1 unstable release
0.1.0 | Nov 28, 2023 |
---|
#425 in Compression
Used in 2 crates
(via orphism)
32KB
949 lines
caff-archive
What is it?
A library for working with binary CAFF archives. This is the format used for .cmo3
and .can3
files.
How do I obtain this majestic tool?
Run the following Cargo command in your project directory (assuming you have cargo-edit installed):
cargo add caff-archive
Or add the following line to your Cargo.toml
(in the [dependencies]
array):
caff-archive = "^ 0.1"
How do I use it?
fn main() {
let mut file = File::open(&archive).expect("failed to open archive for reading");
let mut archive = caff_archive::Archive::read(&mut file).expect("failed to read archive from input data");
}
Optional Features
logging
enables tracing and debugging logs when reading and writing archives.discovery
implieslogging
and enables additional logging of potentially interesting scenarios, from the perspective of this library. It will report things like raw values that were parsed into fallback values in enums, or data sections that are expected to be padding but contain non-zero bytes, along with different potential ways those bytes could be parsed, among other things.
How was this made?
- Carefully, without using or referencing any code or libraries from the format vendor.
- The ImHex highlighting patterns from the MOC3ingbird Exploit (CVE-2023-27566) was instrumental in understanding this format.
- The discovery process for undocumented binary formats is described here.
License
caff-archive
is available under the MIT License. See LICENSE.txt
for the full text.
While the license is short, it's still written in fancy lawyer-speak. If you prefer more down-to-earth language, consider the following:
Dependencies
~0.3–0.9MB
~19K SLoC