wrestool (1)
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wrestool.1 - Manual page for wrestool. Copyright (C) 2001 Colin Watson Copyright (C) 2001 Oskar Liljeblad This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or F...
NAME
wrestool - extract resources from Microsoft Windows(R) binariesSYNOPSIS
wrestool [OPTIONS]... [FILE]...DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the wrestool command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU distribution because the original program does not have a manual page.
Wrestool reads 16- or 32-bit Microsoft Windows(R) binaries
and lists or extracts the resources they contain. Some resources
require processing before they can be written to files; wrestool is
able to do this with icon and cursor resources.
Filters, specified as command line options, control what resources to
extract.
OPTIONS
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-').- -x, --extract
- Extract resources. (By default, resources will be extracted to standard out if --output was not specified.)
- -l, --list
- Output list of resources (default).
- -t, --type=[+|-]ID
-
Resource type identifier of affected resources. If preceded
with a dash (``-''), id must be numeric; if preceded with a
plus sign (``+''), id must be a string.
The type ID may also be the name of a resource type. (If this is the case, a leading dash or plus sign may not be included.) A list of resource types can be found in the ``Resource Types'' section. - -n, --name=[+|-]ID
- Resource name identifier of affected resources. Like the --type option, a leading dash or plus sign controls the datatype of the id.
- -L, --language=[+|-]ID
- Resource language identifier. Has no effect when processing 16-bit libraries.
- -a, --all
- Perform operation on all resource (default).
- -o, --output=PATH
- Where to place extracted resources. If ``PATH'' does not refer to an existing directory, and does not end with a slash (``/''), all output will be written to the file ``PATH''. (This means that if you extract multiple resources, PATH will contain the last resource only.)
- -R, --raw
- Do not parse resource contents - extract raw data. (This option will probably be replaced with --format=raw in future version of icoutils.)
- -v, --verbose
- Explain what is being done. The verbose option may be specified more than once, like ``-vv'', to make wrestool even more verbose.
- --help
- Display a help message and exit.
- --version
- Output version information and exit.
RESOURCE TYPES
The wrestool program recognizes the resource types listed below. The ids of these resources are always numeric and not strings.- cursor (1)
- A single cursor bitmap image. Read as part of group_cursor resources.
- bitmap (2)
- A bitmap image.
- icon (3)
- A single icon bitmap image. Read as part of group_icon resources. This resource is similar to cursor resources; cursors contain four additional bytes of hotspot coordinates.
- menu (4)
- Resources for menus (in popup and menubars). Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- dialog (5)
- Definitions (widgets with locations) for dialog boxes. Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- string (6)
- The string table resource, containing a number of unicode strings. Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- fontdir (7)
- The font directory, containing information on a number of font resources (8). Non-TTF font (.FON) files are actually libraries with resources in them. Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- font (8)
- A single font - the contents of a .FNT file. Read as part of fontdir resources. Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- accelerator (9)
- Keyboard accelerator tables. Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- rcdata (10)
- Arbitrary resource data, user-defined. There are no restrictions to the format of these resources.
- messagelist (11)
- Not supported.
- group_cursor (12)
- A set of cursors. With a few modifications (and with cursor resources), this resource can be extracted as a .CUR file.
- group_icon (14)
- A set of icons. With a few modifications (and with icons resources), this resource can be extracted as a .ICO file.
- version (16)
- Version information, stored as binary data. Could be extracted without modifications, but the data is of probably little use. Currently wrestool does not support this resource type.
- dlginclude (17)
- Not supported.
- plugplay (19)
- Not supported.
- vxd (20)
- Not supported.
- anicursor (21)
- Animated cursors. Currently wrestool does not support animated cursor or icons, nor does icotool.
- aniicon (22)
- Animated icons. I have only seen these in Windows(R) 3.x. Currently wrestool does not support animated cursor or icons, nor does icotool.
EXAMPLES
List all resources in file `write.exe':$ wrestool -l write.exe
--type=3 --name=1 --lang=1033 [type=icon offset=0x3120 size=752]
--type=3 --name=2 --lang=1033 [type=icon offset=0x3410 size=304]
--type=14 --name=1 --lang=1033 [type=group_icon offset=0x3540 size=34]
--type=16 --name=1 --lang=1033 [type=version offset=0x3564 size=808]
List all (group-) icon resource in file `write.exe':
$ wrestool -l --type=group_icon write.exe
--type=14 --name=1 --lang=1033 [type=group_icon offset=0x3540 size=34]
Extract all icons to current directory, naming the destination files
`write.exe_T_N.ico':
$ wrestool -x --output=. -t14 write.exe
$ ls *.ico
write.exe_14_1.ico
SEE ALSO
extresso(1), genresscript(1), icotool(1).AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org> for the Debian GNU system (but may be used by others). It was later modified by Oskar Liljeblad <oskar@osk.mine.nu>.COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2001 Colin WatsonCopyright © 2001 Oskar Liljeblad
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.