Turns out that it isn’t a key to unlock a DPB. It actually is a complete DPB. It is laid out like this:
A1 A1 <4e x 12> <4 bytes that are maybe volume/disk id> 00 <DPB>
And it translates to:
spt = 40 ;Number of 128-byte records per track
bsh = 3 ;Block shift. 3 => 1k, 4 => 2k, 5 => 4k....
blm = 7 ;Block mask. 7 => 1k, 0Fh => 2k, 1Fh => 4k...
exm = 0 ;Extent mask, see later
dsm = 194 ;(no. of blocks on the disc)-1
drm = 95 ;(no. of directory entries)-1
al0 = 224 ;Directory allocation bitmap, first byte
al1 = 0 ;Directory allocation bitmap, second byte
cks = 1800h ;Checksum vector size, 0 or 8000h for a fixed disc.
off = 1 ;Offset, number of reserved tracks
psh = 3 ;Physical sector shift, 0 => 128-byte sectors
phm = 7 ;Physical sector mask, 0 => 128-byte sectors
If you don’t know what any of that means, then just trust me that it matches how the disk structure is organized.
Ok, so what now?