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Revision: 1.77
Committed: Tue Aug 9 12:09:03 2022 UTC (20 months, 3 weeks ago) by root
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# Content
1 #!/usr/bin/perl
2
3 #
4 # PBCDEDIT - Copyright 2019 Marc A. Lehmann <pbcbedit@schmorp.de>
5 #
6 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later
7 #
8 # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
11 # (at your option) any later version.
12 #
13 # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 # GNU General Public License for more details.
17 #
18 # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 # along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
20 #
21
22 use 5.016; # numerous features need 5.14, __SUB__ needs 5.16
23
24 our $VERSION = '1.5';
25 our $JSON_VERSION = 3; # the version of the json objects generated by this program
26
27 our $CHANGELOG = <<EOF;
28
29 1.5 Mon Nov 25 15:54:34 CET 2019
30 - add "del" edit instruction.
31 - work around lsblk bug sometimes giving "dos" pttype for gpt partitions.
32 - bootmenupolicy in synopsis must be set to 0 to get the text menu.
33 - minor doc fxes.
34 - disable use of perldoc for help, doesn't work well.
35
36 1.4 Thu Aug 22 10:48:22 CEST 2019
37 - new "create" subcommand.
38 - "create" and "edit" try to save and restore ownership/permissions
39 of bcd hives when writing the new file.
40 - editorial fixes to the documentation.
41 - add mininmal hive creation example.
42
43 1.3 Sat Aug 17 07:04:15 CEST 2019
44 - output of pbcdedit elements --json has changed, as it didn't
45 take the reorganisation by classes fully into account.
46 - json schema bumped to 3.
47 - new "bcd-device" and "bcd-legacy-device" subcommands.
48 - implement --json option for lsblk.
49
50 1.2 Fri Aug 16 00:20:41 CEST 2019
51 - bcd element names now depend on the bcd object type they are in,
52 also affects "elements" output.
53 - json schema bumped to 2.
54 - new version command.
55 - numerous minor bugfixes.
56
57 EOF
58
59 =head1 NAME
60
61 pbcdedit - portable boot configuration data (BCD) store editor
62
63 =head1 SYNOPSIS
64
65 pbcdedit help # output manual page
66 pbcdedit version # output version and changelog
67
68 pbcdedit export path/to/BCD # output BCD hive as JSON
69 pbcdedit import path/to/BCD # convert standard input to BCD hive
70 pbcdedit edit path/to/BCD edit-instructions...
71
72 pbcdedit objects # list all supported object aliases and types
73 pbcdedit elements # list all supported bcd element aliases
74
75 # Example: enable text-based boot menu.
76 pbcdedit edit /my/BCD set '{default}' bootmenupolicy 0
77
78 # Example change system device to first partition containing winload.
79 pbcdedit edit /my/BCD \
80 set '{default}' device 'locate=<null>,element,path' \
81 set '{default}' osdevice 'locate=<null>,element,path'
82
83
84 =head1 DESCRIPTION
85
86 This program allows you to create, read and modify Boot Configuration Data
87 (BCD) stores used by Windows Vista and newer versions of Windows.
88
89 At this point, it is in relatively early stages of development and has
90 received little to no real-world testing.
91
92 Compared to other BCD editing programs it offers the following unique
93 features:
94
95 =over
96
97 =item Can create BCD hives from scratch
98
99 Practically all other BCD editing programs force you to copy existing BCD
100 stores, which might or might not be copyrighted by Microsoft.
101
102 =item Does not rely on Windows
103
104 As the "portable" in the name implies, this program does not rely on
105 C<bcdedit> or other windows programs or libraries, it works on any system
106 that supports at least perl version 5.16.
107
108 =item Decodes and encodes BCD device elements
109
110 PBCDEDIT can concisely decode and encode BCD device element contents. This
111 is pretty unique, and offers a lot of potential that can't be realised
112 with C<bcdedit> or any programs relying on it.
113
114 =item Minimal files
115
116 BCD files written by PBCDEDIT are always "minimal", that is, they don't
117 contain unused data areas and therefore don't contain old and potentially
118 sensitive data.
119
120 =back
121
122 The target audience for this program is professionals and tinkerers who
123 are ready to invest time into learning how it works. It is not an easy
124 program to use and requires patience and a good understanding of BCD
125 stores.
126
127
128 =head1 SUBCOMMANDS
129
130 PBCDEDIT expects a subcommand as first argument that tells it what to
131 do. The following subcommands exist:
132
133 =over
134
135 =item C<help>
136
137 Displays the whole manual page (this document).
138
139 =item C<version>
140
141 This outputs the PBCDEDIT version, the JSON schema version it uses and the
142 full log of changes.
143
144 =item C<export> F<path>
145
146 Reads a BCD data store and writes a JSON representation of it to standard
147 output.
148
149 The format of the data is explained later in this document.
150
151 Example: read a BCD store, modify it with an external program, write it
152 again.
153
154 pbcdedit export BCD | modify-json-somehow | pbcdedit import BCD
155
156 =item C<import> F<path>
157
158 The reverse of C<export>: Reads a JSON representation of a BCD data store
159 from standard input, and creates or replaces the given BCD data store.
160
161 =item C<edit> F<path> I<instructions...>
162
163 Load a BCD data store, apply some instructions to it, and save it again.
164
165 See the section L<EDITING BCD STORES>, below, for more info.
166
167 =item C<parse> F<path> I<instructions...>
168
169 Same as C<edit>, above, except it doesn't save the data store again. Can
170 be useful to extract some data from it.
171
172 =item C<create> F<path> I<instructions...>
173
174 Same as C<edit>, above, except it creates a new data store from scratch if
175 needed. An existing store will be emptied completely.
176
177 =item C<lsblk> [C<--json>]
178
179 On a GNU/Linux system, you can get a list of partition device descriptors
180 using this command - the external C<lsblk> command is required, as well as
181 a mounted C</sys> file system.
182
183 The output will be a list of all partitions in the system and C<partition>
184 descriptors for GPT and both C<legacypartition> and C<partition>
185 descriptors for MBR partitions.
186
187 With C<--json> it will print similar information as C<lsblk --json>, but
188 with extra C<bcd_device> and C<bcd_legacy_device> attributes.
189
190 =item C<bcd-device> F<path>
191
192 Tries to find the BCD device element for the given device, which currently
193 must be a a partition of some kind. Prints the C<partition=> descriptor as
194 a result, or nothing. Exit status will be true on success, and false on
195 failure.
196
197 Like C<lsblk>, above, this likely only works on GNU/Linux systems.
198
199 Example: print the partition descriptor of tghe partition with label DATA.
200
201 $ pbcdedit bcd-device /dev/disk/by-label/DATA
202 partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,213579202560
203
204 =item C<bcd-legacy-device> F<path>
205
206 Like above, but uses a C<legacypartition> descriptor instead.
207
208 =item C<objects> [C<--json>]
209
210 Outputs two tables: a table listing all type aliases with their hex BCD
211 element ID, and all object name aliases with their GUID and default type
212 (if any).
213
214 With C<--json> it prints similar information as a JSON object, for easier parsing.
215
216 =item C<elements> [C<--json>]
217
218 Outputs a table of known element aliases with their hex ID and the format
219 type.
220
221 With C<--json> it prints similar information as a JSON object, for easier parsing.
222
223 =item C<export-regf> F<path>
224
225 This has nothing to do with BCD stores, but simply exposes PCBEDIT's
226 internal registry hive reader - it takes a registry hive file as argument
227 and outputs a JSON representation of it to standard output.
228
229 Hive versions 1.2 till 1.6 are supported.
230
231 =item C<import-regf> F<path>
232
233 The reverse of C<export-regf>: reads a JSON representation of a registry
234 hive from standard input and creates or replaces the registry hive file
235 given as argument.
236
237 The written hive will always be in a slightly modified version 1.3
238 format. It's not the format windows would generate, but it should be
239 understood by any conformant hive reader.
240
241 Note that the representation chosen by PBCDEDIT currently throws away
242 classname data (often used for feeble attempts at hiding stuff by
243 Microsoft) and security descriptors, so if you write anything other than
244 a BCD hive you will most likely destroy it.
245
246 =back
247
248
249 =head1 BCD STORE REPRESENTATION FORMAT
250
251 A BCD data store is represented as a JSON object with one special key,
252 C<meta>, and one key per BCD object. That is, each BCD object becomes
253 one key-value pair in the object, and an additional key called C<meta>
254 contains meta information.
255
256 Here is an abridged example of a real BCD store:
257
258 {
259 "meta" : {
260 "version" : 1
261 },
262 "{7ae02178-821d-11e7-8813-1c872c5f5ab0}" : {
263 "type" : "application::osloader",
264 "description" : "Windows 10",
265 "device" : "partition=<null>,harddisk,gpt,9742e468-9206-48a0-b4e4-c4e9745a356a,3ce6aceb-e90c-4fd2-9fba-47cab15f6faf",
266 "osdevice" : "partition=<null>,harddisk,gpt,9742e468-9206-48a0-b4e4-c4e9745a356a,3ce6aceb-e90c-4fd2-9fba-47cab15f6faf",
267 "path" : "\\Windows\\system32\\winload.exe",
268 "systemroot" : "\\Windows"
269 },
270 "{bootloadersettings}" : {
271 "inherit" : "{globalsettings} {hypervisorsettings}"
272 },
273 "{bootmgr}" : {
274 "description" : "Windows Boot Manager",
275 "device" : "partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,ff3ba63b,1048576",
276 "displayorder" : "{7ae02178-821d-11e7-8813-1c872c5f5ab0}",
277 "inherit" : "{globalsettings}",
278 "displaybootmenu" : 0,
279 "timeout" : 30
280 },
281 "{globalsettings}" : {
282 "inherit" : "{dbgsettings} {emssettings} {badmemory}"
283 },
284 "{hypervisorsettings}" : {
285 "hypervisorbaudrate" : 115200,
286 "hypervisordebugport" : 1,
287 "hypervisordebugtype" : 0
288 },
289 # ...
290 }
291
292 =head2 Minimal BCD to boot windows
293
294 Experimentally I found the following BCD is the minimum required to
295 successfully boot any post-XP version of Windows (assuming suitable
296 C<device> and C<osdevice> values, of course, and assuming a BIOS boot -
297 for UEFI, you should use F<winload.efi> instead of F<winload.exe>):
298
299 {
300 "{bootmgr}" : {
301 "default" : "{45b547a7-8ca6-4417-9eb0-a257b61f35b4}"
302 },
303
304 "{45b547a7-8ca6-4417-9eb0-a257b61f35b1}" : {
305 "type" : "application::osloader",
306 "description" : "Windows Boot",
307 "device" : "legacypartition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,1",
308 "osdevice" : "legacypartition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,1",
309 "path" : "\\Windows\\system32\\winload.exe",
310 "systemroot" : "\\Windows"
311 },
312 }
313
314 Note that minimal doesn't mean recommended - Windows itself will add stuff
315 to this during or after boot, and you might or might not run into issues
316 when installing updates as it might not be able to find the F<bootmgr>.
317
318 This is how you would create a minimal hive with PBCDEDIT from within
319 GNU/Linux, assuming F</dev/sdc3> is the windows partition, using
320 a random GUID for the osloader and using C<partition> instead of
321 C<legacypartition>:
322
323 osldr="{$(uuidgen)}"
324 part=$(pbcdedit bcd-device /dev/sdc3)
325 pbcdedit create minimal.bcd \
326 set '{bootmgr}' default "$osldr" \
327 set "$osldr" type application::osloader \
328 set "$osldr" description 'Windows Boot' \
329 set "$osldr" device "$part" \
330 set "$osldr" osdevice "$part" \
331 set "$osldr" path '\Windows\system32\winload.exe' \
332 set "$osldr" systemroot '\Windows'
333
334 =head2 The C<meta> key
335
336 The C<meta> key is not stored in the BCD data store but is used only
337 by PBCDEDIT. It is always generated when exporting, and importing will
338 be refused when it exists and the version stored inside doesn't match
339 the JSON schema version of PBCDEDIT. This ensures that different and
340 incompatible versions of PBCDEDIT will not read and misinterpret each
341 others data.
342
343 =head2 The object keys
344
345 Every other key is a BCD object. There is usually a BCD object for the
346 boot manager, one for every boot option and a few others that store common
347 settings inherited by these.
348
349 Each BCD object is represented by a GUID wrapped in curly braces. These
350 are usually random GUIDs used only to distinguish BCD objects from each
351 other. When adding a new boot option, you can simply generate a new GUID.
352
353 Some of these GUIDs are fixed well known GUIDs which PBCDEDIT will decode
354 into human-readable strings such as C<{globalsettings}>, which is the same
355 as C<{7ea2e1ac-2e61-4728-aaa3-896d9d0a9f0e}>.
356
357 Each BCD object has an associated type. For example,
358 C<application::osloader> for objects loading Windows via F<winload.exe>,
359 C<application::bootsector> for real mode applications and so on.
360
361 The type of a object is stored in the pseudo BCD element C<type> (see next
362 section).
363
364 Some well-known objects have a default type. If an object type matches
365 its default type, then the C<type> element will be omitted. Similarly, if
366 the C<type> element is missing and the BCD object has a default type, the
367 default type will be used when writing a BCD store.
368
369 Running F<pbcdedit objects> will give you a list of object types,
370 well-known object aliases and their default types.
371
372 If different string keys in a JSON BCD store map to the same BCD object
373 then a random one will "win" and the others will be discarded. To avoid
374 this, you should always use the "canonical" name of a BCD object, which is
375 the human-readable form (if it exists).
376
377 =head2 The object values - BCD elements
378
379 The value of each BCD object entry consists of key-value pairs called BCD
380 elements.
381
382 BCD elements are identified by a 32 bit number, but to make things
383 simpler PBCDEDIT will replace these with well-known strings such as
384 C<description>, C<device> or C<path>.
385
386 When PBCDEDIT does not know the BCD element, it will use
387 C<custom:HHHHHHHH>, where C<HHHHHHHH> is the 8-digit hex number of the
388 BCD element. For example, C<device> would be C<custom::11000001>. You can
389 get a list of all BCD elements known to PBCDEDIT by running F<pbcdedit
390 elements>.
391
392 What was said about duplicate keys mapping to the same object is true for
393 elements as well, so, again, you should always use the canonical name,
394 which is the human readable alias, if known.
395
396 =head3 BCD element types
397
398 Each BCD element has a type such as I<string> or I<boolean>. This type
399 determines how the value is interpreted, and most of them are pretty easy
400 to explain:
401
402 =over
403
404 =item string
405
406 This is simply a unicode string. For example, the C<description> and
407 C<systemroot> elements both are of this type, one storing a human-readable
408 name for this boot option, the other a file path to the windows root
409 directory:
410
411 "description" : "Windows 10",
412 "systemroot" : "\\Windows",
413
414 =item boolean
415
416 Almost as simple are booleans, which represent I<true>/I<false>,
417 I<on>/I<off> and similar values. In the JSON form, true is represented
418 by the number C<1>, and false is represented by the number C<0>. Other
419 values will be accepted, but PBCDEDIT doesn't guarantee how these are
420 interpreted.
421
422 For example, C<displaybootmenu> is a boolean that decides whether to
423 enable the C<F8> boot menu. In the example BCD store above, this is
424 disabled:
425
426 "displaybootmenu" : 0,
427
428 =item integer
429
430 Again, very simple, this is a 64 bit integer. It can be either specified
431 as a decimal number, as a hex number (by prefixing it with C<0x>) or as a
432 binary number (prefix C<0b>).
433
434 For example, the boot C<timeout> is an integer, specifying the automatic
435 boot delay in seconds:
436
437 "timeout" : 30,
438
439 =item integer list
440
441 This is a list of 64 bit integers separated by whitespace. It is not used
442 much, so here is a somewhat artificial and untested example of using
443 C<customactions> to specify a certain custom, eh, action to be executed
444 when pressing C<F10> at boot:
445
446 "customactions" : "0x1000044000001 0x54000001",
447
448 =item guid
449
450 This represents a single GUID value wrapped in curly braces. It is used a
451 lot to refer from one BCD object to other one.
452
453 For example, The C<{bootmgr}> object might refer to a resume boot option
454 using C<default>:
455
456 "default" : "{7ae02178-821d-11e7-8813-1c872c5f5ab0}",
457
458 Human readable aliases are used and allowed.
459
460 =item guid list
461
462 Similar to the GUID type, this represents a list of such GUIDs, separated
463 by whitespace from each other.
464
465 For example, many BCD objects can I<inherit> elements from other BCD
466 objects by specifying the GUIDs of those other objects in a GUID list
467 called surprisingly called C<inherit>:
468
469 "inherit" : "{dbgsettings} {emssettings} {badmemory}",
470
471 This example also shows how human readable aliases can be used.
472
473 =item device
474
475 This type is why I write I<most> are easy to explain earlier: This type
476 is the pinnacle of Microsoft-typical hacks layered on top of other
477 hacks. Understanding this type took more time than writing all the rest of
478 PBCDEDIT, and because it is so complex, this type has its own subsection
479 below.
480
481 =back
482
483 =head3 The BCD "device" element type
484
485 Device elements specify, well, devices. They are used for such diverse
486 purposes such as finding a TFTP network boot image, serial ports or VMBUS
487 devices, but most commonly they are used to specify the disk (harddisk,
488 cdrom, ramdisk, vhd...) to boot from.
489
490 The device element is kind of a mini-language in its own which is much
491 more versatile then the limited windows interface to it - BCDEDIT -
492 reveals.
493
494 While some information can be found on the BCD store and the windows
495 registry, there is pretty much no public information about the device
496 element, so almost everything known about it had to be researched first
497 in the process of writing this script, and consequently, support for BCD
498 device elements is partial only.
499
500 On the other hand, the expressive power of PBCDEDIT in specifying devices
501 is much greater than BCDEDIT and therefore more can be done with it. The
502 downside is that BCD device elements are much more complicated than what
503 you might think from reading the BCDEDIT documentation.
504
505 In other words, simple things are complicated, and complicated things are
506 possible.
507
508 Anyway, the general syntax of device elements is an optional GUID,
509 followed by a device type, optionally followed by hexadecimal flags in
510 angle brackets, optionally followed by C<=> and a comma-separated list of
511 arguments, some of which can be (and often are) in turn devices again.
512
513 [{GUID}]type[<flags>][=arg,arg...]
514
515 Here are some examples:
516
517 boot
518 {b097d29f-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456}block=file,<boot>,\EFI
519 locate=<null>,element,systemroot
520 partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,1048576
521 partition=<null>,harddisk,gpt,9742e468-9206-48a0-b4e4-c4e9745a356a,76d39e5f-ad1b-407e-9c05-c81eb83b57dd
522 block<1>=ramdisk,<partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,68720525312>,0,0,0,\Recovery\b097d29e-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456\Winre.wim
523 block=file,<partition=<null>,harddisk,gpt,9742e468-9206-48a0-b4e4-c4e9745a356a,ee3a393a-f0de-4057-9946-88584245ed48>,\
524 binary=050000000000000048000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
525
526 I hope you are suitably impressed. I was, too, when I realized decoding
527 these binary blobs is not as easy as I had assumed.
528
529 The optional prefixed GUID seems to refer to a device BCD object, which
530 can be used to specify more device-specific BCD elements (for example
531 C<ramdisksdidevice> and C<ramdisksdpath>).
532
533 The flags after the type are omitted when they are C<0>. The only known
534 flag is C<1>, which seems to indicate that the parent device is invalid. I
535 don't claim to fully understand it, but it seems to indicate that the
536 boot manager has to search the device itself. Why the device is specified
537 in the first place escapes me, but a lot of this device stuff seems to be
538 badly hacked together...
539
540 The types understood and used by PBCDEDIT are as follows (keep in mind
541 that not of all the following is necessarily supported in PBCDEDIT):
542
543 =over
544
545 =item C<binary=>I<hex...>
546
547 This type isn't actually a real BCD element type, but a fallback for those
548 cases where PBCDEDIT can't perfectly decode a device element (except for
549 the leading GUID, which it can always decode). In such cases, it will
550 convert the device into this type with a hexdump of the element data.
551
552 =item C<null>
553
554 This is another special type - sometimes, a device is all zero-filled,
555 which is not valid. This can mark the absence of a device or something
556 PBCDEDIT does not understand, so it decodes it into this special "all
557 zero" type called C<null>.
558
559 It's most commonly found in devices that can use an optional parent
560 device, when no parent device is used.
561
562 =item C<boot>
563
564 Another type without parameters, this refers to the device that was booted
565 from (nowadays typically the EFI system partition).
566
567 =item C<vmbus=>I<interfacetype>,I<interfaceinstance>
568
569 This specifies a VMBUS device with the given interface type and interface
570 instance, both of which are "naked" (no curly braces) GUIDs.
571
572 Made-up example (couldn't find a single example on the web):
573
574 vmbus=c376c1c3-d276-48d2-90a9-c04748072c60,12345678-a234-b234-c234-d2345678abcd
575
576 =item C<partition=><I<parent>>,I<devicetype>,I<partitiontype>,I<diskid>,I<partitionid>
577
578 This designates a specific partition on a block device. I<parent> is an
579 optional parent device on which to search on, and is often C<null>. Note
580 that the angle brackets around I<parent> are part of the syntax.
581
582 I<devicetypes> is one of C<harddisk>, C<floppy>, C<cdrom>, C<ramdisk>,
583 C<file> or C<vhd>, where the first three should be self-explaining,
584 C<file> is usually used to locate a file to be used as a disk image,
585 and C<vhd> is used to treat files as virtual harddisks, i.e. F<vhd> and
586 F<vhdx> files.
587
588 The I<partitiontype> is either C<mbr>, C<gpt> or C<raw>, the latter being
589 used for devices without partitions, such as cdroms, where the "partition"
590 is usually the whole device.
591
592 The I<diskid> identifies the disk or device using a unique signature, and
593 the same is true for the I<partitionid>. How these are interpreted depends
594 on the I<partitiontype>:
595
596 =over
597
598 =item C<mbr>
599
600 The C<diskid> is the 32 bit disk signature stored at offset 0x1b8 in the
601 MBR, interpreted as a 32 bit unsigned little endian integer and written as
602 hex number. That is, the bytes C<01 02 03 04> would become C<04030201>.
603
604 Diskpart (using the C<DETAIL> command) and the C<lsblk> command typically
605 found on GNU/Linux systems (using e.g. C<lsblk -o NAME,PARTUUID>) can
606 display the I<diskid>.
607
608 The I<partitionid> is the byte offset(!) of the partition counting from
609 the beginning of the MBR.
610
611 Example, use the partition on the harddisk with I<diskid> C<47cbc08a>
612 starting at sector C<2048> (= 1048576 / 512).
613
614 partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,1048576
615
616 =item C<gpt>
617
618 The I<diskid> is the disk GUID/disk identifier GUID from the partition
619 table (as displayed e.g. by F<gdisk>), and the I<partitionid> is the
620 partition unique GUID (displayed using e.g. the F<gdisk> F<i> command).
621
622 Example: use the partition C<76d39e5f-ad1b-407e-9c05-c81eb83b57dd> on GPT
623 disk C<9742e468-9206-48a0-b4e4-c4e9745a356a>.
624
625 partition=<null>,harddisk,gpt,9742e468-9206-48a0-b4e4-c4e9745a356a,76d39e5f-ad1b-407e-9c05-c81eb83b57dd
626
627 =item C<raw>
628
629 Instead of I<diskid> and I<partitionid>, this type only accepts a decimal
630 disk number and signifies the whole disk. BCDEDIT cannot display the
631 resulting device, and I am doubtful whether it has a useful effect.
632
633 =back
634
635 =item C<legacypartition=><I<parent>>,I<devicetype>,I<partitiontype>,I<diskid>,I<partitionid>
636
637 This is exactly the same as the C<partition> type, except for a tiny
638 detail: instead of using the partition start offset, this type uses the
639 partition number for MBR disks. Behaviour other partition types should be
640 the same.
641
642 The partition number starts at C<1> and skips unused partition, so if
643 there are two primary partitions and another partition inside the extended
644 partition, the primary partitions are number C<1> and C<2> and the
645 partition inside the extended partition is number C<3>, regardless of any
646 gaps.
647
648 =item C<locate=><I<parent>>,I<locatetype>,I<locatearg>
649
650 This device description will make the bootloader search for a partition
651 with a given path.
652
653 The I<parent> device is the device to search on (angle brackets are
654 still part of the syntax!) If it is C<null>, then C<locate> will
655 search all disks it can find.
656
657 I<locatetype> is either C<element> or C<path>, and merely distinguishes
658 between two different ways to specify the path to search for: C<element>
659 uses an element ID (either as hex or as name) as I<locatearg> and C<path>
660 uses a relative path as I<locatearg>.
661
662 Example: find any partition which has the F<magicfile.xxx> path in the
663 root.
664
665 locate=<null>,path,\magicfile.xxx
666
667 Example: find any partition which has the path specified in the
668 C<systemroot> element (typically F<\Windows>).
669
670 locate=<null>,element,systemroot
671
672 =item C<block=>I<devicetype>,I<args...>
673
674 Last not least, the most complex type, C<block>, which... specifies block
675 devices (which could be inside a F<vhdx> file for example).
676
677 I<devicetypes> is one of C<harddisk>, C<floppy>, C<cdrom>, C<ramdisk>,
678 C<file> or C<vhd> - the same as for C<partition=>.
679
680 The remaining arguments change depending on the I<devicetype>:
681
682 =over
683
684 =item C<block=file>,<I<parent>>,I<path>
685
686 Interprets the I<parent> device (typically a partition) as a
687 filesystem and specifies a file path inside.
688
689 =item C<block=vhd>,<I<parent>>
690
691 Pretty much just changes the interpretation of I<parent>, which is
692 usually a disk image (C<block=file,...)>) to be a F<vhd> or F<vhdx> file.
693
694 =item C<block=ramdisk>,<I<parent>>,I<base>,I<size>,I<offset>,I<path>
695
696 Interprets the I<parent> device as RAM disk, using the (decimal)
697 base address, byte size and byte offset inside a file specified by
698 I<path>. The numbers are usually all C<0> because they can be extracted
699 from the RAM disk image or other parameters.
700
701 This is most commonly used to boot C<wim> images.
702
703 =item C<block=floppy>,I<drivenum>
704
705 Refers to a removable drive identified by a number. BCDEDIT cannot display
706 the resulting device, and it is not clear what effect it will have.
707
708 =item C<block=cdrom>,I<drivenum>
709
710 Pretty much the same as C<floppy> but for CD-ROMs.
711
712 =item anything else
713
714 Probably not yet implemented. Tell me of your needs...
715
716 =back
717
718 =back
719
720 =head4 Examples
721
722 This concludes the syntax overview for device elements, but probably
723 leaves many questions open. I can't help with most of them, as I also have
724 many questions, but I can walk you through some actual examples using more
725 complex aspects.
726
727 =over
728
729 =item C<< locate=<block=vhd,<block=file,<locate=<null>,path,\disk.vhdx>,\disk.vhdx>>,element,path >>
730
731 Just like with C declarations, you best treat device descriptors as
732 instructions to find your device and work your way from the inside out:
733
734 locate=<null>,path,\disk.vhdx
735
736 First, the innermost device descriptor searches all partitions on the
737 system for a file called F<\disk.vhdx>:
738
739 block=file,<see above>,\disk.vhdx
740
741 Next, this takes the device locate has found and finds a file called
742 F<\disk.vhdx> on it. This is the same file locate was using, but that is
743 only because we find the device using the same path as finding the disk
744 image, so this is purely incidental, although quite common.
745
746 Next, this file will be opened as a virtual disk:
747
748 block=vhd,<see above>
749
750 And finally, inside this disk, another C<locate> will look for a partition
751 with a path as specified in the C<path> element, which most likely will be
752 F<\Windows\system32\winload.exe>:
753
754 locate=<see above>,element,path
755
756 As a result, this will boot the first Windows it finds on the first
757 F<disk.vhdx> disk image it can find anywhere.
758
759 =item C<< locate=<block=vhd,<block=file,<partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,242643632128>,\win10.vhdx>>,element,path >>
760
761 Pretty much the same as the previous case, but with a bit of
762 variance. First, look for a specific partition on an MBR-partitioned disk:
763
764 partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,242643632128
765
766 Then open the file F<\win10.vhdx> on that partition:
767
768 block=file,<see above>,\win10.vhdx
769
770 Then, again, the file is opened as a virtual disk image:
771
772 block=vhd,<see above>
773
774 And again the windows loader (or whatever is in C<path>) will be searched:
775
776 locate=<see above>,element,path
777
778 =item C<< {b097d2b2-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456}block<1>=ramdisk,<partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,242643632128>,0,0,0,\boot.wim >>
779
780 This is quite different. First, it starts with a GUID. This GUID belongs
781 to a BCD object of type C<device>, which has additional parameters:
782
783 "{b097d2b2-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456}" : {
784 "type" : "device",
785 "description" : "sdi file for ramdisk",
786 "ramdisksdidevice" : "partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,1048576",
787 "ramdisksdipath" : "\boot.sdi"
788 },
789
790 I will not go into many details, but this specifies a (presumably empty)
791 template ramdisk image (F<\boot.sdi>) that is used to initialize the
792 ramdisk. The F<\boot.wim> file is then extracted into it. As you can also
793 see, this F<.sdi> file resides on a different C<partition>.
794
795 Continuing, as always, from the inside out, first this device descriptor
796 finds a specific partition:
797
798 partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,47cbc08a,242643632128
799
800 And then specifies a C<ramdisk> image on this partition:
801
802 block<1>=ramdisk,<see above>,0,0,0,\boot.wim
803
804 I don't know what the purpose of the C<< <1> >> flag value is, but it
805 seems to be always there on this kind of entry.
806
807 If you have some good examples to add here, feel free to mail me.
808
809 =back
810
811
812 =head1 EDITING BCD STORES
813
814 The C<edit> and C<parse> subcommands allow you to read a BCD data store
815 and modify it or extract data from it. This is done by executing a series
816 of "editing instructions" which are explained here.
817
818 =over
819
820 =item C<get> I<object> I<element>
821
822 Reads the BCD element I<element> from the BCD object I<object> and writes
823 it to standard output, followed by a newline. The I<object> can be a GUID
824 or a human-readable alias, or the special string C<{default}>, which will
825 refer to the default BCD object.
826
827 Example: find description of the default BCD object.
828
829 pbcdedit parse BCD get "{default}" description
830
831 =item C<set> I<object> I<element> I<value>
832
833 Similar to C<get>, but sets the element to the given I<value> instead.
834
835 Example: change the bootmgr default too
836 C<{b097d2ad-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456}>:
837
838 pbcdedit edit BCD set "{bootmgr}" default "{b097d2ad-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456}"
839
840 =item C<del> I<object> I<element>
841
842 Similar to C<get>, but removed the BCD element from the specified BCD object.
843
844 =item C<eval> I<perlcode>
845
846 This takes the next argument, interprets it as Perl code and
847 evaluates it. This allows you to do more complicated modifications or
848 extractions.
849
850 The following variables are predefined for your use:
851
852 =over
853
854 =item C<$PATH>
855
856 The path to the BCD data store, as given to C<edit> or C<parse>.
857
858 =item C<$BCD>
859
860 The decoded BCD data store.
861
862 =item C<$DEFAULT>
863
864 The default BCD object name.
865
866 =back
867
868 The example given for C<get>, above, could be expressed like this with
869 C<eval>:
870
871 pbcdedit edit BCD eval 'say $BCD->{$DEFAULT}{description}'
872
873 The example given for C<set> could be expressed like this:
874
875 pbcdedit edit BCD eval '$BCD->{"{bootmgr}"}{default} = "{b097d2ad-bc00-11e9-8a9a-525400123456}"'
876
877 =item C<do> I<path>
878
879 Similar to C<eval>, above, but instead of using the argument as perl code,
880 it loads the perl code from the given file and executes it. This makes it
881 easier to write more complicated or larger programs.
882
883 =back
884
885
886 =head1 SEE ALSO
887
888 For ideas on what you can do with BCD stores in
889 general, and some introductory material, try
890 L<http://www.mistyprojects.co.uk/documents/BCDEdit/index.html>.
891
892 For good reference on which BCD objects and
893 elements exist, see Geoff Chappell's pages at
894 L<http://www.geoffchappell.com/notes/windows/boot/bcd/index.htm>.
895
896 =head1 AUTHOR
897
898 Written by Marc A. Lehmann L<pbcdedit@schmorp.de>.
899
900 =head1 REPORTING BUGS
901
902 Bugs can be reported directly the author at L<pcbedit@schmorp.de>.
903
904 =head1 BUGS AND SHORTCOMINGS
905
906 This should be a module. Of a series of modules, even.
907
908 Registry code should preserve classname and security descriptor data, and
909 whatever else is necessary to read and write any registry hive file.
910
911 I am also not happy with device descriptors being strings rather than a
912 data structure, but strings are probably better for command line usage. In
913 any case, device descriptors could be converted by simply "splitting" at
914 "=" and "," into an array reference, recursively.
915
916 =head1 HOMEPAGE
917
918 Original versions of this program can be found at
919 L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/pbcdedit>.
920
921 =head1 COPYRIGHT
922
923 Copyright 2019 Marc A. Lehmann, licensed under GNU GPL version 3 or later,
924 see L<https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. This is free software: you are
925 free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent
926 permitted by law.
927
928 =cut
929
930 # common sense is optional, but recommended
931 BEGIN { eval { require "common/sense.pm"; } && common::sense->import }
932
933 no warnings 'portable'; # avoid 32 bit integer warnings
934
935 use Encode ();
936 use List::Util ();
937 use IO::Handle ();
938 use Time::HiRes ();
939
940 eval { unpack "Q", pack "Q", 1 }
941 or die "perl with 64 bit integer supported required.\n";
942
943 our $JSON = eval { require JSON::XS; JSON::XS:: }
944 // eval { require JSON::PP; JSON::PP:: }
945 // die "either JSON::XS or JSON::PP must be installed\n";
946
947 our $json_coder = $JSON->new->utf8->pretty->canonical->relaxed;
948
949 # hack used for debugging
950 sub xxd($$) {
951 open my $xxd, "| xxd | sed -e 's/^/\Q$_[0]\E: /'";
952 syswrite $xxd, $_[1];
953 }
954
955 # get some meta info on a file (uid, gid, perms)
956 sub stat_get($) {
957 [(stat shift)[4, 5, 2]]
958 }
959
960 # set stat info on a file
961 sub stat_set($$) {
962 my ($fh_or_path, $stat) = @_;
963
964 return unless $stat;
965 chown $stat->[0], $stat->[1], $fh_or_path;
966 chmod +($stat->[2] & 07777), $fh_or_path;
967 }
968
969 sub file_load($) {
970 my ($path) = @_;
971
972 open my $fh, "<:raw", $path
973 or die "$path: $!\n";
974 my $size = -s $fh;
975 $size = read $fh, my $buf, $size
976 or die "$path: short read\n";
977
978 $buf
979 }
980
981 sub file_save($$;$) {
982 my ($path, $data, $stat) = @_;
983
984 open my $fh, ">:raw", "$path~"
985 or die "$path~: $!\n";
986 print $fh $data
987 or die "$path~: short write\n";
988 stat_set $fh, $stat;
989 $fh->sync;
990 close $fh;
991
992 rename "$path~", $path;
993 }
994
995 # sources and resources used for writing pbcdedit
996 #
997 # registry:
998 # https://github.com/msuhanov/regf/blob/master/Windows%20registry%20file%20format%20specification.md
999 # http://amnesia.gtisc.gatech.edu/~moyix/suzibandit.ltd.uk/MSc/
1000 # bcd:
1001 # http://www.geoffchappell.com/notes/windows/boot/bcd/index.htm
1002 # https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/windows/hardware/design/dn653287(v=vs.85)
1003 # bcd devices:
1004 # reactos' boot/environ/include/bl.h
1005 # windows .mof files
1006
1007 #############################################################################
1008 # registry stuff
1009
1010 # we use a hardcoded securitya descriptor - full access for everyone
1011 my $sid = pack "H*", "010100000000000100000000"; # S-1-1-0 everyone
1012 my $ace = pack "C C S< L< a*", 0, 2, 8 + (length $sid), 0x000f003f, $sid; # type flags size mask sid
1013 my $sacl = "";
1014 my $dacl = pack "C x S< S< x2 a*", 2, 8 + (length $ace), 1, $ace; # rev size count ace*
1015 my $sd = pack "C x S< L< L< L< L< a* a* a* a*",
1016 # rev flags(SE_DACL_PRESENT SE_SELF_RELATIVE) owner group sacl dacl
1017 1, 0x8004,
1018 20 + (length $sacl) + (length $dacl),
1019 20 + (length $sacl) + (length $dacl) + (length $sid),
1020 0, 20,
1021 $sacl, $dacl, $sid, $sid;
1022 my $sk = pack "a2 x2 x4 x4 x4 L< a*", sk => (length $sd), $sd;
1023
1024 sub NO_OFS() { 0xffffffff } # file pointer "NULL" value
1025
1026 sub KEY_HIVE_ENTRY() { 0x0004 }
1027 sub KEY_NO_DELETE () { 0x0008 }
1028 sub KEY_COMP_NAME () { 0x0020 }
1029
1030 sub VALUE_COMP_NAME() { 0x0001 }
1031
1032 my @regf_typename = qw(
1033 none sz expand_sz binary dword dword_be link multi_sz
1034 resource_list full_resource_descriptor resource_requirements_list
1035 qword qword_be
1036 );
1037
1038 my %regf_dec_type = (
1039 sz => sub { $_[0] =~ s/\x00\x00$//; Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $_[0] },
1040 expand_sz => sub { $_[0] =~ s/\x00\x00$//; Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $_[0] },
1041 link => sub { $_[0] =~ s/\x00\x00$//; Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $_[0] },
1042 multi_sz => sub { $_[0] =~ s/(?:\x00\x00)?\x00\x00$//; [ split /\x00/, (Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $_[0]), -1 ] },
1043 dword => sub { unpack "L<", shift },
1044 dword_be => sub { unpack "L>", shift },
1045 qword => sub { unpack "Q<", shift },
1046 qword_be => sub { unpack "Q>", shift },
1047 );
1048
1049 my %regf_enc_type = (
1050 sz => sub { (Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $_[0]) . "\x00\x00" },
1051 expand_sz => sub { (Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $_[0]) . "\x00\x00" },
1052 link => sub { (Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $_[0]) . "\x00\x00" },
1053 multi_sz => sub { (join "", map +(Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $_) . "\x00\x00", @{ $_[0] }) . "\x00\x00" },
1054 dword => sub { pack "L<", shift },
1055 dword_be => sub { pack "L>", shift },
1056 qword => sub { pack "Q<", shift },
1057 qword_be => sub { pack "Q>", shift },
1058 );
1059
1060 # decode a registry hive
1061 sub regf_decode($) {
1062 my ($hive) = @_;
1063
1064 "regf" eq substr $hive, 0, 4
1065 or die "not a registry hive\n";
1066
1067 my ($major, $minor) = unpack "\@20 L< L<", $hive;
1068
1069 $major == 1
1070 or die "registry major version is not 1, but $major\n";
1071
1072 $minor >= 2 && $minor <= 6
1073 or die "registry minor version is $minor, only 2 .. 6 are supported\n";
1074
1075 my $bins = substr $hive, 4096;
1076
1077 my $decode_key = sub {
1078 my ($ofs) = @_;
1079
1080 my @res;
1081
1082 my ($sze, $sig) = unpack "\@$ofs l< a2", $bins;
1083
1084 $sze < 0
1085 or die "key node points to unallocated cell\n";
1086
1087 $sig eq "nk"
1088 or die "expected key node at $ofs, got '$sig'\n";
1089
1090 my ($flags, $snum, $sofs, $vnum, $vofs, $knamesze) = unpack "\@$ofs ( \@6 S< \@24 L< x4 L< x4 L< L< \@76 S< )", $bins;
1091
1092 my $kname = unpack "\@$ofs x80 a$knamesze", $bins;
1093
1094 # classnames, security descriptors
1095 #my ($cofs, $xofs, $clen) = unpack "\@$ofs ( \@44 L< L< \@72 S< )", $bins;
1096 #if ($cofs != NO_OFS && $clen) {
1097 # #warn "cofs $cofs+$clen\n";
1098 # xxd substr $bins, $cofs, 16;
1099 #}
1100
1101 $kname = Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $kname
1102 unless $flags & KEY_COMP_NAME;
1103
1104 if ($vnum && $vofs != NO_OFS) {
1105 for ($vofs += 4; $vnum--; $vofs += 4) {
1106 my $kofs = unpack "\@$vofs L<", $bins;
1107
1108 my ($sze, $sig) = unpack "\@$kofs l< a2", $bins;
1109
1110 $sig eq "vk"
1111 or die "key values list contains invalid node (expected vk got '$sig')\n";
1112
1113 my ($nsze, $dsze, $dofs, $type, $flags) = unpack "\@$kofs x4 x2 S< L< L< L< L<", $bins;
1114
1115 my $name = substr $bins, $kofs + 24, $nsze;
1116
1117 $name = Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $name
1118 unless $flags & VALUE_COMP_NAME;
1119
1120 my $data;
1121 if ($dsze & 0x80000000) {
1122 $data = substr $bins, $kofs + 12, $dsze & 0x7;
1123 } elsif ($dsze > 16344 && $minor > 3) { # big data
1124 my ($bsze, $bsig, $bnum, $bofs) = unpack "\@$dofs l< a2 S< L<", $bins;
1125
1126 for ($bofs += 4; $bnum--; $bofs += 4) {
1127 my $dofs = unpack "\@$bofs L<", $bins;
1128 my $dsze = unpack "\@$dofs l<", $bins;
1129 $data .= substr $bins, $dofs + 4, -$dsze - 4;
1130 }
1131 $data = substr $data, 0, $dsze; # cells might be longer than data
1132 } else {
1133 $data = substr $bins, $dofs + 4, $dsze;
1134 }
1135
1136 $type = $regf_typename[$type] if $type < @regf_typename;
1137
1138 $data = ($regf_dec_type{$type} || sub { unpack "H*", shift })
1139 ->($data);
1140
1141 $res[0]{$name} = [$type, $data];
1142 }
1143 }
1144
1145 if ($sofs != NO_OFS) {
1146 my $decode_key = __SUB__;
1147
1148 my $decode_subkeylist = sub {
1149 my ($sofs) = @_;
1150
1151 my ($sze, $sig, $snum) = unpack "\@$sofs l< a2 S<", $bins;
1152
1153 if ($sig eq "ri") { # index root
1154 for (my $lofs = $sofs + 8; $snum--; $lofs += 4) {
1155 __SUB__->(unpack "\@$lofs L<", $bins);
1156 }
1157 } else {
1158 my $inc;
1159
1160 if ($sig eq "li") { # subkey list
1161 $inc = 4;
1162 } elsif ($sig eq "lf" or $sig eq "lh") { # subkey list with name hints or hashes
1163 $inc = 8;
1164 } else {
1165 die "expected subkey list at $sofs, found '$sig'\n";
1166 }
1167
1168 for (my $lofs = $sofs + 8; $snum--; $lofs += $inc) {
1169 my ($name, $data) = $decode_key->(unpack "\@$lofs L<", $bins);
1170 $res[1]{$name} = $data;
1171 }
1172 }
1173 };
1174
1175 $decode_subkeylist->($sofs);
1176 }
1177
1178 ($kname, \@res);
1179 };
1180
1181 my ($rootcell) = unpack "\@36 L<", $hive;
1182
1183 my ($rname, $root) = $decode_key->($rootcell);
1184
1185 [$rname, $root]
1186 }
1187
1188 # return a binary windows FILETIME struct
1189 sub filetime_now {
1190 my ($s, $ms) = Time::HiRes::gettimeofday;
1191
1192 pack "Q<", ($s * 1_000_000 + $ms) * 10
1193 + 116_444_736_000_000_000 # 1970-01-01 00:00:00
1194 }
1195
1196 # encode a registry hive
1197 sub regf_encode($) {
1198 my ($hive) = @_;
1199
1200 my %typeval = map +($regf_typename[$_] => $_), 0 .. $#regf_typename;
1201
1202 # the filetime is apparently used to verify log file validity,
1203 # so by generating a new timestamp the log files *should* automatically
1204 # become invalidated and windows would "self-heal" them.
1205 # (update: has been verified by reverse engineering)
1206 # possibly the fact that the two sequence numbers match might also
1207 # make windows think that the hive is not dirty and ignore logs.
1208 # (update: has been verified by reverse engineering)
1209
1210 my $now = filetime_now;
1211
1212 # we only create a single hbin
1213 my $bins = pack "a4 L< L< x8 a8 x4", "hbin", 0, 0, $now;
1214
1215 # append cell to $bind, return offset
1216 my $cell = sub {
1217 my ($cell) = @_;
1218
1219 my $res = length $bins;
1220
1221 $cell .= "\x00" while 4 != (7 & length $cell); # slow and ugly
1222
1223 $bins .= pack "l<", -(4 + length $cell);
1224 $bins .= $cell;
1225
1226 $res
1227 };
1228
1229 my $sdofs = $cell->($sk); # add a dummy security descriptor
1230 my $sdref = 0; # refcount
1231 substr $bins, $sdofs + 8, 4, pack "L<", $sdofs; # flink
1232 substr $bins, $sdofs + 12, 4, pack "L<", $sdofs; # blink
1233
1234 my $encode_key = sub {
1235 my ($kname, $kdata, $flags) = @_;
1236 my ($values, $subkeys) = @$kdata;
1237
1238 if ($kname =~ /[^\x00-\xff]/) {
1239 $kname = Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $kname;
1240 } else {
1241 $flags |= KEY_COMP_NAME;
1242 }
1243
1244 # encode subkeys
1245
1246 my @snames =
1247 map $_->[1],
1248 sort { $a->[0] cmp $b->[0] }
1249 map [(uc $_), $_],
1250 keys %$subkeys;
1251
1252 # normally, we'd have to encode each name, but we assume one char is at most two utf-16 cp's
1253 my $maxsname = 4 * List::Util::max map length, @snames;
1254
1255 my @sofs = map __SUB__->($_, $subkeys->{$_}, 0), @snames;
1256
1257 # encode values
1258 my $maxvname = 4 * List::Util::max map length, keys %$values;
1259 my @vofs;
1260 my $maxdsze = 0;
1261
1262 while (my ($vname, $v) = each %$values) {
1263 my $flags = 0;
1264
1265 if ($vname =~ /[^\x00-\xff]/) {
1266 $vname = Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $kname;
1267 } else {
1268 $flags |= VALUE_COMP_NAME;
1269 }
1270
1271 my ($type, $data) = @$v;
1272
1273 $data = ($regf_enc_type{$type} || sub { pack "H*", shift })->($data);
1274
1275 my $dsze;
1276 my $dofs;
1277
1278 if (length $data <= 4) {
1279 $dsze = 0x80000000 | length $data;
1280 $dofs = unpack "L<", pack "a4", $data;
1281 } else {
1282 $dsze = length $data;
1283 $dofs = $cell->($data);
1284 }
1285
1286 $type = $typeval{$type} // ($type =~ /^[0-9]+\z/ ? $type : die "cannot encode type '$type'");
1287
1288 push @vofs, $cell->(pack "a2 S< L< L< L< S< x2 a*",
1289 vk => (length $vname), $dsze, $dofs, $type, $flags, $vname);
1290
1291 $maxdsze = $dsze if $maxdsze < $dsze;
1292 }
1293
1294 # encode key
1295
1296 my $slist = @sofs ? $cell->(pack "a2 S< L<*", li => (scalar @sofs), @sofs) : NO_OFS;
1297 my $vlist = @vofs ? $cell->(pack "L<*", @vofs) : NO_OFS;
1298
1299 my $kdata = pack "
1300 a2 S< a8 x4 x4
1301 L< L< L< L< L< L<
1302 L< L< L< L< L< L<
1303 x4 S< S< a*
1304 ",
1305 nk => $flags, $now,
1306 (scalar @sofs), 0, $slist, NO_OFS, (scalar @vofs), $vlist,
1307 $sdofs, NO_OFS, $maxsname, 0, $maxvname, $maxdsze,
1308 length $kname, 0, $kname;
1309 ++$sdref;
1310
1311 my $res = $cell->($kdata);
1312
1313 substr $bins, $_ + 16, 4, pack "L<", $res
1314 for @sofs;
1315
1316 $res
1317 };
1318
1319 my ($rname, $root) = @$hive;
1320
1321 my $rofs = $encode_key->($rname, $root, KEY_HIVE_ENTRY | KEY_NO_DELETE); # 4 = root key
1322
1323 if (my $pad = -(length $bins) & 4095) {
1324 $pad -= 4;
1325 $bins .= pack "l< x$pad", $pad + 4;
1326 }
1327
1328 substr $bins, $sdofs + 16, 4, pack "L<", $sdref; # sd refcount
1329 substr $bins, 8, 4, pack "L<", length $bins;
1330
1331 my $base = pack "
1332 a4 L< L< a8 L< L< L< L<
1333 L< L< L<
1334 a64
1335 x396
1336 ",
1337 regf => 1974, 1974, $now, 1, 3, 0, 1,
1338 $rofs, length $bins, 1,
1339 (Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", "\\pbcdedit.reg");
1340
1341 my $chksum = List::Util::reduce { $a ^ $b } unpack "L<*", $base;
1342 $chksum = 0xfffffffe if $chksum == 0xffffffff;
1343 $chksum = 1 if $chksum == 0;
1344
1345 $base .= pack "L<", $chksum;
1346
1347 $base = pack "a* \@4095 x1", $base;
1348
1349 $base . $bins
1350 }
1351
1352 # load and parse registry from file
1353 sub regf_load($) {
1354 my ($path) = @_;
1355
1356 regf_decode file_load $path
1357 }
1358
1359 # encode and save registry to file
1360 sub regf_save($$;$) {
1361 my ($path, $hive, $stat) = @_;
1362
1363 $hive = regf_encode $hive;
1364
1365 file_save $path, $hive, $stat;
1366 }
1367
1368 #############################################################################
1369 # bcd stuff
1370
1371 # human-readable aliases for GUID object identifiers
1372 our %bcd_objects = (
1373 '{0ce4991b-e6b3-4b16-b23c-5e0d9250e5d9}' => '{emssettings}',
1374 '{1afa9c49-16ab-4a5c-4a90-212802da9460}' => '{resumeloadersettings}',
1375 '{1cae1eb7-a0df-4d4d-9851-4860e34ef535}' => '{default}',
1376 '{313e8eed-7098-4586-a9bf-309c61f8d449}' => '{kerneldbgsettings}',
1377 '{4636856e-540f-4170-a130-a84776f4c654}' => '{dbgsettings}',
1378 '{466f5a88-0af2-4f76-9038-095b170dc21c}' => '{ntldr}',
1379 '{5189b25c-5558-4bf2-bca4-289b11bd29e2}' => '{badmemory}',
1380 '{6efb52bf-1766-41db-a6b3-0ee5eff72bd7}' => '{bootloadersettings}',
1381 '{7254a080-1510-4e85-ac0f-e7fb3d444736}' => '{ssetupefi}',
1382 '{7ea2e1ac-2e61-4728-aaa3-896d9d0a9f0e}' => '{globalsettings}',
1383 '{7ff607e0-4395-11db-b0de-0800200c9a66}' => '{hypervisorsettings}',
1384 '{9dea862c-5cdd-4e70-acc1-f32b344d4795}' => '{bootmgr}',
1385 '{a1943bbc-ea85-487c-97c7-c9ede908a38a}' => '{ostargettemplatepcat}',
1386 '{a5a30fa2-3d06-4e9f-b5f4-a01df9d1fcba}' => '{fwbootmgr}',
1387 '{ae5534e0-a924-466c-b836-758539a3ee3a}' => '{ramdiskoptions}',
1388 '{b012b84d-c47c-4ed5-b722-c0c42163e569}' => '{ostargettemplateefi}',
1389 '{b2721d73-1db4-4c62-bf78-c548a880142d}' => '{memdiag}',
1390 '{cbd971bf-b7b8-4885-951a-fa03044f5d71}' => '{setuppcat}',
1391 '{fa926493-6f1c-4193-a414-58f0b2456d1e}' => '{current}',
1392 );
1393
1394 # default types
1395 our %bcd_object_types = (
1396 '{fwbootmgr}' => 0x10100001,
1397 '{bootmgr}' => 0x10100002,
1398 '{memdiag}' => 0x10200005,
1399 '{ntldr}' => 0x10300006,
1400 '{badmemory}' => 0x20100000,
1401 '{dbgsettings}' => 0x20100000,
1402 '{emssettings}' => 0x20100000,
1403 '{globalsettings}' => 0x20100000,
1404 '{bootloadersettings}' => 0x20200003,
1405 '{hypervisorsettings}' => 0x20200003,
1406 '{kerneldbgsettings}' => 0x20200003,
1407 '{resumeloadersettings}' => 0x20200004,
1408 '{ramdiskoptions}' => 0x30000000,
1409 );
1410
1411 # object types
1412 our %bcd_types = (
1413 0x10100001 => 'application::fwbootmgr',
1414 0x10100002 => 'application::bootmgr',
1415 0x10200003 => 'application::osloader',
1416 0x10200004 => 'application::resume',
1417 0x10100005 => 'application::memdiag',
1418 0x10100006 => 'application::ntldr',
1419 0x10100007 => 'application::setupldr',
1420 0x10400008 => 'application::bootsector',
1421 0x10400009 => 'application::startup',
1422 0x1020000a => 'application::bootapp',
1423 0x20100000 => 'settings',
1424 0x20200001 => 'inherit::fwbootmgr',
1425 0x20200002 => 'inherit::bootmgr',
1426 0x20200003 => 'inherit::osloader',
1427 0x20200004 => 'inherit::resume',
1428 0x20200005 => 'inherit::memdiag',
1429 0x20200006 => 'inherit::ntldr',
1430 0x20200007 => 'inherit::setupldr',
1431 0x20200008 => 'inherit::bootsector',
1432 0x20200009 => 'inherit::startup',
1433 0x20300000 => 'inherit::device',
1434 0x30000000 => 'device',
1435 );
1436
1437 our %rbcd_objects = reverse %bcd_objects;
1438
1439 our $RE_GUID = qr<([0-9a-f]{8})-([0-9a-f]{4})-([0-9a-f]{4})-([0-9a-f]{4})-([0-9a-f]{12})>i;
1440
1441 sub dec_guid($) {
1442 my ($p1, $p2, $p3, $p4, $p5) = unpack "VvvH4H12", shift;
1443 sprintf "%08x-%04x-%04x-%s-%s", $p1, $p2, $p3, $p4, $p5;
1444 }
1445
1446 sub enc_guid($) {
1447 $_[0] =~ /^$RE_GUID\z/o
1448 or return;
1449
1450 pack "VvvH4H12", hex $1, hex $2, hex $3, $4, $5
1451 }
1452
1453 # "wguid" are guids wrapped in curly braces {...} also supporting aliases
1454 sub dec_wguid($) {
1455 my $guid = "{" . (dec_guid shift) . "}";
1456
1457 $bcd_objects{$guid} // $guid
1458 }
1459
1460 sub enc_wguid($) {
1461 my ($guid) = @_;
1462
1463 if (my $alias = $rbcd_objects{$guid}) {
1464 $guid = $alias;
1465 }
1466
1467 $guid =~ /^\{($RE_GUID)\}\z/o
1468 or return;
1469
1470 enc_guid $1
1471 }
1472
1473 sub BCDE_CLASS () { 0xf0000000 }
1474 sub BCDE_CLASS_LIBRARY () { 0x10000000 }
1475 sub BCDE_CLASS_APPLICATION () { 0x20000000 }
1476 sub BCDE_CLASS_DEVICE () { 0x30000000 }
1477 sub BCDE_CLASS_TEMPLATE () { 0x40000000 }
1478
1479 sub BCDE_FORMAT () { 0x0f000000 }
1480 sub BCDE_FORMAT_DEVICE () { 0x01000000 }
1481 sub BCDE_FORMAT_STRING () { 0x02000000 }
1482 sub BCDE_FORMAT_GUID () { 0x03000000 }
1483 sub BCDE_FORMAT_GUID_LIST () { 0x04000000 }
1484 sub BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER () { 0x05000000 }
1485 sub BCDE_FORMAT_BOOLEAN () { 0x06000000 }
1486 sub BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER_LIST () { 0x07000000 }
1487
1488 sub enc_integer($) {
1489 my $value = shift;
1490 $value = oct $value if $value =~ /^0[bBxX]/;
1491 unpack "H*", pack "Q<", $value
1492 }
1493
1494 sub enc_device($$);
1495 sub dec_device($$);
1496
1497 our %bcde_dec = (
1498 BCDE_FORMAT_DEVICE , \&dec_device,
1499 # # for round-trip verification
1500 # BCDE_FORMAT_DEVICE , sub {
1501 # my $dev = dec_device $_[0];
1502 # $_[0] eq enc_device $dev
1503 # or die "bcd device decoding does not round trip for $_[0]\n";
1504 # $dev
1505 # },
1506 BCDE_FORMAT_STRING , sub { shift },
1507 BCDE_FORMAT_GUID , sub { dec_wguid enc_wguid shift },
1508 BCDE_FORMAT_GUID_LIST , sub { join " ", map dec_wguid enc_wguid $_, @{+shift} },
1509 BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER , sub { unpack "Q", pack "a8", pack "H*", shift }, # integer might be 4 or 8 bytes - caused by ms coding bugs
1510 BCDE_FORMAT_BOOLEAN , sub { shift eq "00" ? 0 : 1 },
1511 BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER_LIST, sub { join " ", unpack "Q*", pack "H*", shift }, # not sure if this can be 4 bytes
1512 );
1513
1514 our %bcde_enc = (
1515 BCDE_FORMAT_DEVICE , sub { binary => enc_device $_[0], $_[1] },
1516 BCDE_FORMAT_STRING , sub { sz => shift },
1517 BCDE_FORMAT_GUID , sub { sz => "{" . (dec_guid enc_wguid shift) . "}" },
1518 BCDE_FORMAT_GUID_LIST , sub { multi_sz => [map "{" . (dec_guid enc_wguid $_) . "}", split /\s+/, shift ] },
1519 BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER , sub { binary => enc_integer shift },
1520 BCDE_FORMAT_BOOLEAN , sub { binary => shift ? "01" : "00" },
1521 BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER_LIST, sub { binary => join "", map enc_integer $_, split /\s+/, shift },
1522 );
1523
1524 # BCD Elements
1525 our %bcde_byclass = (
1526 any => {
1527 0x11000001 => 'device',
1528 0x12000002 => 'path',
1529 0x12000004 => 'description',
1530 0x12000005 => 'locale',
1531 0x14000006 => 'inherit',
1532 0x15000007 => 'truncatememory',
1533 0x14000008 => 'recoverysequence',
1534 0x16000009 => 'recoveryenabled',
1535 0x1700000a => 'badmemorylist',
1536 0x1600000b => 'badmemoryaccess',
1537 0x1500000c => 'firstmegabytepolicy',
1538 0x1500000d => 'relocatephysical',
1539 0x1500000e => 'avoidlowmemory',
1540 0x1600000f => 'traditionalkseg',
1541 0x16000010 => 'bootdebug',
1542 0x15000011 => 'debugtype',
1543 0x15000012 => 'debugaddress',
1544 0x15000013 => 'debugport',
1545 0x15000014 => 'baudrate',
1546 0x15000015 => 'channel',
1547 0x12000016 => 'targetname',
1548 0x16000017 => 'noumex',
1549 0x15000018 => 'debugstart',
1550 0x12000019 => 'busparams',
1551 0x1500001a => 'hostip',
1552 0x1500001b => 'port',
1553 0x1600001c => 'dhcp',
1554 0x1200001d => 'key',
1555 0x1600001e => 'vm',
1556 0x16000020 => 'bootems',
1557 0x15000022 => 'emsport',
1558 0x15000023 => 'emsbaudrate',
1559 0x12000030 => 'loadoptions',
1560 0x16000040 => 'advancedoptions',
1561 0x16000041 => 'optionsedit',
1562 0x15000042 => 'keyringaddress',
1563 0x11000043 => 'bootstatdevice',
1564 0x12000044 => 'bootstatfilepath',
1565 0x16000045 => 'preservebootstat',
1566 0x16000046 => 'graphicsmodedisabled',
1567 0x15000047 => 'configaccesspolicy',
1568 0x16000048 => 'nointegritychecks',
1569 0x16000049 => 'testsigning',
1570 0x1200004a => 'fontpath',
1571 0x1500004b => 'integrityservices',
1572 0x1500004c => 'volumebandid',
1573 0x16000050 => 'extendedinput',
1574 0x15000051 => 'initialconsoleinput',
1575 0x15000052 => 'graphicsresolution',
1576 0x16000053 => 'restartonfailure',
1577 0x16000054 => 'highestmode',
1578 0x16000060 => 'isolatedcontext',
1579 0x15000065 => 'displaymessage',
1580 0x15000066 => 'displaymessageoverride',
1581 0x16000068 => 'nobootuxtext',
1582 0x16000069 => 'nobootuxprogress',
1583 0x1600006a => 'nobootuxfade',
1584 0x1600006b => 'bootuxreservepooldebug',
1585 0x1600006c => 'bootuxdisabled',
1586 0x1500006d => 'bootuxfadeframes',
1587 0x1600006e => 'bootuxdumpstats',
1588 0x1600006f => 'bootuxshowstats',
1589 0x16000071 => 'multibootsystem',
1590 0x16000072 => 'nokeyboard',
1591 0x15000073 => 'aliaswindowskey',
1592 0x16000074 => 'bootshutdowndisabled',
1593 0x15000075 => 'performancefrequency',
1594 0x15000076 => 'securebootrawpolicy',
1595 0x17000077 => 'allowedinmemorysettings',
1596 0x15000079 => 'bootuxtransitiontime',
1597 0x1600007a => 'mobilegraphics',
1598 0x1600007b => 'forcefipscrypto',
1599 0x1500007d => 'booterrorux',
1600 0x1600007e => 'flightsigning',
1601 0x1500007f => 'measuredbootlogformat',
1602 0x15000080 => 'displayrotation',
1603 0x15000081 => 'logcontrol',
1604 0x16000082 => 'nofirmwaresync',
1605 0x11000084 => 'windowssyspart',
1606 0x16000087 => 'numlock',
1607 0x26000202 => 'skipffumode',
1608 0x26000203 => 'forceffumode',
1609 0x25000510 => 'chargethreshold',
1610 0x26000512 => 'offmodecharging',
1611 0x25000aaa => 'bootflow',
1612 0x45000001 => 'devicetype',
1613 0x42000002 => 'applicationrelativepath',
1614 0x42000003 => 'ramdiskdevicerelativepath',
1615 0x46000004 => 'omitosloaderelements',
1616 0x47000006 => 'elementstomigrate',
1617 0x46000010 => 'recoveryos',
1618 },
1619 bootapp => {
1620 0x26000145 => 'enablebootdebugpolicy',
1621 0x26000146 => 'enablebootorderclean',
1622 0x26000147 => 'enabledeviceid',
1623 0x26000148 => 'enableffuloader',
1624 0x26000149 => 'enableiuloader',
1625 0x2600014a => 'enablemassstorage',
1626 0x2600014b => 'enablerpmbprovisioning',
1627 0x2600014c => 'enablesecurebootpolicy',
1628 0x2600014d => 'enablestartcharge',
1629 0x2600014e => 'enableresettpm',
1630 },
1631 bootmgr => {
1632 0x24000001 => 'displayorder',
1633 0x24000002 => 'bootsequence',
1634 0x23000003 => 'default',
1635 0x25000004 => 'timeout',
1636 0x26000005 => 'resume',
1637 0x23000006 => 'resumeobject',
1638 0x24000007 => 'startupsequence',
1639 0x24000010 => 'toolsdisplayorder',
1640 0x26000020 => 'displaybootmenu',
1641 0x26000021 => 'noerrordisplay',
1642 0x21000022 => 'bcddevice',
1643 0x22000023 => 'bcdfilepath',
1644 0x26000024 => 'hormenabled',
1645 0x26000025 => 'hiberboot',
1646 0x22000026 => 'passwordoverride',
1647 0x22000027 => 'pinpassphraseoverride',
1648 0x26000028 => 'processcustomactionsfirst',
1649 0x27000030 => 'customactions',
1650 0x26000031 => 'persistbootsequence',
1651 0x26000032 => 'skipstartupsequence',
1652 0x22000040 => 'fverecoveryurl',
1653 0x22000041 => 'fverecoverymessage',
1654 },
1655 device => {
1656 0x35000001 => 'ramdiskimageoffset',
1657 0x35000002 => 'ramdisktftpclientport',
1658 0x31000003 => 'ramdisksdidevice',
1659 0x32000004 => 'ramdisksdipath',
1660 0x35000005 => 'ramdiskimagelength',
1661 0x36000006 => 'exportascd',
1662 0x35000007 => 'ramdisktftpblocksize',
1663 0x35000008 => 'ramdisktftpwindowsize',
1664 0x36000009 => 'ramdiskmcenabled',
1665 0x3600000a => 'ramdiskmctftpfallback',
1666 0x3600000b => 'ramdisktftpvarwindow',
1667 },
1668 memdiag => {
1669 0x25000001 => 'passcount',
1670 0x25000002 => 'testmix',
1671 0x25000003 => 'failurecount',
1672 0x26000003 => 'cacheenable',
1673 0x25000004 => 'testtofail',
1674 0x26000004 => 'failuresenabled',
1675 0x25000005 => 'stridefailcount',
1676 0x26000005 => 'cacheenable',
1677 0x25000006 => 'invcfailcount',
1678 0x25000007 => 'matsfailcount',
1679 0x25000008 => 'randfailcount',
1680 0x25000009 => 'chckrfailcount',
1681 },
1682 ntldr => {
1683 0x22000001 => 'bpbstring',
1684 },
1685 osloader => {
1686 0x21000001 => 'osdevice',
1687 0x22000002 => 'systemroot',
1688 0x23000003 => 'resumeobject',
1689 0x26000004 => 'stampdisks',
1690 0x26000010 => 'detecthal',
1691 0x22000011 => 'kernel',
1692 0x22000012 => 'hal',
1693 0x22000013 => 'dbgtransport',
1694 0x25000020 => 'nx',
1695 0x25000021 => 'pae',
1696 0x26000022 => 'winpe',
1697 0x26000024 => 'nocrashautoreboot',
1698 0x26000025 => 'lastknowngood',
1699 0x26000026 => 'oslnointegritychecks',
1700 0x26000027 => 'osltestsigning',
1701 0x26000030 => 'nolowmem',
1702 0x25000031 => 'removememory',
1703 0x25000032 => 'increaseuserva',
1704 0x25000033 => 'perfmem',
1705 0x26000040 => 'vga',
1706 0x26000041 => 'quietboot',
1707 0x26000042 => 'novesa',
1708 0x26000043 => 'novga',
1709 0x25000050 => 'clustermodeaddressing',
1710 0x26000051 => 'usephysicaldestination',
1711 0x25000052 => 'restrictapiccluster',
1712 0x22000053 => 'evstore',
1713 0x26000054 => 'uselegacyapicmode',
1714 0x26000060 => 'onecpu',
1715 0x25000061 => 'numproc',
1716 0x26000062 => 'maxproc',
1717 0x25000063 => 'configflags',
1718 0x26000064 => 'maxgroup',
1719 0x26000065 => 'groupaware',
1720 0x25000066 => 'groupsize',
1721 0x26000070 => 'usefirmwarepcisettings',
1722 0x25000071 => 'msi',
1723 0x25000072 => 'pciexpress',
1724 0x25000080 => 'safeboot',
1725 0x26000081 => 'safebootalternateshell',
1726 0x26000090 => 'bootlog',
1727 0x26000091 => 'sos',
1728 0x260000a0 => 'debug',
1729 0x260000a1 => 'halbreakpoint',
1730 0x260000a2 => 'useplatformclock',
1731 0x260000a3 => 'forcelegacyplatform',
1732 0x260000a4 => 'useplatformtick',
1733 0x260000a5 => 'disabledynamictick',
1734 0x250000a6 => 'tscsyncpolicy',
1735 0x260000b0 => 'ems',
1736 0x250000c0 => 'forcefailure',
1737 0x250000c1 => 'driverloadfailurepolicy',
1738 0x250000c2 => 'bootmenupolicy',
1739 0x260000c3 => 'onetimeadvancedoptions',
1740 0x260000c4 => 'onetimeoptionsedit',
1741 0x250000e0 => 'bootstatuspolicy',
1742 0x260000e1 => 'disableelamdrivers',
1743 0x250000f0 => 'hypervisorlaunchtype',
1744 0x220000f1 => 'hypervisorpath',
1745 0x260000f2 => 'hypervisordebug',
1746 0x250000f3 => 'hypervisordebugtype',
1747 0x250000f4 => 'hypervisordebugport',
1748 0x250000f5 => 'hypervisorbaudrate',
1749 0x250000f6 => 'hypervisorchannel',
1750 0x250000f7 => 'bootux',
1751 0x260000f8 => 'hypervisordisableslat',
1752 0x220000f9 => 'hypervisorbusparams',
1753 0x250000fa => 'hypervisornumproc',
1754 0x250000fb => 'hypervisorrootprocpernode',
1755 0x260000fc => 'hypervisoruselargevtlb',
1756 0x250000fd => 'hypervisorhostip',
1757 0x250000fe => 'hypervisorhostport',
1758 0x250000ff => 'hypervisordebugpages',
1759 0x25000100 => 'tpmbootentropy',
1760 0x22000110 => 'hypervisorusekey',
1761 0x22000112 => 'hypervisorproductskutype',
1762 0x25000113 => 'hypervisorrootproc',
1763 0x26000114 => 'hypervisordhcp',
1764 0x25000115 => 'hypervisoriommupolicy',
1765 0x26000116 => 'hypervisorusevapic',
1766 0x22000117 => 'hypervisorloadoptions',
1767 0x25000118 => 'hypervisormsrfilterpolicy',
1768 0x25000119 => 'hypervisormmionxpolicy',
1769 0x2500011a => 'hypervisorschedulertype',
1770 0x25000120 => 'xsavepolicy',
1771 0x25000121 => 'xsaveaddfeature0',
1772 0x25000122 => 'xsaveaddfeature1',
1773 0x25000123 => 'xsaveaddfeature2',
1774 0x25000124 => 'xsaveaddfeature3',
1775 0x25000125 => 'xsaveaddfeature4',
1776 0x25000126 => 'xsaveaddfeature5',
1777 0x25000127 => 'xsaveaddfeature6',
1778 0x25000128 => 'xsaveaddfeature7',
1779 0x25000129 => 'xsaveremovefeature',
1780 0x2500012a => 'xsaveprocessorsmask',
1781 0x2500012b => 'xsavedisable',
1782 0x2500012c => 'kerneldebugtype',
1783 0x2200012d => 'kernelbusparams',
1784 0x2500012e => 'kerneldebugaddress',
1785 0x2500012f => 'kerneldebugport',
1786 0x25000130 => 'claimedtpmcounter',
1787 0x25000131 => 'kernelchannel',
1788 0x22000132 => 'kerneltargetname',
1789 0x25000133 => 'kernelhostip',
1790 0x25000134 => 'kernelport',
1791 0x26000135 => 'kerneldhcp',
1792 0x22000136 => 'kernelkey',
1793 0x22000137 => 'imchivename',
1794 0x21000138 => 'imcdevice',
1795 0x25000139 => 'kernelbaudrate',
1796 0x22000140 => 'mfgmode',
1797 0x26000141 => 'event',
1798 0x25000142 => 'vsmlaunchtype',
1799 0x25000144 => 'hypervisorenforcedcodeintegrity',
1800 0x21000150 => 'systemdatadevice',
1801 0x21000151 => 'osarcdevice',
1802 0x21000153 => 'osdatadevice',
1803 0x21000154 => 'bspdevice',
1804 0x21000155 => 'bspfilepath',
1805 },
1806 resume => {
1807 0x21000001 => 'filedevice',
1808 0x22000002 => 'filepath',
1809 0x26000003 => 'customsettings',
1810 0x26000004 => 'pae',
1811 0x21000005 => 'associatedosdevice',
1812 0x26000006 => 'debugoptionenabled',
1813 0x25000007 => 'bootux',
1814 0x25000008 => 'bootmenupolicy',
1815 0x26000024 => 'hormenabled',
1816 },
1817 startup => {
1818 0x26000001 => 'pxesoftreboot',
1819 0x22000002 => 'applicationname',
1820 },
1821 );
1822
1823 # mask, value => class
1824 our @bcde_typeclass = (
1825 [0x00000000, 0x00000000, 'any'],
1826 [0xf00fffff, 0x1000000a, 'bootapp'],
1827 [0xf0ffffff, 0x2020000a, 'bootapp'],
1828 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000001, 'bootmgr'],
1829 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000002, 'bootmgr'],
1830 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200001, 'bootmgr'],
1831 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200002, 'bootmgr'],
1832 [0xf0f00000, 0x20300000, 'device'],
1833 [0xf0000000, 0x30000000, 'device'],
1834 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000005, 'memdiag'],
1835 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200005, 'memdiag'],
1836 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000006, 'ntldr'],
1837 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000007, 'ntldr'],
1838 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200006, 'ntldr'],
1839 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200007, 'ntldr'],
1840 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000003, 'osloader'],
1841 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200003, 'osloader'],
1842 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000004, 'resume'],
1843 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200004, 'resume'],
1844 [0xf00fffff, 0x10000009, 'startup'],
1845 [0xf0ffffff, 0x20200009, 'startup'],
1846 );
1847
1848 our %rbcde_byclass;
1849
1850 while (my ($k, $v) = each %bcde_byclass) {
1851 $rbcde_byclass{$k} = { reverse %$v };
1852 }
1853
1854 # decodes (numerical elem, type) to name
1855 sub dec_bcde_id($$) {
1856 for my $class (@bcde_typeclass) {
1857 if (($_[1] & $class->[0]) == $class->[1]) {
1858 if (my $id = $bcde_byclass{$class->[2]}{$_[0]}) {
1859 return $id;
1860 }
1861 }
1862 }
1863
1864 sprintf "custom:%08x", $_[0]
1865 }
1866
1867 # encodes (elem as name, type)
1868 sub enc_bcde_id($$) {
1869 $_[0] =~ /^custom:(?:0x)?([0-9a-fA-F]{8}$)/
1870 and return hex $1;
1871
1872 for my $class (@bcde_typeclass) {
1873 if (($_[1] & $class->[0]) == $class->[1]) {
1874 if (my $value = $rbcde_byclass{$class->[2]}{$_[0]}) {
1875 return $value;
1876 }
1877 }
1878 }
1879
1880 undef
1881 }
1882
1883 # decode/encode bcd device element - the horror, no documentaion
1884 # whatsoever, supercomplex, superinconsistent.
1885
1886 our @dev_type = qw(block type1 legacypartition serial udp boot partition vmbus locate);
1887 our @block_type = qw(harddisk floppy cdrom ramdisk type4 file vhd);
1888 our @part_type = qw(gpt mbr raw);
1889
1890 our $NULL_DEVICE = "\x00" x 16;
1891
1892 # biggest bitch to decode, ever
1893 # this decodes a device portion after the GUID
1894 sub dec_device_($$);
1895 sub dec_device_($$) {
1896 my ($device, $type) = @_;
1897
1898 my $res;
1899
1900 my ($type, $flags, $length, $pad) = unpack "VVVV", substr $device, 0, 4 * 4, "";
1901
1902 $pad == 0
1903 or die "non-zero reserved field in device descriptor\n";
1904
1905 if ($length == 0 && $type == 0 && $flags == 0) {
1906 return ("null", $device);
1907 }
1908
1909 $length >= 16
1910 or die "device element size too small ($length)\n";
1911
1912 $type = $dev_type[$type] // die "$type: unknown device type\n";
1913 #d# warn "t<$type,$flags,$length,$pad>\n";#d#
1914
1915 $res .= $type;
1916 $res .= sprintf "<%x>", $flags if $flags;
1917
1918 my $tail = substr $device, $length - 4 * 4, 1e9, "";
1919
1920 $length == 4 * 4 + length $device
1921 or die "device length mismatch ($length != " . (16 + length $device) . ")\n";
1922
1923 my $dec_path = sub {
1924 my ($path, $error) = @_;
1925
1926 $path =~ /^((?:..)*)\x00\x00\z/s
1927 or die "$error\n";
1928
1929 $path = Encode::decode "UTF-16LE", $1;
1930
1931 $path
1932 };
1933
1934 if ($type eq "partition" or $type eq "legacypartition") {
1935 my $partdata = substr $device, 0, 16, "";
1936 my ($blocktype, $parttype) = unpack "VV", substr $device, 0, 4 * 2, "";
1937
1938 $blocktype = $block_type[$blocktype] // die "unknown block device type '$blocktype'\n";
1939 $parttype = $part_type[$parttype] // die "unknown partition type\n";
1940
1941 my $diskid = substr $device, 0, 16, "";
1942
1943 $diskid = $parttype eq "gpt"
1944 ? dec_guid substr $diskid, 0, 16
1945 : sprintf "%08x", unpack "V", $diskid;
1946
1947 my $partid = $parttype eq "gpt" ? dec_guid $partdata
1948 : $type eq "partition" ? unpack "Q<", $partdata # byte offset to partition start
1949 : unpack "L<", $partdata; # partition number, one-based
1950
1951 (my $parent, $device) = dec_device_ $device, $type;
1952
1953 $res .= "=";
1954 $res .= "<$parent>";
1955 $res .= ",$blocktype,$parttype,$diskid,$partid";
1956
1957 # PartitionType (gpt, mbr, raw)
1958 # guid | partsig | disknumber
1959
1960 } elsif ($type eq "boot") {
1961 $device =~ s/^\x00{56}\z//
1962 or die "boot device type with extra data not supported\n";
1963
1964 } elsif ($type eq "block") {
1965 my $blocktype = unpack "V", substr $device, 0, 4, "";
1966
1967 $blocktype = $block_type[$blocktype] // die "unknown block device type '$blocktype'\n";
1968
1969 # decode a "file path" structure
1970 my $dec_file = sub {
1971 my ($fver, $flen, $ftype) = unpack "VVV", substr $device, 0, 4 * 3, "";
1972
1973 my $path = substr $device, 0, $flen - 12, "";
1974
1975 $fver == 1
1976 or die "unsupported file descriptor version '$fver'\n";
1977
1978 $ftype == 5
1979 or die "unsupported file descriptor path type '$type'\n";
1980
1981 (my $parent, $path) = dec_device_ $path, $type;
1982
1983 $path = $dec_path->($path, "file device without path");
1984
1985 ($parent, $path)
1986 };
1987
1988 if ($blocktype eq "file") {
1989 my ($parent, $path) = $dec_file->();
1990
1991 $res .= "=file,<$parent>,$path";
1992
1993 } elsif ($blocktype eq "vhd") {
1994 $device =~ s/^\x00{20}//s
1995 or die "virtualdisk has non-zero fields I don't understand\n";
1996
1997 (my $parent, $device) = dec_device_ $device, $type;
1998
1999 $res .= "=vhd,<$parent>";
2000
2001 } elsif ($blocktype eq "ramdisk") {
2002 my ($base, $size, $offset) = unpack "Q< Q< L<", substr $device, 0, 8 + 8 + 4, "";
2003 my ($subdev, $path) = $dec_file->();
2004
2005 $res .= "=ramdisk,<$subdev>,$base,$size,$offset,$path";
2006
2007 } else {
2008 die "unsupported block type '$blocktype'\n";
2009 }
2010
2011 } elsif ($type eq "locate") {
2012 # mode, bcde_id, unknown, string
2013 # we assume locate has _either_ an element id _or_ a path, but not both
2014
2015 my ($mode, $elem, $parent) = unpack "VVV", substr $device, 0, 4 * 3, "";
2016
2017 if ($parent) {
2018 # not sure why this is an offset - it must come after the path
2019 $parent = substr $device, $parent - 4 * 3 - 4 * 4, 1e9, "";
2020 ($parent, my $tail) = dec_device_ $parent, $type;
2021 0 == length $tail
2022 or die "trailing data after locate device parent\n";
2023 } else {
2024 $parent = "null";
2025 }
2026
2027 my $path = $device; $device = "";
2028 $path = $dec_path->($path, "device locate mode without path");
2029
2030 $res .= "=<$parent>,";
2031
2032 if ($mode == 0) { # "Element"
2033 !length $path
2034 or die "device locate mode 0 having non-empty path ($mode, $elem, $path)\n";
2035
2036 $elem = dec_bcde_id $elem, $type;
2037 $res .= "element,$elem";
2038
2039 } elsif ($mode == 1) { # "String"
2040 !$elem
2041 or die "device locate mode 1 having non-zero element\n";
2042
2043 $res .= "path,$path";
2044 } else {
2045 # mode 2 maybe called "ElementChild" with element and parent device? example needed
2046 die "device locate mode '$mode' not supported\n";
2047 }
2048
2049 } elsif ($type eq "vmbus") {
2050 my $type = dec_guid substr $device, 0, 16, "";
2051 my $instance = dec_guid substr $device, 0, 16, "";
2052
2053 $device =~ s/^\x00{24}\z//
2054 or die "vmbus has non-zero fields I don't understand\n";
2055
2056 $res .= "=$type,$instance";
2057
2058 } else {
2059 die "unsupported device type '$type'\n";
2060 }
2061
2062 warn "unexpected trailing device data($res), " . unpack "H*",$device
2063 if length $device;
2064 #length $device
2065 # and die "unexpected trailing device data\n";
2066
2067 ($res, $tail)
2068 }
2069
2070 # decode a full binary BCD device descriptor
2071 sub dec_device($$) {
2072 my ($device, $type) = @_;
2073
2074 $device = pack "H*", $device;
2075
2076 my $guid = dec_guid substr $device, 0, 16, "";
2077 $guid = $guid eq "00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"
2078 ? "" : "{$guid}";
2079
2080 eval {
2081 my ($dev, $tail) = dec_device_ $device, $type;
2082
2083 $tail eq ""
2084 or die "unsupported trailing data after device descriptor\n";
2085
2086 "$guid$dev"
2087 # } // scalar ((warn $@), "$guid$fallback")
2088 } // ($guid . "binary=" . unpack "H*", $device)
2089 }
2090
2091 sub indexof($@) {
2092 my $value = shift;
2093
2094 for (0 .. $#_) {
2095 $value eq $_[$_]
2096 and return $_;
2097 }
2098
2099 undef
2100 }
2101
2102 # encode the device portion after the GUID
2103 sub enc_device_($$);
2104 sub enc_device_($$) {
2105 my ($device, $type) = @_;
2106
2107 my $enc_path = sub {
2108 my $path = shift;
2109 $path =~ s/\//\\/g;
2110 (Encode::encode "UTF-16LE", $path) . "\x00\x00"
2111 };
2112
2113 my $enc_file = sub {
2114 my ($parent, $path) = @_; # parent and path must already be encoded
2115
2116 $path = $parent . $path;
2117
2118 # fver 1, ftype 5
2119 pack "VVVa*", 1, 12 + length $path, 5, $path
2120 };
2121
2122 my $parse_path = sub {
2123 s/^([\/\\][^<>"|?*\x00-\x1f]*)//
2124 or die "$_: invalid path\n";
2125
2126 $enc_path->($1)
2127 };
2128
2129 my $parse_parent = sub {
2130 my $parent;
2131
2132 if (s/^<//) {
2133 ($parent, $_) = enc_device_ $_, $type;
2134 s/^>//
2135 or die "$device: syntax error: parent device not followed by '>'\n";
2136 } else {
2137 $parent = $NULL_DEVICE;
2138 }
2139
2140 $parent
2141 };
2142
2143 for ($device) {
2144 s/^([a-z]+)//
2145 or die "$_: device does not start with type string\n";
2146
2147 my $type = $1;
2148 my $flags = s/^<([0-9a-fA-F]+)>// ? hex $1 : 0;
2149 my $payload;
2150
2151 if ($type eq "binary") {
2152 s/^=([0-9a-fA-F]+)//
2153 or die "binary type must have a hex string argument\n";
2154
2155 $payload = pack "H*", $1;
2156
2157 } elsif ($type eq "null") {
2158 return ($NULL_DEVICE, $_);
2159
2160 } elsif ($type eq "boot") {
2161 $payload = "\x00" x 56;
2162
2163 } elsif ($type eq "partition" or $type eq "legacypartition") {
2164 s/^=//
2165 or die "$_: missing '=' after $type\n";
2166
2167 my $parent = $parse_parent->();
2168
2169 s/^,//
2170 or die "$_: comma missing after partition parent device\n";
2171
2172 s/^([a-z]+),//
2173 or die "$_: partition does not start with block type (e.g. hd or vhd)\n";
2174 my $blocktype = $1;
2175
2176 s/^([a-z]+),//
2177 or die "$_: partition block type not followed by partiton type\n";
2178 my $parttype = $1;
2179
2180 my ($partdata, $diskdata);
2181
2182 if ($parttype eq "mbr") {
2183 s/^([0-9a-f]{8}),//i
2184 or die "$_: partition mbr disk id malformed (must be e.g. 1234abcd)\n";
2185 $diskdata = pack "Vx12", hex $1;
2186
2187 s/^([0-9]+)//
2188 or die "$_: partition number or offset is missing or malformed (must be decimal)\n";
2189
2190 # the following works for both 64 bit offset and 32 bit partno
2191 $partdata = pack "Q< x8", $1;
2192
2193 } elsif ($parttype eq "gpt") {
2194 s/^($RE_GUID),//
2195 or die "$_: partition disk guid missing or malformed\n";
2196 $diskdata = enc_guid $1;
2197
2198 s/^($RE_GUID)//
2199 or die "$_: partition guid missing or malformed\n";
2200 $partdata = enc_guid $1;
2201
2202 } elsif ($parttype eq "raw") {
2203 s/^([0-9]+)//
2204 or die "$_: partition disk number missing or malformed (must be decimal)\n";
2205
2206 $partdata = pack "L< x12", $1;
2207
2208 } else {
2209 die "$parttype: partition type not supported\n";
2210 }
2211
2212 $payload = pack "a16 L< L< a16 a*",
2213 $partdata,
2214 (indexof $blocktype, @block_type),
2215 (indexof $parttype, @part_type),
2216 $diskdata,
2217 $parent;
2218
2219 } elsif ($type eq "locate") {
2220 s/^=//
2221 or die "$_: missing '=' after $type\n";
2222
2223 my ($mode, $elem, $path);
2224
2225 my $parent = $parse_parent->();
2226
2227 s/^,//
2228 or die "$_: missing comma after locate parent device\n";
2229
2230 if (s/^element,//) {
2231 s/^([0-9a-z:]+)//i
2232 or die "$_ locate element must be either name or 8-digit hex id\n";
2233 $elem = enc_bcde_id $1, $type;
2234 $mode = 0;
2235 $path = $enc_path->("");
2236
2237 } elsif (s/^path,//) {
2238 $mode = 1;
2239 $path = $parse_path->();
2240
2241 } else {
2242 die "$_ second locate argument must be subtype (either element or path)\n";
2243 }
2244
2245 if ($parent ne $NULL_DEVICE) {
2246 ($parent, $path) = (4 * 4 + 4 * 3 + length $path, "$path$parent");
2247 } else {
2248 $parent = 0;
2249 }
2250
2251 $payload = pack "VVVa*", $mode, $elem, $parent, $path;
2252
2253 } elsif ($type eq "block") {
2254 s/^=//
2255 or die "$_: missing '=' after $type\n";
2256
2257 s/^([a-z]+),//
2258 or die "$_: block device does not start with block type (e.g. disk)\n";
2259 my $blocktype = $1;
2260
2261 my $blockdata;
2262
2263 if ($blocktype eq "file") {
2264 my $parent = $parse_parent->();
2265 s/^,// or die "$_: comma missing after file block device parent\n";
2266 my $path = $parse_path->();
2267
2268 $blockdata = $enc_file->($parent, $path);
2269
2270 } elsif ($blocktype eq "vhd") {
2271 $blockdata = "\x00" x 20; # ENOTUNDERSTOOD
2272 $blockdata .= $parse_parent->();
2273
2274 } elsif ($blocktype eq "ramdisk") {
2275 my $parent = $parse_parent->();
2276
2277 s/^,(\d+),(\d+),(\d+),//a
2278 or die "$_: missing ramdisk base,size,offset after ramdisk parent device\n";
2279
2280 my ($base, $size, $offset) = ($1, $2, $3);
2281
2282 my $path = $parse_path->();
2283
2284 $blockdata = pack "Q< Q< L< a*", $base, $size, $offset, $enc_file->($parent, $path);
2285
2286 } elsif ($blocktype eq "cdrom" or $blocktype eq "floppy") {
2287 # this is guesswork
2288 s/^(\d+)//a
2289 or die "$_: missing device number for cdrom\n";
2290 $blockdata = pack "V", $1;
2291
2292 } else {
2293 die "$blocktype: unsupported block type (must be file, vhd, ramdisk, floppy, cdrom)\n";
2294 }
2295
2296 $payload = pack "Va*",
2297 (indexof $blocktype, @block_type),
2298 $blockdata;
2299
2300 } elsif ($type eq "vmbus") {
2301 s/^=($RE_GUID)//
2302 or die "$_: malformed or missing vmbus interface type guid\n";
2303 my $type = enc_guid $1;
2304 s/^,($RE_GUID)//
2305 or die "$_: malformed or missing vmbus interface instance guid\n";
2306 my $instance = enc_guid $1;
2307
2308 $payload = pack "a16a16x24", $type, $instance;
2309
2310 # } elsif ($type eq "udp") {
2311 # $payload = pack "Va16", 1, "12345678";
2312
2313 } else {
2314 die "$type: not a supported device type (binary, null, boot, legacypartition, partition, block, locate)\n";
2315 }
2316
2317 return (
2318 (pack "VVVVa*", (indexof $type, @dev_type), $flags, 16 + length $payload, 0, $payload),
2319 $_
2320 );
2321 }
2322 }
2323
2324 # encode a full binary BCD device descriptor
2325 sub enc_device($$) {
2326 my ($device, $type) = @_;
2327
2328 my $guid = "\x00" x 16;
2329
2330 if ($device =~ s/^\{([A-Za-z0-9\-]+)\}//) {
2331 $guid = enc_guid $1
2332 or die "$device: does not start with valid guid\n";
2333 }
2334
2335 my ($descriptor, $tail) = enc_device_ $device, $type;
2336
2337 length $tail
2338 and die "$device: garbage after device descriptor\n";
2339
2340 unpack "H*", $guid . $descriptor
2341 }
2342
2343 # decode a registry hive into the BCD structure used by pbcdedit
2344 sub bcd_decode {
2345 my ($hive) = @_;
2346
2347 my %bcd;
2348
2349 my $objects = $hive->[1][1]{Objects}[1];
2350
2351 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$objects) {
2352 my %kv;
2353 $v = $v->[1];
2354
2355 $k = $bcd_objects{$k} // $k;
2356
2357 my $type = $v->{Description}[0]{Type}[1];
2358
2359 if ($type != $bcd_object_types{$k}) {
2360 $kv{type} = $bcd_types{$type} // sprintf "0x%08x", $type;
2361 }
2362
2363 my $elems = $v->{Elements}[1];
2364
2365 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$elems) {
2366 my $k = hex $k;
2367
2368 my $v = $bcde_dec{$k & BCDE_FORMAT}->($v->[0]{Element}[1], $type);
2369 my $k = dec_bcde_id $k, $type;
2370
2371 $kv{$k} = $v;
2372 }
2373
2374 $bcd{$k} = \%kv;
2375 }
2376
2377 $bcd{meta} = { version => $JSON_VERSION };
2378
2379 \%bcd
2380 }
2381
2382 # encode a pbcdedit structure into a registry hive
2383 sub bcd_encode {
2384 my ($bcd) = @_;
2385
2386 if (my $meta = $bcd->{meta}) {
2387 $meta->{version} eq $JSON_VERSION
2388 or die "BCD meta version ($meta->{version}) does not match executable version ($JSON_VERSION)\n";
2389 }
2390
2391 my %objects;
2392 my %rbcd_types = reverse %bcd_types;
2393
2394 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$bcd) {
2395 my %kv;
2396
2397 next if $k eq "meta";
2398
2399 $k = lc $k; # I know you windows types!
2400
2401 my $type = $v->{type};
2402
2403 if ($type) {
2404 $type = $type =~ /^(?:0x)[0-9a-fA-F]+$/
2405 ? hex $type
2406 : $rbcd_types{$type} // die "$type: unable to parse bcd object type\n";
2407 }
2408
2409 my $guid = enc_wguid $k
2410 or die "$k: invalid bcd object identifier\n";
2411
2412 # default type if not given
2413 $type //= $bcd_object_types{dec_wguid $guid} // die "$k: unable to deduce bcd object type\n";
2414
2415 my %elem;
2416
2417 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$v) {
2418 next if $k eq "type";
2419
2420 $k = (enc_bcde_id $k, $type) // die "$k: invalid bcde element name or id\n";
2421 $elem{sprintf "%08x", $k} = [{
2422 Element => [ ($bcde_enc{$k & BCDE_FORMAT} // die "$k: unable to encode unknown bcd element type}")->($v)]
2423 }];
2424 }
2425
2426 $guid = dec_guid $guid;
2427
2428 $objects{"{$guid}"} = [undef, {
2429 Description => [{ Type => [dword => $type] }],
2430 Elements => [undef, \%elem],
2431 }];
2432 }
2433
2434 [NewStoreRoot => [undef, {
2435 Description => [{
2436 KeyName => [sz => "BCD00000001"],
2437 System => [dword => 1],
2438 pbcdedit => [sz => $VERSION],
2439 # other values seen: GuidCache => ..., TreatAsSystem => 0x00000001
2440 }],
2441 Objects => [undef, \%objects],
2442 }]]
2443 }
2444
2445 #############################################################################
2446 # edit instructions
2447
2448 sub bcd_edit_eval {
2449 package pbcdedit;
2450
2451 our ($PATH, $BCD, $DEFAULT);
2452
2453 eval shift;
2454 die "$@" if $@;
2455 }
2456
2457 sub bcd_edit {
2458 my ($path, $bcd, @insns) = @_;
2459
2460 my $default = $bcd->{"{bootmgr}"}{default};
2461
2462 # prepare "officially visible" variables
2463 local $pbcdedit::PATH = $path;
2464 local $pbcdedit::BCD = $bcd;
2465 local $pbcdedit::DEFAULT = $default;
2466
2467 while (@insns) {
2468 my $insn = shift @insns;
2469
2470 if ($insn eq "get") {
2471 my $object = shift @insns;
2472 my $elem = shift @insns;
2473
2474 $object = $object eq "{default}" ? $default : dec_wguid enc_wguid $object;
2475
2476 print $bcd->{$object}{$elem}, "\n";
2477
2478 } elsif ($insn eq "set") {
2479 my $object = shift @insns;
2480 my $elem = shift @insns;
2481 my $value = shift @insns;
2482
2483 $object = $object eq "{default}" ? $default : dec_wguid enc_wguid $object;
2484
2485 $bcd->{$object}{$elem} = $value;
2486
2487 } elsif ($insn eq "del") {
2488 my $object = shift @insns;
2489 my $elem = shift @insns;
2490
2491 $object = $object eq "{default}" ? $default : dec_wguid enc_wguid $object;
2492
2493 delete $bcd->{$object}{$elem};
2494
2495 } elsif ($insn eq "eval") {
2496 my $perl = shift @insns;
2497 bcd_edit_eval "#line 1 'eval'\n$perl";
2498
2499 } elsif ($insn eq "do") {
2500 my $path = shift @insns;
2501 my $file = file_load $path;
2502 bcd_edit_eval "#line 1 '$path'\n$file";
2503
2504 } else {
2505 die "$insn: not a recognized instruction for create/edit/parse\n";
2506 }
2507 }
2508
2509 }
2510
2511 #############################################################################
2512 # other utilities
2513
2514 # json to stdout
2515 sub prjson($) {
2516 print $json_coder->encode ($_[0]);
2517 }
2518
2519 # json from stdin
2520 sub rdjson() {
2521 my $json;
2522 1 while read STDIN, $json, 65536, length $json;
2523 $json_coder->decode ($json)
2524 }
2525
2526 sub lsblk() {
2527 my $lsblk = $json_coder->decode (scalar qx<lsblk --json -o PATH,KNAME,MAJ:MIN,TYPE,PTTYPE,PTUUID,PARTUUID,LABEL,FSTYPE>);
2528
2529 for my $dev (@{ $lsblk->{blockdevices} }) {
2530 if ($dev->{type} eq "part") {
2531
2532 # lsblk sometimes gives a bogus pttype, so we recreate it here
2533 $dev->{pttype} = $dev->{ptuuid} =~ /^$RE_GUID\z/
2534 ? "gpt" : "dos";
2535
2536 if ($dev->{pttype} eq "gpt") {
2537 $dev->{bcd_device} = "partition=<null>,harddisk,gpt,$dev->{ptuuid},$dev->{partuuid}";
2538 } elsif ($dev->{pttype} eq "dos") { # why not "mbr" :(
2539 if ($dev->{partuuid} =~ /^([0-9a-f]{8})-([0-9a-f]{2})\z/i) {
2540 my ($diskid, $partno) = ($1, hex $2);
2541 $dev->{bcd_legacy_device} = "legacypartition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,$diskid,$partno";
2542 if (open my $fh, "/sys/class/block/$dev->{kname}/start") {
2543 my $start = 512 * readline $fh;
2544 $dev->{bcd_device} = "partition=<null>,harddisk,mbr,$diskid,$start";
2545 }
2546 }
2547 }
2548 }
2549 }
2550
2551 $lsblk->{blockdevices}
2552 }
2553
2554 sub prdev($$) {
2555 my ($path, $attribute) = @_;
2556
2557 # rather than stat'ing and guessing how devices are encoded, we use lsblk for this
2558 my $mm = $json_coder->decode (scalar qx<lsblk -d -o MAJ:MIN -J \Q$path\E>)->{blockdevices}[0]{"maj:min"};
2559
2560 my $lsblk = lsblk;
2561
2562 for my $dev (@$lsblk) {
2563 if ($dev->{"maj:min"} eq $mm && $dev->{$attribute}) {
2564 say $dev->{$attribute};
2565 exit 0;
2566 }
2567 }
2568
2569 exit 1;
2570 }
2571
2572 #############################################################################
2573 # command line parser
2574
2575 our %CMD = (
2576 help => sub {
2577 require Pod::Usage;
2578 Pod::Usage::pod2usage (-verbose => 2, -quotes => "none", -noperldoc => 1);
2579 },
2580
2581 objects => sub {
2582 my %rbcd_types = reverse %bcd_types;
2583 $_ = sprintf "%08x", $_ for values %rbcd_types;
2584
2585 if ($_[0] eq "--json") {
2586 my %default_type = %bcd_object_types;
2587 $_ = sprintf "%08x", $_ for values %default_type;
2588
2589 prjson {
2590 version => $JSON_VERSION,
2591 object_alias => \%bcd_objects,
2592 object_type => \%rbcd_types,
2593 object_default_type => \%default_type,
2594 };
2595 } else {
2596 my %rbcd_objects = reverse %bcd_objects;
2597
2598 print "\n";
2599
2600 printf "%-9s %s\n", "Type", "Alias";
2601 for my $tname (sort keys %rbcd_types) {
2602 printf "%-9s %s\n", $rbcd_types{$tname}, $tname;
2603 }
2604
2605 print "\n";
2606
2607 printf "%-39s %-23s %s\n", "Object GUID", "Alias", "(Hex) Default Type";
2608 for my $name (sort keys %rbcd_objects) {
2609 my $guid = $rbcd_objects{$name};
2610 my $type = $bcd_object_types{$name};
2611 my $tname = $bcd_types{$type};
2612
2613 $type = $type ? sprintf "(%08x) %s", $type, $tname : "-";
2614
2615 printf "%-39s %-23s %s\n", $guid, $name, $type;
2616 }
2617
2618 print "\n";
2619 }
2620 },
2621
2622 elements => sub {
2623 my $json = $_[0] eq "--json";
2624
2625 my %format_name = (
2626 BCDE_FORMAT_DEVICE , "device",
2627 BCDE_FORMAT_STRING , "string",
2628 BCDE_FORMAT_GUID , "guid",
2629 BCDE_FORMAT_GUID_LIST , "guid list",
2630 BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER , "integer",
2631 BCDE_FORMAT_BOOLEAN , "boolean",
2632 BCDE_FORMAT_INTEGER_LIST, "integer list",
2633 );
2634
2635 my @element;
2636
2637 for my $class (sort keys %rbcde_byclass) {
2638 my $rbcde = $rbcde_byclass{$class};
2639
2640 unless ($json) {
2641 print "\n";
2642 printf "Elements applicable to class(es): $class\n";
2643 printf "%-9s %-12s %s\n", "Element", "Format", "Name Alias";
2644 }
2645 for my $name (sort keys %$rbcde) {
2646 my $id = $rbcde->{$name};
2647 my $format = $format_name{$id & BCDE_FORMAT};
2648
2649 if ($json) {
2650 push @element, [$class, $id * 1, $format, $name];
2651 } else {
2652 $id = sprintf "%08x", $id;
2653 printf "%-9s %-12s %s\n", $id, $format, $name;
2654 }
2655 }
2656 }
2657 print "\n" unless $json;
2658
2659 prjson {
2660 version => $JSON_VERSION,
2661 element => \@element,
2662 class => \@bcde_typeclass,
2663 } if $json;
2664
2665 },
2666
2667 export => sub {
2668 prjson bcd_decode regf_load shift;
2669 },
2670
2671 import => sub {
2672 regf_save shift, bcd_encode rdjson;
2673 },
2674
2675 create => sub {
2676 my $path = shift;
2677 my $stat = stat_get $path; # should actually be done at file load time
2678 my $bcd = { };
2679 bcd_edit $path, $bcd, @_;
2680 regf_save $path, bcd_encode $bcd;
2681 stat_set $path, $stat;
2682 },
2683
2684 edit => sub {
2685 my $path = shift;
2686 my $stat = stat_get $path; # should actually be done at file load time
2687 my $bcd = bcd_decode regf_load $path;
2688 bcd_edit $path, $bcd, @_;
2689 regf_save $path, bcd_encode $bcd;
2690 stat_set $path, $stat;
2691 },
2692
2693 parse => sub {
2694 my $path = shift;
2695 my $bcd = bcd_decode regf_load $path;
2696 bcd_edit $path, $bcd, @_;
2697 },
2698
2699 "export-regf" => sub {
2700 prjson regf_load shift;
2701
2702 },
2703
2704 "import-regf" => sub {
2705 regf_save shift, rdjson;
2706 },
2707
2708 lsblk => sub {
2709 my $json = $_[0] eq "--json";
2710
2711 my $lsblk = lsblk;
2712
2713 if ($json) {
2714 prjson $lsblk;
2715 } else {
2716 printf "%-10s %-8.8s %-6.6s %-3s %s\n", "DEVICE", "LABEL", "FSTYPE", "PT", "DEVICE DESCRIPTOR";
2717 for my $dev (@$lsblk) {
2718 for my $bcd ($dev->{bcd_device}, $dev->{bcd_legacy_device}) {
2719 printf "%-10s %-8.8s %-6.6s %-3s %s\n",
2720 $dev->{path}, $dev->{label}, $dev->{fstype}, $dev->{pttype}, $bcd
2721 if $bcd;
2722 }
2723 }
2724 }
2725 },
2726
2727 "bcd-device" => sub {
2728 prdev shift, "bcd_device";
2729 },
2730
2731 "bcd-legacy-device" => sub {
2732 prdev shift, "bcd_legacy_device";
2733 },
2734
2735 version => sub {
2736 print "\n",
2737 "PBCDEDIT version $VERSION, copyright 2019 Marc A. Lehmann <pbcdedit\@schmorp.de>.\n",
2738 "JSON schema version: $JSON_VERSION\n",
2739 "Licensed under the GNU General Public License Version 3.0, or any later version.\n",
2740 "\n",
2741 $CHANGELOG,
2742 "\n";
2743 },
2744 );
2745
2746 my $cmd = shift;
2747
2748 unless (exists $CMD{$cmd}) {
2749 warn "Usage: $0 subcommand args...\nTry $0 help\n";
2750 exit 126;
2751 }
2752
2753 $CMD{$cmd}->(@ARGV);
2754