Note: We do need to explicitly close FCBs. Reasons are as follows: If we
; are running in the no-sharing no-network environment, we are simulating the
; 2.0 world and thus if the user doesn't close the file, that is his problem
; BUT... the cache remains in a state with garbage that may be reused by the
; next process. We scan the set and blast the ref counts of the FCBs we own.
;
; If sharing is loaded, then the following call to close process will
; correctly close all FCBs. We will then need to walk the list AFTER here.
;
; Finally, the following call to NET_Abort will cause an EOP to be sent to all
; known network resources. These resources are then responsible for cleaning
; up after this process.
;
; Sleazy, eh?~
I imagine that's already a compatibility thing. If the os closed the file handles at that point but the program was expecting to do that, it might crash.