Difference between revisions of "Uudecode"
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(I'm tired of looking for this thing, and it's damned handy to have!!!!!) |
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Latest revision as of 00:33, 17 December 2018
UUdecode decodes a uuencoded text file into a binary.
source
This should compile on all kinds of things...
/* * Copyright (c) 1983 Regents of the University of California. * All rights reserved. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted * provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are * duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation, * advertising materials, and other materials related to such * distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed * by the University of California, Berkeley. The name of the * University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived * from this software without specific prior written permission. * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED * WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. */ /* * Modified 12 April 1990 by Mark Adler for use on MSDOS systems with * Microsoft C and Turbo C. * * Modifed 13 February 1991 by Greg Roelofs for use on VMS systems. As * with the MS-DOS version, the setting of the file mode has been disabled. * Compile and link normally (but note that the shared-image link option * produces a binary only 6 blocks long, as opposed to the 137-block one * produced by an ordinary link). To set up the VMS symbol to run the * program ("run uudecode filename" won't work), do: * uudecode :== "$disk:[directory]uudecode.exe" * and don't forget the leading "$" or it still won't work. The binaries * produced by this program are in VMS "stream-LF" format; this makes no * difference to VMS when running decoded executables, nor to VMS unzip, * but other programs such as zoo or arc may or may not require the file * to be "BILFed" (or "unBILFed" or whatever). Also, unlike the other * flavors, VMS files don't get overwritten (a higher version is created). * * Modified 13 April 1991 by Gary Mussar to be forgiving of systems that * appear to be stripping trailing blanks. */ #ifndef lint static char sccsid[] = "@(#)uudecode.c 5.5 (Berkeley) 7/6/88"; #endif /* not lint */ #ifdef __MSDOS__ /* For Turbo C */ #define MSDOS 1 #endif /* * uudecode [input] * * create the specified file, decoding as you go. * used with uuencode. */ #include <stdio.h> #ifdef VMS # include <types.h> # include <stat.h> #else # ifndef MSDOS /* i.e., UNIX */ # include <pwd.h> # endif # include <sys/types.h> /* MSDOS or UNIX */ # include <sys/stat.h> #endif /* single-character decode */ #define DEC(c) (((c) - ' ') & 077) main(argc, argv) char **argv; { FILE *in, *out; int mode; char dest[128]; char buf[80]; /* optional input arg */ if (argc > 1) { if ((in = fopen(argv[1], "r")) == NULL) { perror(argv[1]); exit(1); } argv++; argc--; } else in = stdin; if (argc != 1) { printf("Usage: uudecode [infile]\n"); exit(2); } /* search for header line */ for (;;) { if (fgets(buf, sizeof buf, in) == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "No begin line\n"); exit(3); } if (strncmp(buf, "begin ", 6) == 0) break; } (void)sscanf(buf, "begin %o %s", &mode, dest); #if !defined(MSDOS) && !defined(VMS) /* i.e., UNIX */ /* handle ~user/file format */ if (dest[0] == '~') { char *sl; struct passwd *getpwnam(); struct passwd *user; char dnbuf[100], *index(), *strcat(), *strcpy(); sl = index(dest, '/'); if (sl == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "Illegal ~user\n"); exit(3); } *sl++ = 0; user = getpwnam(dest+1); if (user == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "No such user as %s\n", dest); exit(4); } strcpy(dnbuf, user->pw_dir); strcat(dnbuf, "/"); strcat(dnbuf, sl); strcpy(dest, dnbuf); } #endif /* !defined(MSDOS) && !defined(VMS) */ /* create output file */ #ifdef MSDOS out = fopen(dest, "wb"); /* Binary file */ #else out = fopen(dest, "w"); #endif if (out == NULL) { perror(dest); exit(4); } #if !defined(MSDOS) && !defined(VMS) /* i.e., UNIX */ chmod(dest, mode); #endif decode(in, out); if (fgets(buf, sizeof buf, in) == NULL || strcmp(buf, "end\n")) { fprintf(stderr, "No end line\n"); exit(5); } exit(0); } /* * copy from in to out, decoding as you go along. */ decode(in, out) FILE *in; FILE *out; { char buf[80]; char *bp; int n, i, expected; for (;;) { /* for each input line */ if (fgets(buf, sizeof buf, in) == NULL) { printf("Short file\n"); exit(10); } n = DEC(buf[0]); if ((n <= 0) || (buf[0] == '\n')) break; /* Calculate expected # of chars and pad if necessary */ expected = ((n+2)/3)<<2; for (i = strlen(buf)-1; i <= expected; i++) buf[i] = ' '; bp = &buf[1]; while (n > 0) { outdec(bp, out, n); bp += 4; n -= 3; } } } /* * output a group of 3 bytes (4 input characters). * the input chars are pointed to by p, they are to * be output to file f. n is used to tell us not to * output all of them at the end of the file. */ outdec(p, f, n) char *p; FILE *f; { int c1, c2, c3; c1 = DEC(*p) << 2 | DEC(p[1]) >> 4; c2 = DEC(p[1]) << 4 | DEC(p[2]) >> 2; c3 = DEC(p[2]) << 6 | DEC(p[3]); if (n >= 1) putc(c1, f); if (n >= 2) putc(c2, f); if (n >= 3) putc(c3, f); } /* * Return the ptr in sp at which the character c appears; * NULL if not found */ #define NULL 0 char * index(sp, c) register char *sp, c; { do { if (*sp == c) return(sp); } while (*sp++); return(NULL); }