Deleted Added
full compact
convex (186675) convex (226048)
1
1#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3# $File: convex,v 1.7 2009/09/19 16:28:08 christos Exp $
2# convex: file(1) magic for Convex boxes
3#
4# Convexes are big-endian.
5#
6# /*\
7# * Below are the magic numbers and tests added for Convex.
8# * Added at beginning, because they are expected to be used most.
9# \*/
100 belong 0507 Convex old-style object
11>16 belong >0 not stripped
120 belong 0513 Convex old-style demand paged executable
13>16 belong >0 not stripped
140 belong 0515 Convex old-style pre-paged executable
15>16 belong >0 not stripped
160 belong 0517 Convex old-style pre-paged, non-swapped executable
17>16 belong >0 not stripped
180 belong 0x011257 Core file
19#
20# The following are a series of dump format magic numbers. Each one
21# corresponds to a drastically different dump format. The first on is
22# the original dump format on a 4.1 BSD or earlier file system. The
23# second marks the change between the 4.1 file system and the 4.2 file
24# system. The Third marks the changing of the block size from 1K
25# to 2K to be compatible with an IDC file system. The fourth indicates
26# a dump that is dependent on Convex Storage Manager, because data in
27# secondary storage is not physically contained within the dump.
28# The restore program uses these number to determine how the data is
29# to be extracted.
30#
3124 belong =60011 dump format, 4.1 BSD or earlier
3224 belong =60012 dump format, 4.2 or 4.3 BSD without IDC
3324 belong =60013 dump format, 4.2 or 4.3 BSD (IDC compatible)
3424 belong =60014 dump format, Convex Storage Manager by-reference dump
35#
36# what follows is a bunch of bit-mask checks on the flags field of the opthdr.
37# If there is no `=' sign, assume just checking for whether the bit is set?
38#
390 belong 0601 Convex SOFF
40>88 belong&0x000f0000 =0x00000000 c1
41>88 belong &0x00010000 c2
42>88 belong &0x00020000 c2mp
43>88 belong &0x00040000 parallel
44>88 belong &0x00080000 intrinsic
45>88 belong &0x00000001 demand paged
46>88 belong &0x00000002 pre-paged
47>88 belong &0x00000004 non-swapped
48>88 belong &0x00000008 POSIX
49#
50>84 belong &0x80000000 executable
51>84 belong &0x40000000 object
52>84 belong&0x20000000 =0 not stripped
53>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x00000000 native fpmode
54>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x10000000 ieee fpmode
55>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x18000000 undefined fpmode
56#
570 belong 0605 Convex SOFF core
58#
590 belong 0607 Convex SOFF checkpoint
60>88 belong&0x000f0000 =0x00000000 c1
61>88 belong &0x00010000 c2
62>88 belong &0x00020000 c2mp
63>88 belong &0x00040000 parallel
64>88 belong &0x00080000 intrinsic
65>88 belong &0x00000008 POSIX
66#
67>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x00000000 native fpmode
68>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x10000000 ieee fpmode
69>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x18000000 undefined fpmode
4# convex: file(1) magic for Convex boxes
5#
6# Convexes are big-endian.
7#
8# /*\
9# * Below are the magic numbers and tests added for Convex.
10# * Added at beginning, because they are expected to be used most.
11# \*/
120 belong 0507 Convex old-style object
13>16 belong >0 not stripped
140 belong 0513 Convex old-style demand paged executable
15>16 belong >0 not stripped
160 belong 0515 Convex old-style pre-paged executable
17>16 belong >0 not stripped
180 belong 0517 Convex old-style pre-paged, non-swapped executable
19>16 belong >0 not stripped
200 belong 0x011257 Core file
21#
22# The following are a series of dump format magic numbers. Each one
23# corresponds to a drastically different dump format. The first on is
24# the original dump format on a 4.1 BSD or earlier file system. The
25# second marks the change between the 4.1 file system and the 4.2 file
26# system. The Third marks the changing of the block size from 1K
27# to 2K to be compatible with an IDC file system. The fourth indicates
28# a dump that is dependent on Convex Storage Manager, because data in
29# secondary storage is not physically contained within the dump.
30# The restore program uses these number to determine how the data is
31# to be extracted.
32#
3324 belong =60011 dump format, 4.1 BSD or earlier
3424 belong =60012 dump format, 4.2 or 4.3 BSD without IDC
3524 belong =60013 dump format, 4.2 or 4.3 BSD (IDC compatible)
3624 belong =60014 dump format, Convex Storage Manager by-reference dump
37#
38# what follows is a bunch of bit-mask checks on the flags field of the opthdr.
39# If there is no `=' sign, assume just checking for whether the bit is set?
40#
410 belong 0601 Convex SOFF
42>88 belong&0x000f0000 =0x00000000 c1
43>88 belong &0x00010000 c2
44>88 belong &0x00020000 c2mp
45>88 belong &0x00040000 parallel
46>88 belong &0x00080000 intrinsic
47>88 belong &0x00000001 demand paged
48>88 belong &0x00000002 pre-paged
49>88 belong &0x00000004 non-swapped
50>88 belong &0x00000008 POSIX
51#
52>84 belong &0x80000000 executable
53>84 belong &0x40000000 object
54>84 belong&0x20000000 =0 not stripped
55>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x00000000 native fpmode
56>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x10000000 ieee fpmode
57>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x18000000 undefined fpmode
58#
590 belong 0605 Convex SOFF core
60#
610 belong 0607 Convex SOFF checkpoint
62>88 belong&0x000f0000 =0x00000000 c1
63>88 belong &0x00010000 c2
64>88 belong &0x00020000 c2mp
65>88 belong &0x00040000 parallel
66>88 belong &0x00080000 intrinsic
67>88 belong &0x00000008 POSIX
68#
69>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x00000000 native fpmode
70>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x10000000 ieee fpmode
71>84 belong&0x18000000 =0x18000000 undefined fpmode