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862 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
862 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
__________________________________________________________________________
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This is the Info-ZIP file INSTALL (for UnZip), last updated 16 Apr 2009.
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__________________________________________________________________________
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Yes, this is a rather long file, but don't be intimidated: much of its
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length is due to coverage of multiple operating systems and of optional
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customization features, large portions of which may be skipped.
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__________________________________________________________________________
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To compile UnZip, UnZipSFX and/or fUnZip (quick-start instructions):
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========================================
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(1) Unpack everything into a work directory somewhere, and make sure you're
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in the main UnZip directory (the one with this file in it).
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* (See note below concerning line termination format used in the source
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distribution)
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(2) Copy the appropriate makefile into the current directory, except under
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OS/2.
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(3) Run your "make" utility on the makefile (e.g., "nmake -f makefile.msc").
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(4) Try out your new UnZip the way you would any new utility: read the
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docs first.
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Ah ha ha ha!! Oh, that kills me. But seriously... For VMS, see the
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Install section below or [.vms]README. for details.
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For DOS and other OSes without explicit timezone support (i.e., everybody
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but Unix, Windows 95 and NT), make sure the "TZ" environment variable is
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set to a valid and reasonable value; see your compiler docs for details.
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(*) The unzip sources as well as other Info-ZIP source archives are packaged
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in Unix format. All text files use single LF (Ascii 0x0a) characters as
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line terminators. On systems that use different conventions for plain text
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files (e.g.:DOS,Win9x,WinNT,OS/2 -> combined CR+LF; MacOS -> single CR),
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some utilities (editors, compilers, etc.) may not accept source files
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with LF line terminators.
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For these systems, we recommend to use Info-ZIP's UnZip utility for
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extraction of our distribution archives, applying the command option
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"-a" (= translate text files to native format) in the extraction command.
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In case this procedure is not applicable, an appropiate third-party
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conversion utility may be used to achieve the desired line termination
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style (examples: "flip", available for Unix, DOS, OS/2; or "tr" on Unix).
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To compile UnZip, UnZipSFX and/or fUnZip (detailed instructions):
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========================================
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(1) Unpack *.c and *.h (the actual source files), preserving the directory
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structure (e.g., ./unix/unix.c). The sole exception is TOPS-20, where
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tops20/* should be unpacked into the current directory, but TOPS-20
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is no longer fully supported anyway.
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As of UnZip 5.41, full decryption support has been integrated in the
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UnZip source distribution. If you wish to compile binaries without
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decryption support, you must define the preprocessor flag NO_CRYPT.
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For many environments, you may add this flag to the custom compilation
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flags supplied by the environment variable LOCAL_UNZIP. For more
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details, see the make procedures and accompanied documentation for your
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particular target OS.
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As of UnZip 5.53, support for the bzip2 compression algorithm has been
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added to UnZip. However, this support requires the original sources of
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the bzip2 compression library which have to be aquired separately;
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see "http://www.bzip.org/" for further reference.
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(2) Choose the appropriate makefile based on the description in the Con-
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tents file for your OS (that is, there's only one for Unix or OS/2, but
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MS-DOS and several other OSes have several, depending on the compiler).
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Copy it into the current directory and rename if necessary or desired.
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(Some makefiles can be invoked in place; see (5) below.)
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Don't be afraid to read the makefile! Many options will be explained only
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in the comments contained therein. The defaults may not quite suit your
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system. When making changes, remember that some "make" utilities expect
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tabs as part of the makefile syntax. Failure with cryptic error messages
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will result if your editor quietly replaces those tabs with spaces.
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Special point of confusion: some non-MSDOS makefiles contain MS-DOS
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targets (useful for cross-compilations). An example is the OS/2 makefile
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os2/makefile.os2 that contains the gccdos target for DOS emx+gcc and
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some more DOS related targets for Watcom C and MSC. But since version 5.3,
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the msdos subdirectory contains makefiles for all supported DOS compilers.
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[The old djgpp, djgpp1 and gcc_dos targets in unix/Makefile have been
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removed in 5.3; use msdos/makefile.dj* instead.]
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Extra-special point of confusion: makefile.os2 expects to remain in
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the os2 subdirectory. Invoke it via "nmake -f os2/makefile.os2 gcc",
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for example.
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(3) If you want a non-standard version of UnZip, define one or more of the
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following optional macros, either by adding them to the LOCAL_UNZIP
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environment variable or by editing your makefile as appropriate. The
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syntax differs from compiler to compiler, but macros are often defined
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via "-DMACRO_NAME" or similar (for one called MACRO_NAME). Note that
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some of these may not be fully supported in future releases (or even
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in the current release). Note also that very short command lines in
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MS-DOS (128 characters) may place severe limits on how many of these
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can be used; if need be, the definitions can be placed at the top of
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unzip.h instead (it is included in all source files)--for example,
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"#define MACRO_NAME", one macro per line.
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DOSWILD (MS-DOS only)
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Treat trailing "*.*" like Unix "*" (i.e., matches anything); treat
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trailing "*." as match for files without a dot (i.e., matches any-
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thing, as long as no dots in name). Special treatment only occurs
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if patterns are at end of arguments; i.e., "a*.*" matches all files
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starting with "a", but "*.*c" matches all files ending in "c" *only*
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if they have a dot somewhere before the "c". [The default method of
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specifying files without a dot would be "* -x *.*", making use of
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UnZip's exclude-files option.] The matching is actually the same as
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Unix, if you assume that undotted filenames really have an invisible
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dot at the end, which is how DOS and related systems treat filenames
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in general. All other regular expressions (including "?" and
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"[range_of_chars]") retain their Unix-like behavior.
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WILD_STOP_AT_DIR (incompatible with WINDLL!)
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Enables an additional option "-W". When this qualifier is specified,
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the pattern matching routine is modified so that both '?' (single-char
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wildcard) and '*' (multi-char wildcard) do not match the directory
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separator character '/'. Examples:
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"*.c" matches "foo.c" but not "mydir/foo.c"
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"*/*.c" matches "bar/foo.c" but not "baz/bar/foo.c"
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"??*/*" matches "ab/foo" and "abc/foo" but not "a/foo" or "a/b/foo"
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To enable matching across directory separator chars, two consecutive
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multi-char wildcards "**" should be specified.
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This modified behaviour is equivalent to the pattern matching style
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used by the shells of some of UnZip's supported target OSs (one
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example is Acorn RISC OS).
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VMSWILD (VMS only)
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Use parentheses rather than brackets to delimit sets (ranges), and
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use '%' instead of '?' as the single-character wildcard for internal
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filename matching. (External matching of zipfile names always uses
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the standard VMS wildcard facilities; character sets are disallowed.)
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VMSCLI (VMS only)
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Use VMS-style "slash options" (/FOOBAR) instead of the default Unix-
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style hyphenated options (-f). This capability does not affect options
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stored in environment variables (UNZIP_OPTS or ZIPINFO_OPTS); those use
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the Unix style regardless. Beginning with UnZip 5.32, the supplied
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VMS build methods generate both VMS-style and default "UNIX-style"
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executables; you should NOT add VMSCLI to the custom options.
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CHECK_VERSIONS (VMS only)
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UnZip "extra fields" are used to store VMS (RMS) filesystem info,
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and the format of this information may differ in various versions
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of VMS. Defining this option will enable UnZip warnings when the
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stored extra-field VMS version(s) do(es) not match the version of
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VMS currently being used. This is a common occurrence in zipfiles
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received from other sites, but since the format of the filesystem
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does not seem to have changed in years (including on Alpha and
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IA64 systems), the warnings are not enabled by default.
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RETURN_CODES (VMS only)
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VMS interprets return codes according to a rigid set of guidelines,
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which means it misinterprets normal UnZip return codes as all sorts
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of really nasty errors. Therefore VMS UnZip returns an alternate set
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of return codes; since these may be difficult to interpret, define
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RETURN_CODES for human-readable explanations.
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VMS_TEXT_CONV (everybody except VMS)
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VMS Stream_LF-format text files archived with the "-V" option
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(/VMS), but NOT with -VV (/VMS=ALL), should be fine when extracted
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on other systems. Stream_LF-files archived with -VV should be
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readable as well, but they may get some junk appended.
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Text files with other formats (like the default VFC, with its
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embedded byte counts) may be only semi-readable at best when
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extracted on other systems. Defining this option enables UnZip's
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-aa option to detect and convert VMS VFC-record text files into
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native text format. Non-VMS UnZips now use a rudimentary VMS extra
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field analyser to relyably determine such text files. (Earlier
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versions of UnZip applied some heuristics instead.)
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Therefore this option is now enabled by default for the main program
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(but not the SFX stub), because it can be extremely useful on those
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rare occasions when a VMS text file must be extracted as normal text.
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USE_DJGPP_ENV (MS-DOS DJGPP 2.0x only)
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Regular DJGPP v2.0x compiled programs which use ENVIRONMENT are
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able to read from the file "djgpp.env" as well as those set in the
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environment. This adds about 1KB to the size of the executable.
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This option is disabled by default in Info-ZIP source. If you are
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able to use "djgpp.env" and don't like to clutter the environment
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with many special purpose variables, you may want to compile with
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this option set.
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USE_DJGPP_GLOB (MS-DOS DJGPP 2.0x only)
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If you like to get UnZip binaries that handle command line arguments
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similar to Unix tools which are run in an Unix shell, you might want
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to set this compilation option. This option enables the support for
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globbing command line arguments containing wildcards that is built
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into the DJGPP startup code. When using a binary compiled with this
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option, you may have to enclose wildcard arguments in double quotes
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to get them passed to the program unmodified. Enabling this option
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is not recommended, because it results in Info-Zip binaries that do
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not behave as expected for MS-DOS programs.
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USE_VFAT (MS-DOS only, for using same executable under DOS and Win95/NT)
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djgpp 2.x and emx/gcc+RSX 5.1 can detect when they are running under a
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Win32 DOS box and will accordingly enable long-filename support. For
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now only djgpp 2.x and emx/gcc with RSX 5.1 or later have this feature
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(and it is defined by default in msdos/makefile.dj2 and makefile.emx),
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but if/when other compilers build in similar support, define this
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macro to enable its use. See also msdos/doscfg.h. [Note that djgpp
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2.0's LFN support is flaky; users should upgrade to 2.01 or later.]
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NO_W32TIMES_IZFIX (Win32 including WinDLL, and WinCE)
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By specifying this option, you can disable Info-ZIP's special timestamp
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adjustment to get stable time stamps on NTFS disks that do not change
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depending on the current time being normal vs. daylight saving time.
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When this option is set, UnZip behaves exactly like other programs;
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file timestamps on NTFS partitions are created so that their >current<
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local time representation displayed by directory listings (cmd.exe
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"dir" command or Windows Explorer listings) is the same as shown by
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UnZip's listing. But the actual UTC timestamp values stored in the
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NTFS file attributes vary depending on whether extraction is done
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at summer or winter time.
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This option is not recommended because it sacrifies the timestamp
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comparison checks when extracting or modifying archives in "update
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only newer" mode.
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However, for environments where consistency of >displayed< dates
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of files extracted to NTFS vs. FAT disks is considered more important
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than correctly working update/freshen tasks of Zip&UnZip, this
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option may be used.
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>> DO NOT DISTRIBUTE OR PUBLISH executables that were compiled with
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this option! <<
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NOTIMESTAMP
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This option disables the -T option, which basically does exactly what
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Zip's -go options do (i.e., set the timestamp of the zipfile to that of
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the newest file in the archive without rewriting the archive). Unlike
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Zip, however, UnZip supports wildcard specifications for the archive
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name; for example, "unzip -T *.zip" will set the dates of all zipfiles
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in the current directory. (UnZip's option is also much faster.)
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DATE_FORMAT=DF_DMY or DF_MDY or DF_YMD
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This option controls the order in which date components are printed
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in non-ZipInfo-mode listings: day-month-year or month-day-year or
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year-month-day.
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For DOS, FlexOS, OS2, Theos and Win32, the format is automatically
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obtained from the operating system; most others default to DF_MDY.
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DATE_SEPCHAR='-' or '.' or '/' etc.
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This option controls the character that separates the date components
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shown in (non-ZipInfo-mode) listings. The Win32 port obtains the
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separator automatically from the operating system's locale settings;
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all others default to '-'.
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ACORN_FTYPE_NFS (needs support for long filenames with embedded commas)
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This option enables a -F option that instructs UnZip to interpret the
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filetype information extracted from Acorn RiscOS extra field blocks.
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The filetype IDs are translated into "NFS filetype extensions" and
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appended to the names of the extracted files. This feature facilitates
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maintenance of Unix-based NFS volumes that are exported to Acorn RiscOS
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systems.
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QLZIP (Unix only)
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Add some support for QDOS extra fields. This option enables Unix
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UnZip to append "datalen info" to QDOS exec type files in the same
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format as used by QDOS cross-compilers on Unix or the qltools v2.2(+).
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UNIXBACKUP (default on OS/2, Unix, Win32)
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This option enables a -B option that instructs UnZip to rename files
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that would normally be overwritten. The renamed files are given a
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tilde suffix and a unique sequence number (`~#####'). Note that
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previously renamed files may be overwritten without notice, even
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if the -n option is given.
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On target ports where UNIXBACKUP is enabled by default, the negated
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option NO_UNIXBACKUP may be used to disable this feature.
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OS2_EAS
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List the sizes of OS/2 EAs and ACLs for each file as two extra columns
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in "unzip -l" output. This is primarily useful for OS/2 systems, but
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because zipfiles are portable, OS2_EAS can be defined for any system.
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(May be extended someday to show sizes of Mac resource forks, RISCOS
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and VMS file info, etc.)
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DELETE_IF_FULL (anybody with unlink() function)
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If a write error is encountered (most likely due to a full disk),
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enabling this option will cause the incomplete file to be deleted
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instead of closed normally. This is particularly useful for the
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Windows CE port, which must generally contend with extremely limited
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resources.
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ASM_CRC (Amiga/Aztec C; many x86 systems: DOS, OS/2, Win32, Unix)
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Use an assembler routine to calculate the CRC for each file (speed).
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ASM_INFLATECODES (Amiga/Aztec C only, for now)
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Use an assembler version of inflate_codes() for speed.
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OLD_EXDIR
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No longer supported.
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SFX_EXDIR
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Enable the "-d <extract_dir>" option for UnZipSFX. This is now
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enabled by default (since UnZip 5.5) to facilitate use with
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automated installation scripts and the like. For disabling
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this feature, see the NO_SFX_EXDIR option.
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NO_SFX_EXDIR
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Disables the "-d <extract_dir>" option for UnZipSFX to generate the
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smallest possible executable stub. (Prior to the UnZip 5.5 release,
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this was the default.)
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CHEAP_SFX_AUTORUN
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Enable a simple "run command after extraction" feature for
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the (command line) UnZipSFX stub. This feature is currently
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incompatible with the "-d <extract_dir>" command line option,
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therefore CHEAP_SFX_AUTORUN implicitely sets the NO_SFX_EXDIR
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option.
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NO_ZIPINFO
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Compile without ZipInfo mode (-Z) enabled; makes a smaller executable
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because many text strings are left out. Automatically enabled for
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some small-model compiles under MS-DOS and OS/2, so ordinarily there
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is no need to specify this explicitly. (Note that even with this
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defined, the resulting executable may still be too big to extract
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some zipfiles correctly, if compiled with the small memory model.)
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USE_DEFLATE64 (default for UnZip and fUnZip)
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NO_DEFLATE64 (default for UnZipSFX stub)
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The "deflate64" algorithm from PKZIP 4.0 (or newer) is an enhanced
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variant of the deflate algorithm that achieves slightly better
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compression ratios on highly redundant data. Normally, UnZip should
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be compiled with support for this compression algorithm enabled.
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However, this results in significantly larger memory requirements
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to run the program. For 16-bit executables (DOS and OS/2), the
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special memory management to support the 64k history buffer results
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in a slight performance (= speed) penalty. And for the SFX stub,
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"deflate64" support might be unnessessary as long as the Info-ZIP
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Zip utility does not support it (quite likely, this will never
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get implemented). So, the NO_DEFLATE64 option is provided to allow
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exclusion of the deflate64 support.
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USE_BZIP2 (requires additional external code distribution)
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UnZip can optionally support the "bzip2" compression algorithm for
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most ports on 32-bit (or higher) platforms. Currently, this support
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is integrated in the Make procedures of MSDOS 32-bit (DJGPP), VMS,
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Win32, and many Unix systems.
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Prerequisites:
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You have to obtain the bzip2 source distribution (version 1.03 or
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higher) and extract it into the "bzip2" subdirectory.
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Compilation:
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- MSDOS, Win32: You have to supply the symbol definition
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"USEBZ2=1" on the command line when you invoke the make program.
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- Unix: The target "generic" automatically activates bzip2 support
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when its configure script detects the presence of the bzip2 sources.
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For other targets, there are two options:
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a) Use the command
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"make -f unix/Makefile D_USE_BZ2=-DUSE_BZIP2 L_BZ2=-lbz2 \
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LIBBZ2=bzip2/libbz2.a YourTarget"
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(Do not use the continuation line and replace YourTarget with
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the appropiate target name.)
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b) Edit the Makefile and remove the comment signs from the lines
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that define the macros D_USE_BZ2, L_BZ2, and LIBBZ2 (at about
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line 84 ff.).
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- VMS: The MMS/MMK build program should automatically activate the
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bzip2 support when it detects the presence of the bzip2 sources.
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MULT_VOLUME (experimental for 5.5x, do NOT use in production versions!)
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NO_MULT_VOLUME (default)
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The symbol MULT_VOLUME is used to flag code portions needed for
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support of multi-volume archives. For now, this flag MUST NOT be
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used to compile a production versions of UnZip. This flag has been
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introduced to allow integration of experimental code for multi-volume
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support in the master source tree. This feature will become a default
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option in the future 6.1 release of UnZip.
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LZW_CLEAN
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USE_UNSHRINK (now default, as of January 2005)
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The "shrinking" algorithm from PKZIP 1.0 is an LZW variant. Unisys
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patented the Lempel-Ziv-Welch algorithm in 1985 and has publicly
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claimed that decompression is covered by it. (IBM also patented the
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same thing in a filing 3 weeks prior to Unisys's.) In 2004, the
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Unisys and IBM patents expired worldwide, so unshrinking is now
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enabled again by default. If you do not wish to include the LZW
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method, you may still disable it by defining LZW_CLEAN.
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(Unshrinking was used by PKZIP 1.0 and 1.1, and Zip 1.0 and 1.1.
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All newer archives use only the deflation method.)
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COPYRIGHT_CLEAN (now default)
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USE_SMITH_CODE
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The last chunk of code in UnZip that was blatantly derived from Sam
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Smith's unzip 2.0 (as in, "substantially similar") is in unreduce.c.
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Since reducing was only used by very early PKZIP beta versions (0.9x),
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support for it is now omitted by default (COPYRIGHT_CLEAN). To in-
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clude unreducing capability, define USE_SMITH_CODE and replace the
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stub unreduce.c source file by the separatly distributed full source
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code module. Note that this subjects UnZip to any and all restrictions
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in Smith's copyright; see the UnZip COPYING.OLD file for details.
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USE_CRYPT
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Enable decryption support for all binaries. The default setting
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is to disable decryption support for the SFX stub to keep its size
|
|
as small as possible. For other binaries of the UnZip distribution,
|
|
decryption support is enabled by default.
|
|
|
|
NO_CRYPT
|
|
Disable decryption support for all binaries.
|
|
|
|
PASSWD_FROM_STDIN (with full crypt sources only; Unix, VMS only)
|
|
Used to allow the password on encrypted files to be read from stdin
|
|
rather than the default stderr. This was useful for those who wished
|
|
to automate the testing or decoding of encrypted archives (say, in a
|
|
shell script via ``echo "password" | unzip -tq archive''), but as of
|
|
version 5.3, UnZip has a -P option for passing a password directly to
|
|
the program. PASSWD_FROM_STDIN will therefore probably be phased out
|
|
in future versions. Note that the same security warnings given in the
|
|
description of the -P option apply here as well.
|
|
|
|
UNICODE_SUPPORT
|
|
Enable restoring from UTF-8 encoded paths. These paths are stored
|
|
in extra fields in a backward-compatible way so that archives with
|
|
UTF-8 paths still work on zips and unzips that don't support Unicode.
|
|
This support follows the recent additions to the PKWare AppNote for
|
|
Unicode support, except that Unicode comments on systems where UTF-8
|
|
is not the current character set is not implemented in this release.
|
|
|
|
Internally, Unicode support can be achieved by three methods:
|
|
a) The charset encoding used by the system is already UTF-8, so
|
|
the program just has to select the UTF-8 versions of the stored
|
|
filenames for file name handling.
|
|
This method is enabled by setting the symbol UTF8_MAYBE_NATIVE;
|
|
this activates code to check for native UTF-8 encoding in the
|
|
locale settings.
|
|
b) The operating system and the compilation environment support
|
|
"wide character" data in Unicode encoding (UCS-2/UTF-16 or UCS-4),
|
|
which are used to translate between UTF-8 and the native
|
|
extended-ASCII character encoding.
|
|
The code for this method is activated by setting the preprocessor
|
|
symbol UNICODE_WCHAR.
|
|
It may be activated together with UTF8_MAYBE_NATIVE to provide
|
|
more versatile Unicode support and additional "debugging" options
|
|
for checking the correct recognition of non-ASCII Unicode
|
|
characters.
|
|
c) The operating system and the compilation environment allow to use
|
|
unicode-encoded "wide character" data for native text strings
|
|
support.
|
|
Complete support for this method requires a throughout revision
|
|
of the UnZip code. All internal string handling and text output
|
|
needs to be ported to use wchar_t character storage.
|
|
This porting is still in an experimental stage and not ready
|
|
for general distribution.
|
|
|
|
On some ports UNICODE_SUPPORT is set automatically:
|
|
- WIN32 (and WinCE) use method b) by defining UNICODE_SUPPORT and
|
|
UNICODE_WCHAR.
|
|
- On Unix, the automatic configuration script enables UNICODE_WCHAR
|
|
if ISO-10646 compatible wide characters are supported and
|
|
UTF8_MAYBE_NATIVE if the locale detection call is available.
|
|
For these ports, setting NO_UNICODE_SUPPORT forces deactivation of
|
|
the Unicode support.
|
|
|
|
NO_SETLOCALE (for Unix)
|
|
On Unix, it is now assumed that <locale.h> and the setlocale function
|
|
are available, to setup locale-aware filtering of displayed filenames.
|
|
The option NO_SETLOCALE allows to disable the dependency on <locale.h>
|
|
and setlocale() on systems where this assumption is invalid (and the
|
|
auto-configuring make target "generic" cannot be used for capabilities
|
|
detection).
|
|
|
|
_MBCS
|
|
NO_MBCS
|
|
Enable multi-byte character set support. This is the default for the
|
|
Human68k system (originated from Japan) and for Win32 (here only DBCS
|
|
"double-byte character set" support). The MBCS support should also be
|
|
enabled on systems which are capable of using UTF-8 as native charset.
|
|
For MBCS support, the C runtime library must supply implementations
|
|
for the mblen() function and the MB_CUR_MAX runtime macro/function.
|
|
The NO_MBCS symbol allows to explicitely disable MBCS support for
|
|
testing purpose, or when MBCS support does not work as expected.
|
|
|
|
HAVE_WORKING_ISPRINT
|
|
NO_WORKING_ISPRINT
|
|
The symbol HAVE_WORKING_ISPRINT enables enhanced non-printable chars
|
|
filtering for filenames in the fnfilter() function. On some systems
|
|
(Unix, VMS, some Win32 compilers), this setting is enabled by default.
|
|
In cases where isprint() flags printable extended characters as
|
|
unprintable, defining NO_WORKING_ISPRINT allows to disable the enhanced
|
|
filtering capability in fnfilter(). (The ASCII control codes 0x01 to
|
|
0x1f are always escaped on ASCII systems.)
|
|
|
|
DEBUG
|
|
Used for debugging purposes; enables Trace() statements. Generally
|
|
it's best to compile only one or two modules this way.
|
|
|
|
DEBUG_TIME
|
|
Used for debugging the timezone code in fileio.c; enables TTrace()
|
|
statements. This code is only used for the freshen/update options
|
|
(-f and -u), and non-Unix compilers often get it wrong.
|
|
|
|
|
|
(4) If you regularly compile new versions of UnZip and always want the same
|
|
non-standard option(s), you may wish to add it (them) to the LOCAL_UNZIP
|
|
environment variable (assuming it's supported in your makefile). Under
|
|
MS-DOS, for example, add this to AUTOEXEC.BAT:
|
|
|
|
set LOCAL_UNZIP=-DDOSWILD -DDATE_FORMAT=DF_DMY
|
|
|
|
You can also use the variable to hold special compiler options (e.g.,
|
|
-FPi87 for Microsoft C, if the x87 libraries are the only ones on your
|
|
disk and they follow Microsoft's default naming conventions; MSC also
|
|
supports the CL environment variable, however).
|
|
|
|
|
|
(5) Run the make utility on your chosen makefile:
|
|
|
|
Unix
|
|
For most systems it's possible to invoke the makefile in place, at
|
|
the possible cost of an ignorable warning; do "make -f unix/Makefile
|
|
list" to get a list of possible system targets, and then "make -f
|
|
unix/Makefile target" for your chosen target. The "generic" target
|
|
works for most systems, but if it fails with a message about ftime()
|
|
unresolved or timezone redefined, do "make clean", "make help", and
|
|
then either "make generic2" or "make generic3" as instructed. If all
|
|
else fails, read the makefile itself; it contains numerous comments.
|
|
(One of these days we'll make a configure script that automates this
|
|
procedure better.)
|
|
|
|
VMS (OpenVMS):
|
|
On VMS, two build methods are provided: a command procedure, and
|
|
description files for MMS or MMK. Both methods must be run from
|
|
the main directory, not the [.VMS] subdirectory.
|
|
|
|
A simple build using the command procedure looks like this:
|
|
@ [.VMS]BUILD_UNZIP.COM
|
|
|
|
A simple build using MMS or MMK looks like this:
|
|
MMS /DESCRIP = [.VMS]DESCRIP.MMS ! Or, with MMK, ...
|
|
MMK /DESCRIP = [.VMS]DESCRIP.MMS
|
|
|
|
Various options for each build method are explained in comments in
|
|
the main builder file, either BUILD_UNZIP.COM or DESCRIP.MMS.
|
|
|
|
Here are some more complex build examples:
|
|
|
|
o Build with the large-file option enabled (non-VAX only):
|
|
|
|
@ [.VMS]BUILD_UNZIP LARGE
|
|
or:
|
|
MMS /DESC = [.VMS] /MACRO = LARGE=1
|
|
|
|
o Re-link the executables (small-file and large-file):
|
|
|
|
@ [.VMS]BUILD_UNZIP LINK
|
|
@ [.VMS]BUILD_UNZIP LARGE LINK
|
|
or
|
|
MMK /DESC = [.VMS] CLEAN_EXE ! Deletes existing executables.
|
|
MMK /DESC = [.VMS] ! Builds new executables.
|
|
MMK /DESC = [.VMS] /MACRO = LARGE=1 CLEAN_EXE
|
|
MMK /DESC = [.VMS] /MACRO = LARGE=1
|
|
|
|
o Build a large-file product from scratch, for debug, getting
|
|
compiler listings and link maps:
|
|
|
|
mms /desc = [.vms] clean
|
|
mms /desc = [.vms] /macro = (DBG=1, LARGE=1. LIST=1)
|
|
|
|
On VAX, the builders attempt to cope with the various available C
|
|
compilers: DEC/Compaq/HP C, VAX C, or GNU C. If DEC/Compaq/HP C is
|
|
not available or not desired, comments in the relevant builder file
|
|
explain the command-line options used to select a different
|
|
compiler.
|
|
|
|
System-architecture-specific files (like objects and executables)
|
|
are placed in separate directories, such as [.ALPHA], [.IA64], or
|
|
[.VAX]. Large-file products get their own directories, [.ALPHAL]
|
|
or [.IA64L]. On VAX, VAX C products are placed in [.VAXV], GNU C
|
|
products in [.VAXG]. Each product builder announces what the
|
|
destination directory will be when it is run.
|
|
|
|
Common files, such as the help libraries (UNZIP.HLP for the
|
|
default UNIX-like command-line interface, UNZIP_CLI.HLP for the
|
|
VMS-like command-line interface), are placed in the main
|
|
directory. With a mixed-architecture VMS cluster, the same main
|
|
directory on a shared disk may may be used by all system types.
|
|
(Using the NOHELP option with BUILD_UNZIP.COM can keep it from
|
|
making the same help files repeatedly.)
|
|
|
|
Some further information may be found in the files
|
|
[.VMS]README. and [.VMS]00BINARY.VMS, though much of what's
|
|
there is now obsolete.
|
|
|
|
MS-DOS
|
|
See the msdos\Contents file for notes regarding which makefile(s) to
|
|
use with which compiler. In summary: pick one of msdos\makefile.*
|
|
as appropriate, or (as noted above) use the OS/2 gccdos target for
|
|
emx+gcc. There is also an mscdos cross-compilation target in
|
|
os2\makefile.os2 and a sco_dos cross-compilation target in the Unix
|
|
makefile. For Watcom 16-bit or 32-bit versions, see the comments in
|
|
the OS/2 section below.
|
|
|
|
After choosing the appropriate makefile and editing as necessary or
|
|
desired, invoke the corresponding make utility. Microsoft's NMAKE
|
|
and the free dmake and GNU make utilities are generally the most
|
|
versatile. The makefiles in the msdos directory can be invoked in
|
|
place ("nmake -f msdos\makefile.msc", for example).
|
|
|
|
OS/2
|
|
Either GNU make, nmake or dmake may be used with the OS/2 makefile;
|
|
all are freely available on the net. Do "nmake -f os2\makefile.os2",
|
|
for example, to get a list of supported targets. More generally,
|
|
read the comments at the top of the makefile for an explanation of
|
|
the differences between some of the same-compiler targets.
|
|
|
|
Win32 (WinNT or Win9x)
|
|
For creating Win32 executables, the Microsoft Visual C++ compiler
|
|
platforms from version 2.x up to 8.0 (Visual Studio .Net C++ 2005)
|
|
are supported. Recent build test have been run on VC++ 6.0, 7.1
|
|
and 8.0. The linker of newer Microsoft Visual C++ versions (beginning
|
|
with Visual C++ 2008 - [VC++ 9.0]) create executables that are marked
|
|
to run on Windows 2000 and newer, only. Although these Visual C++
|
|
environments may succeed in building Win32 Info-ZIP executables,
|
|
they cannot (and must not) be used to create binaries for public
|
|
distribution.
|
|
Alternative compilers for the Intel platforms are OpenWatcom C++,
|
|
GNU C (preferably the mingw32 port, CygWin and emx/rsxnt may also
|
|
work), Borland C++, or lcc-win32.
|
|
DEC C/C++ for NT/Alpha may or may not still work.
|
|
For the Watcom compiler, use WMAKE and win32\makefile.wat; for the
|
|
Microsoft compilers, use NMAKE and win32\Makefile; for mingw32 and
|
|
CygWin, GNU Make and win32\Makefile.gcc should do the job.
|
|
With emx+gcc, a good choice is GNUMake 3.75 (or higher) from the
|
|
djgpp V2 distribution used on win32\Makefile.emx.
|
|
|
|
The unzip32.dll WinDLL executables can be built using the appropiate
|
|
Makefile in the win32\ subdirectory, or by using the Microsoft Visual
|
|
C++ project files supplied below the windll subdirectory. Besides the
|
|
MSC compilers, gcc-mingw32, Watcom C and Borland C allow to build the
|
|
Windows UnZip DLL. By default, the Makefiles for compilers that use
|
|
the Microsoft C runtime are configured to link against the shared
|
|
multithreading C runtime DLL. Depending on the intended usage for
|
|
unzip32.dll, a statically linked dll might be more suitable. The
|
|
make scripts for MSC support build variants with static linking; you
|
|
should look up the configuration switch DLLSTANDALONE in the MSC
|
|
Makefile or the "Static..." build configurations in the Visual Studio
|
|
project files.
|
|
|
|
WinCE (WinCE or WinNT)
|
|
Only Microsoft Visual C++ 5.0, 6.0 or Visual C++ embedded 3.0 or later
|
|
are supported. Use the appropiate version of the included project
|
|
files and check wince\README for details.
|
|
|
|
AmigaDOS
|
|
SAS/Lattice C and Manx Aztec C are supported. For SAS C 6.x do "smake
|
|
-f amiga/smakefile all"; for Aztec C do "make -f amiga/makefile.azt
|
|
all". The Aztec C version supports assembly-language versions of two
|
|
routines; these are enabled by default.
|
|
|
|
Atari TOS
|
|
Turbo C is no longer supported; use gcc and the MiNT libraries, and
|
|
do "make". Note that all versions of gcc prior to 2.5.8 have a bug
|
|
affecting 68000-based machines (optimizer adds 68020 instructions).
|
|
See atari\README for comments on using other compilers.
|
|
|
|
Macintosh
|
|
Metrowerks CodeWarrior Pro 4 with Universal Interfaces 3.1 is the only
|
|
currently supported compiler, although the Mac Programmer's Workbench
|
|
(MPW) and Think C were supported at one time and still have some hooks.
|
|
Other Compilers may work too, no compiler specific instructions
|
|
(pragma, header, macros, ...) were used in the code.
|
|
For CodeWarrior Pro 4, un-BinHex the CodeWarrior project file and
|
|
UnZip resource file (using Stuffit Expander or BinHex 4.0 or later),
|
|
then open the project and click on the compile button.
|
|
See ":macos:Contents" for the possible project targets.
|
|
Link order of the standard libraries is very important: Link all
|
|
sources first and all standard libraries last.
|
|
|
|
Acorn (RISC OS)
|
|
Extract the files from the archive and place in standard 'Acorn' C
|
|
form (i.e., *.c, *.h and *.s become c.*, h.* and s.*, respectively),
|
|
either using the UNZIP$EXTS environment variable and a pre-built UnZip
|
|
binary, or using Spark[FS] and doing it manually. Then copy the
|
|
Acorn.Makefile to the main UnZip directory and either type 'amu' or
|
|
use the desktop make utility.
|
|
|
|
VM/CMS
|
|
Unpack all the files and transfer them with ASCII -> EBCDIC conver-
|
|
sion to an appropriate directory/minidisk/whatever, then execute
|
|
UNZVMC to compile and link all the sources. This may require C/370
|
|
version 2.1 or later and certain `nucleus extensions,' although
|
|
UnZip 5.3 has been reported to compile fine with the `ADCYCLE C/370
|
|
v1.2 compiler.' Note that it will abend without access to the C/370
|
|
runtime library. See the README.CMS file for more details.
|
|
|
|
MVS
|
|
Unpack all the files and transfer them to an appropriate PDS with
|
|
ASCII -> EBCDIC conversion enabled, then edit UNZMVSC.JOB as required,
|
|
and execute it to compile and link all the sources. C/370 2.1 or
|
|
later is required. See README.MVS for further details. [This is a
|
|
new port and may need a little more work even to compile.]
|
|
|
|
Human68K
|
|
[This is a Japanese machine and OS.] It appears that GNU make and
|
|
gcc are required; presumably just do "gmake -f human68k/Makefile.gcc"
|
|
to build everything. This port has not been tested since the 5.12
|
|
release.
|
|
|
|
TOPS-20
|
|
[No longer fully supported due to new, unported features, although
|
|
patches are always accepted.] Unpack all files into the current
|
|
directory only (including those in the zipfile's tops20 directory),
|
|
then use make.mic and "do make".
|
|
|
|
BeOS
|
|
You can run the BeOS makefile in place by typing "make -f
|
|
beos/Makefile". In fact, this is how the author tests it.
|
|
|
|
Running the appropriate make utility should produce three executables on
|
|
most systems, one for UnZip/ZipInfo, one for UnZipSFX, and one for fUnZip.
|
|
(VMS is one prominent exception: fUnZip makes no sense on it. The Amiga
|
|
produces a fourth executable called MakeSFX, which is necessary because
|
|
Amiga self-extracting archives cannot be created by simple concatenation.
|
|
If necessary the source amiga/makesfx.c can be compiled on other systems.)
|
|
Read any OS-specific README files for notes on setting things up for
|
|
normal use (especially for VMS) and for warnings about known quirks and
|
|
bugs in various compilers (especially for MS-DOS).
|
|
|
|
Also note that many OSes require a timezone variable to be set correctly
|
|
(often "TZ"); Unix and VMS generally do so by default, Win95/NT do if set
|
|
up properly, but other OSes generally do not. See the discussion of the
|
|
-f and -u options in the UnZip man page (or unzip.txt). BeOS doesn't
|
|
currently support timezone information at all, but this will probably be
|
|
added soon.
|
|
|
|
Then test your new UnZip on a few archives and let us know if there are
|
|
problems (but *please* first make certain that the archives aren't actu-
|
|
ally corrupted and that you didn't make one of the silly mistakes dis-
|
|
cussed in the documentation). If possible, double-check any problems
|
|
with PKUNZIP or with a previous version of UnZip prior to reporting a
|
|
"bug." The zipfile itself may be damaged.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
To install:
|
|
===========
|
|
|
|
Unix
|
|
The default prefix for the installation location is /usr/local (things
|
|
go into the bin and man/man1 subdirectories beneath the prefix), and
|
|
the default man-page extension is "1" (corresponding to man/man1, above).
|
|
To install as per the defaults, do "make install"; otherwise do "make
|
|
prefix=/your/path manext=your_extension install". (For Intel Unix flavors
|
|
where the assembler CRC routines were used [ASM_CRC], use the install_asm
|
|
target instead of the regular install target.) For example, to install
|
|
in your home directory with "l" as the man-page extension (for "local"),
|
|
do "make prefix=$HOME manext=l install". Permissions will be 755 for the
|
|
executables and 644 for the man pages. In general root must perform in-
|
|
stallation into a public directory. Do "rehash" if your shell requires
|
|
it in order to find the new executables.
|
|
|
|
VMS
|
|
To complete the installation, the executables may be left in place,
|
|
or moved (or copied) to a convenient place. While other methods
|
|
(like DCL$PATH) exist, most users define symbols to make the UnZip
|
|
executables available as foreign commands. These symbol definitions
|
|
may be placed in a user's SYS$LOGIN:LOGIN.COM, or in a more central
|
|
location, like SYS$MANAGER:SYLOGIN.COM. Typical symbol definitions
|
|
might look like these:
|
|
|
|
UNZIP :== $ dev:[dir]UNZIP.EXE ! UNIX-like command line.
|
|
or:
|
|
UNZIP :== $ dev:[dir]UNZIP_CLI.EXE ! VMS-like command line.
|
|
|
|
For convenience, a ZIPINFO symbol could also be defined, so:
|
|
|
|
ZIPINFO :== $ dev:[dir]UNZIP.EXE """-Z"""
|
|
|
|
On a non-VAX system, different symbols could be defined for the
|
|
small-file and large-file programs. For example:
|
|
|
|
UNZIPS :== $ dev:[dir.ALPHA]UNZIP.EXE ! UNZIPS = small-file UnZip.
|
|
UNZIP*L :== $ dev:[dir.ALPHAL]UNZIP.EXE ! UNZIP[L] = large-file UnZip.
|
|
|
|
The builders create help text files, UNZIP.HLP and UNZIP_CLI.HLP.
|
|
These may be incorporated into an existing help library, or a separate
|
|
UnZip help library may be created using commands like these, using
|
|
either UNZIP.HLP (as shown) or UNZIP_CLI.HLP:
|
|
|
|
$ LIBRARY /HELP dev:[dir]existing_library.HLB UNZIP.HLP
|
|
|
|
$ LIBRARY /CREATE /HELP UNZIP.HLB UNZIP.HLP
|
|
|
|
UnZip help may then be accessed from a separate UnZip help library
|
|
using a command like:
|
|
|
|
$ HELP /LIBRARY = device:[directory]UNZIP.HLB
|
|
|
|
For greater ease, the user (or system manager) may define a
|
|
HLP$LIBRARY logical name to allow the HELP utility to find the UnZip
|
|
help library automatically. See HELP HELP /USERLIBRARY for more
|
|
details. The command procedure HLP_LIB_NEXT.COM may be used to
|
|
determine the next available HLP$LIBRARY logical name, and could be
|
|
adapted to define a HLP$LIBRARY logical name for an UnZip help library.
|
|
|
|
The kit includes MAKESFX.COM, a command procedure intended to simplify
|
|
creating a self-extracting archive. It may be helpful to install this
|
|
procedure near the UnZip executables. MAKESFX.COM expects another
|
|
symbol definition, like one of these:
|
|
|
|
UNZIPSFX :== $ dev:[dir]UNZIPSFX.EXE ! UNIX-like command line.
|
|
or:
|
|
UNZIPSFX :== $ dev:[dir]UNZIPSFX_CLI.EXE ! VMS-like command line.
|
|
|
|
Again here, on a non-VAX system, either a small-file or a large-file
|
|
UNZIPSFX program may be used. (MAKESFX.COM could be modified to allow
|
|
a run-time choice to be made.)
|
|
|
|
OS/2, MS-DOS, NT, Atari, Amiga
|
|
Move or copy unzip.exe (or unzip.ttp, or UnZip, or whatever) to a direc-
|
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tory in your path; also possibly copy the UnZip executable to zipinfo.exe
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(or ii.exe), or else create an alias or a batch/command file for ZipInfo
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("@unzip -Z %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9" under MS-DOS). The latter is only
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relevant if NO_ZIPINFO was *not* defined, obviously... Under djgpp 2.x,
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zipinfo.exe is a 2K stub symbolically linked to unzip.exe.
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Acorn RISC OS
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Copy the executables unzip, funzip and zipinfo to somewhere in your
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Run$Path. See your Welcome manual if you don't know about Run$Path.
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BeOS
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The default prefix for the installation location is /boot/usr/local
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(things go into the bin and man/man1 subdirectories beneath the prefix),
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and the default man-page extension is "1" (corresponding to the man/man1,
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above). Of course, these Unix man-pages aren't useful until someone ports
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something that can format them... plain text versions are also installed
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with an extension of ".txt". To install, do a "make install", or to
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change the prefix, do "make prefix=/your/path install". For example, to
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install in /boot/bin, do "make prefix=/boot/bin install".
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Macintosh
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(This port is for Macintosh OS before Mac OS X. See Unix Apple below for
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Mac OS X and later.)
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MacZip requires at least System 7 and a Macintosh with a minimum of a
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Motorola 68020 or PowerPC 601 processor. Other configurations may work
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but it is not tested at all.
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The application (MacZip) is distributed as a combination of zip and unzip
|
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in one program. The offical release is a fat binary with both regular 68K
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and native PowerPC versions included.
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Move the executable(s) somewhere--for example, drag it (or them) to your
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Applications folder. For easy access, make an alias in the Launcher Control
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Panel or directly on your desktop.
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This port supports also Apple-event.So you can install it in your
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WWW-Browser as a helper-app.
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Look into "macos/README.TXT" (or ":macos:README.TXT" on Mac) for further
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info.
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Macintosh OS X (Unix Apple)
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Mac OS X and later are based on BSD Unix and are supported by the Unix
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port. See the Unix port for details. Though support is currently
|
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minimal, we plan to support additional Mac OS X features, such as resource
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forks, in future releases.
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Human68K, TOPS-20, AOS/VS, MVS, VM/CMS, etc.
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Dunno, sorry...
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