| Name | Modified | Size | Downloads / Week |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent folder | |||
| transformenator.jar | 2013-07-31 | 29.3 kB | |
| transformdirectory.sh | 2013-07-31 | 715 Bytes | |
| transformdirectory.bat | 2013-07-31 | 772 Bytes | |
| readme.txt | 2013-07-31 | 1.5 kB | |
| Totals: 4 Items | 32.2 kB | 0 | |
New for v1.5: ============= * Added the ability to "toggle" between two values based on the appearance of a byte sequence - useful for word processors that used the same marker to toggle emphasis of some sort on and off * Removed several built-in html transforms, enhanced others with more/better RTF formatting * Fixed a bug in regex parsing that kept regular expressions from being detected correctly Transformenator introduction: ============================= Transformenation is something that should be possible to do with some rudimentary shell scripting. You should be able to run a binary file through sed or awk and have byte sequences change to different byte sequences. But you can't. You could probably run a file through a hex dumper, change hex values, then un-transform it back to binary. But that's kind of a pain too. The problem is that sed and awk work on lines, defined as things that are delineated by what they consider line ending characters like 0x0d or 0x0a. But what if your data stream contains 0x0d and 0x0a bytes - but you don't want them to count as line endings? What if you need to remove nulls, hex zeroes, or whatever you want to call them from a binary file or data stream? Your're stuck. Maybe that's why you're here. Transformenator can help. Invocation: java -jar transformenator.jar transform infile.bin outfile.bin See http://transformenator.sourceforge.net for details.