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Full Discussion: C
Top Forums Programming C Post 7657 by loadc on Friday 28th of September 2001 10:47:58 PM
Old 09-28-2001
EEEKKK!!!

Okay, I've wanted to do this as well-

Here is the trick the VM mainframeers taught me, it actually did work, but keep in mind, I did this on a VM CP command env, using pipes and some VM tools translating to EBCDIC, so go easy if this doesn't translate well...

We took the binary file and converted to hex sing a converter in the editor on VM, we then took the hex and translated to EBCDIC (ascii should be a reasonable change from there, as well), and read what we could of the file.

Keep in mind, teh compiler that put the file together is going to have done some things to the file, you are WAY better off with a good de-compiler, but you didn't hear that from me...

Whatever you get back from either operation, it may not be an exact copy of the source code, unless you have a lot of time, knowledge of EXACTLY what tools were used by the developers, and the skill or luck to find a de-compiler that knows what the compiler did.


Or, maybe I'm totally out of my tree and I'm talking out of my knothole...



loadc
 
UUENCODE(1C)															      UUENCODE(1C)

NAME
uuencode, uudecode - encode/decode a binary file for transmission via mail SYNOPSIS
uuencode [ source ] remotedest | mail sys1!sys2!..!decode uudecode [ file ] DESCRIPTION
Uuencode and uudecode are used to send a binary file via uucp (or other) mail. This combination can be used over indirect mail links even when uusend(1C) is not available. Uuencode takes the named source file (default standard input) and produces an encoded version on the standard output. The encoding uses only printing ASCII characters, and includes the mode of the file and the remotedest for recreation on the remote system. Uudecode reads an encoded file, strips off any leading and trailing lines added by mailers, and recreates the original file with the speci- fied mode and name. The intent is that all mail to the user ``decode'' should be filtered through the uudecode program. This way the file is created automati- cally without human intervention. This is possible on the uucp network by either using sendmail or by making rmail be a link to Mail instead of mail. In each case, an alias must be created in a master file to get the automatic invocation of uudecode. If these facilities are not available, the file can be sent to a user on the remote machine who can uudecode it manually. The encode file has an ordinary text form and can be edited by any text editor to change the mode or remote name. SEE ALSO
atob(n), uusend(1C), uucp(1C), uux(1C), mail(1), uuencode(5) BUGS
The file is expanded by 35% (3 bytes become 4 plus control information) causing it to take longer to transmit. The user on the remote system who is invoking uudecode (often uucp) must have write permission on the specified file. 4th Berkeley Distribution April 24, 1986 UUENCODE(1C)
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