I believe) and its capability to expand hex. codes 0xHH
, together with exit
to set the exit code and the hidden variable =ExitCode
to convert the exit code to a hexadecimal value, like in this example code:
@echo off
for /L %%C in (0x41,1,0x5A) do (
cmd /C exit %%C
for /F %%D in ('
forfiles /P "%~dp0." /M "%~nx0" /C "cmd /C echo 0x%%=ExitCode:~-2%%"
') do echo %%D:\
)
This is quite slow though, because there are several cmd
instances opened and closed.
To loop through all available drives, including network drives and also such established by subst
, you could use the following code, based on wmic
:
for /F "skip=1" %%C in ('wmic LogicalDisk get DeviceID') do for /F %%D in ("%%C") do echo %%D\
To loop through all local drives, you could use the following code, again based on wmic
:
for /F "skip=1" %%C in ('wmic Volume where "DriveLetter is not Null" get DriveLetter') do for /F %%D in ("%%C") do echo %%D\
To loop through all local drives, but based on mountvol
, you could use the following code instead:
for /F %%C in ('mountvol ^| find ":\"') do echo %%C
Finally, for the sake of completeness, to loop through all drives that have been established by subst
, use the this code:
for /F "delims=\" %%C in ('subst') do echo %%C\