DeRez(1)DeRez(1)NAMEDeRez - decompiles resources
SYNTAXDeRez resourceFile [ typeDeclFile1 [ typeDeclFile2 ] ... ]
[ -c[ompatible] ] [ -d[efine] macro [ = data ] ]
[ -e[scape] ] [ -i directoryPath ] [ -is[ysroot] sdkPath ]
[ -m[axstringsize] n ] [ -noResolve ]
[ -only typeExpr [ (idExpr1 [:idExpr2 ] | resourceName) ] ]
[ -only type ] [ -p ] [ -rd ]
[ -script Roman | Japanese | Korean | SimpChinese |
TradChinese ]
[ -s[kip] typeExpr [ (idExpr1 [:idExpr2 ] | resourceName) ] ]
[ -s[kip] type ] [ -u[ndef] macro ]
[ -useDF ]
DESCRIPTION
The DeRez tool decompiles the resource fork of resourceFile according
to the type declarations supplied by the type declaration files. The
resource description produced by this decompilation contains the
resource definitions (resource and data statements) associated with
these type declarations. If for some reason it cannot reproduce the
appropriate resource statements, DeRez generates hexadecimal data
statements instead.
A type declaration file is a file of type declarations used by the
resource compiler, Rez. The type declarations for the standard
Macintosh resources are contained in the Carbon.r resource header file,
contained in the Carbon framework. You may use the ${RIncludes} shell
environment variable to define a default path to resource header files.
If you do not specify any type declaration files, DeRez produces data
statements in hexadecimal form.
This same process works backward to recompile the resource fork. If you
use the output of DeRez and the appropriate type declaration files as
input to Rez, it produces the original resource fork of resourceFile.
INPUT
An input file containing resources in its resource fork. DeRez does
not read standard input. You can also specify resource description
files containing type declarations. For each type declaration file on
the command line, DeRez applies the following search rules: 1. DeRez
tries to open the file with the name specified as is.
2. If rule 1 fails and the filename contains no colons or begins with a
colon, DeRez appends the filename to each of the pathnames specified by
the {RIncludes} environment variable and tries to open the file.
OUTPUT
Standard output. DeRez writes a resource description to standard
output consisting of resource and data statements that can be
understood by Rez. If you omit the typeDeclFile1 [ typeDeclFile2 ]...
parameter, DeRez generates hexadecimal data statements instead.
Errors and warnings are written to diagnostic output.
ALIAS RESOLUTION
This command resolves Finder aliases on all input file specifications.
Finder aliases are also resolved in the pathnames of any files included
by specified resource definition files. You can optionally suppress the
resolution of leaf aliases for the input resource file (with the
-noResolve option).
STATUSDeRez can return the following status codes:
0 no errors
1 error in parameters
2 syntax error in resourceFile
3 I/O or program error
PARAMETERS
resourceFile
Specifies a file containing the resource fork to be decompiled.
typeDeclFile1 [ typeDeclFile2 ]...
Specifies one or more files containing type declarations. These
type declarations are the templates associated with the
information in the resource description. In addition to using
those in the ${RIncludes} folder, you can also specify your own
type declaration files.
Note
The DeRez tool ignores any include (but not #include), read,
data, change, delete, and resource statements found in these
files. However, it still checks these statements for correct
syntax.
OPTIONS
-c[ompatible]
Generates output that is backward-compatible with Rez 1.0.
-d[efine] macro [ = data ]
Defines the macro variable macro as having the value data. You
can use this option more than once on a command line.
macro Specifies the macro variable to be defined.
data Specifies the value of macro. This is the same as
writing
#define macro [ data ]
at the beginning of the resource file.
If you do not specify data, DeRez sets the value of data
to the null string. Note that this still defines the
macro.
-e[scape]
Prints characters that are normally escaped, such as \0xff, as
extended Macintosh characters. By default, characters with
values between $20 and $FF are printed as Macintosh characters.
With this option, however, DeRez prints all characters (except
null, newline, tab, backspace, form feed, vertical tab, and
rubout) as characters, not as escape sequences.
Note
Not all fonts have all the characters defined.
-i directoryPath
Specifies the directory to search for #include files. You may
specify this option more than once. Directory paths are searched
in the order in which they appear on the command line.
-is[ysroot] sdkPath
Specifies the system SDK in which to search for include files
and frameworks. If omitted, the system root ("/") is assumed.
-m[axstringsize] n
Sets the maximum output string width to n, where n must be in
the range 2-120.
-noResolve
Suppresses leaf alias resolution of the file or pathname for the
input resource file thus allowing the resource fork of a Finder
alias file to be decompiled. Finder aliases are still resolved
on all resource definition file paths and on any files they may
include.
-only typeExpr [ (idExpr1[:idExpr2] | resourceName) ]
Reads only resources of the type indicated by typeExpr. An ID
(idExpr1), range of IDs (idExpr1:idExpr2), or resource name can
also be supplied to further specify which resources to read. If
you provide this additional information, DeRez reads only the
specified resources.
This option can be repeated multiple times. Note that this
option cannot be specified in conjunction with the -skip option.
Note
The typeExpr parameter is an expression and must be enclosed in
single quotation marks. If you also specify an ID, range of IDs,
or resource name, you must place double quotation marks around
the entire option parameter, as in these examples:
-only "'MENU' (1:128)"
-only "'MENU' ("'"Edit"'")"
-only type
Reads only resources of the specified type. It is not necessary
to place quotation marks around the type as long as it starts
with a letter and contains no spaces or special characters. For
example, this specification doesn't require quotation marks:
-only MENU
Escape characters are not allowed. This option can be repeated
multiple times.
-p Writes progress and summary information to standard output.
-rd Suppresses warning messages emitted when a resource type is
redeclared.
-script Roman | Japanese | Korean | SimpChinese | TradChinese
Enables the recognition of any of several 2-byte character
script systems to use when compiling and decompiling files. This
option insures that 2-byte characters in strings are handled as
indivisible entities. The default language is Roman and
specifies 1-byte character sets.
-s[kip] typeExpr [ (idExpr1 [:idExpr2 ] | resourceName) ]
Skips resources of the type indicated by typeExpr. For example,
it is very useful to be able to skip 'CODE' resources.
An ID (idExpr1), range of IDs (idExpr1:idExpr2), or resource
name can also be supplied to further specify which resources to
skip. If you provide this additional information, DeRez skips
only the specified resources.
You can repeat this option multiple times. Note that this option
cannot be used in conjunction with the -only option.
Note
The typeExpr parameter is an expression and must be enclosed in
single quotation marks. If you also specify an ID, range of IDs,
or resource name, you must place double quotation marks around
the entire option parameter, as in this example:
-skip "'MENU' (1:128)"
-skip -only "'MENU' ("'"Edit"'")"
-s[kip] type
Skips only resources of the specified type. It is not necessary
to place quotation marks around the type as long as it starts
with a letter and does not contain spaces or special characters.
For example, this specification doesn't require quotation marks:
-skip CODE
Escape characters are not allowed. This option can be repeated
multiple times.
-u[ndef] macro
Undefines the preset macro variable This is the same as writing
#undef macro
at the beginning of the resource file. This option can be
repeated more than once on a command line.
-useDF Reads and writes resource information from the files' data
forks, instead of their resource forks.
EXAMPLES
The following command line displays the 'cfrg' resources in the
CarbonLib library. The type declaration for 'cfrg' resources is found
in the CarbonCore.r framework umbrella resource header file.
/Developer/Tools/DeRez -I
/System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Frameworks/
CarbonCore.framework/Headers/ /System/Library/CFMSupport/CarbonLib
CarbonCore.r
In the following example, DeRez decompiles the 'itl1' resource ID 0 in
the data-fork-based localized resource file in the HIToolbox framework.
$ export RIncludes=/System/Library/Frameworks/Carbon.framework/Headers/
$ /Developer/Tools/DeRez -only 'itl1'
/System/Library/Frameworks/Carbon.framework/Frameworks/
HIToolbox.framework/Resources/English.lproj/Localized.rsrc Carbon.r
-useDF
SEE ALSO
Rez
Mac OS X July 24, 2000 DeRez(1)