I'm guessing you've got the full time 4wd setup with NP203 transfer case. If so, and it hasn't been modified, you'll have flat-ish chrome caps on your front axle ends where you'd usually find the manual locking hubs of a standard part time setup. If so, you're in 4wd all the time, and there is no provision to unlock the front axle, as it's always in use. What allows you to drive on high traction surfaces in 4wd, is that there's a differential in the 203 T-case that keeps the front and rear axles from winding up on pavement and such. Most of the full time 4wd trucks I've encountered have open diffs in the front and rear (though you probably could've gotten at least a limited slip in the rear... and maybe the front too?). With the transfer case in High or Low, you'll have roughly the same power delivery to all four wheels, though if you've got one tire jacked up in the air, it should (at least theoretically) spin at 4x the speedometer reading. The High Loc and Low Loc positions lock out the center differential, making the vehicle perform exactly like a part time 4wd for use in extra low traction situations. It has no effect on front or rear axle diffs.
If you have a NP203 with manual hubs up front, someone has converted it to a part time setup, though the quality and depth of these installations was often done in a half ass manner. I've never owned a full-timer, but if I did, I wouldn't bother to try and convert it... even though I wouldn't mind having 2L for certain situations.