1Win::Hivex::Regedit(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentationWin::Hivex::Regedit(3)
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6 Win::Hivex::Regedit - Helper for reading and writing regedit format
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10 use Win::Hivex;
11 use Win::Hivex::Regedit qw(reg_import reg_export);
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13 $h = Win::Hivex->open ('SOFTWARE', write => 1);
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15 open FILE, "updates.reg";
16 reg_import (\*FILE, $h);
17 $h->commit (undef);
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19 reg_export ($h, "\\Microsoft\\Windows NT\\CurrentVersion", \*OUTFILE,
20 prefix => "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\\SOFTWARE");
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23 Win::Hivex::Regedit is a helper library for reading and writing the
24 Windows regedit (or ".REG") file format. This is the textual format
25 that is commonly used on Windows for distributing groups of Windows
26 Registry changes, and this format is read and written by the
27 proprietary "reg.exe" and "regedit.exe" programs supplied with Windows.
28 It is not the same as the binary "hive" format which the hivex library
29 itself can read and write. Note that the regedit format is not well-
30 specified, and hence deviations can occur between what the Windows
31 program can read/write and what we can read/write. (Please file bugs
32 for any deviations found).
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34 Win::Hivex::Regedit is the low-level Perl library. There is also a
35 command line tool for combining hive files and reg files
36 (hivexregedit(1)). If you have a Windows virtual machine that you need
37 to merge regedit-format changes into, use the high-level
38 virt-win-reg(1) tool (part of libguestfs tools).
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40 FUNCTIONS
41 reg_import
42 reg_import ($fh, ($h|$map), [encoding => "UTF-16LE"]);
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44 This function imports the registry keys from file handle $fh either
45 into the hive $h or via a map function.
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47 The hive handle $h must have been opened for writing, ie. using the
48 "write => 1" flag to "Win::Hivex->open".
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50 In the binary hive file, the first part of the key name (eg.
51 "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE") is not stored. You just have to know
52 (somehow) that this maps to the "SOFTWARE" hive. Therefore if you are
53 given a file containing a mixture of keys that have to be added to
54 different hives, you have to have a way to map these to the hive
55 handles. This is outside the scope of the hivex library, but if the
56 second argument is a CODEREF (ie. reference to a function) then this
57 $map function is called on each key name:
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59 map ($keyname)
60 ==> ($h, $keyname)
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62 As shown, the function should return a pair, hive handle, and the true
63 key name (with the prefix stripped off). For example:
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65 sub map {
66 if ($_[0] =~ /^HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\\SOFTWARE(.*)/i) {
67 return ($software_h, $1);
68 } else ...
69 }
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71 "encoding" is the encoding used by default for strings. If not
72 specified, this defaults to "UTF-16LE", however we highly advise you to
73 specify it. See "ENCODING STRINGS" below.
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75 As with the regedit program, we merge the new registry keys with
76 existing ones, and new node values with old ones. You can use the "-"
77 (minus) character to delete individual keys and values. This is
78 explained in detail in the Wikipedia page on the Windows Registry.
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80 Remember you need to call "$h->commit (undef)" on the hivex handle
81 before any changes are written to the hive file. See "WRITING TO HIVE
82 FILES" in hivex(3).
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84 reg_export
85 reg_export ($h, $key, $fh,
86 [prefix => $prefix],
87 [unsafe_printable_strings => 1]);
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89 This function exports the registry keys starting at the root $key and
90 recursively downwards into the file handle $fh.
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92 $key is a case-insensitive path of the node to start from, relative to
93 the root of the hive. It is an error if this path does not exist.
94 Path elements should be separated by backslash characters.
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96 $prefix is prefixed to each key name. The usual use for this is to
97 make key names appear as they would on Windows. For example the key
98 "\Foo" in the SOFTWARE Registry, with $prefix
99 "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE", would be written as:
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101 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Foo]
102 "Key 1"=...
103 "Key 2"=...
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105 If "unsafe_printable_strings" is not given or is false, then the output
106 is written as pure 7 bit ASCII, with line endings which are the default
107 for the local host. Strings are always encoded as hex bytes. This is
108 safe because it preserves the original content and encoding of strings.
109 See "ENCODING STRINGS" below.
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111 If "unsafe_printable_strings" is true, then strings are assumed to be
112 UTF-16LE and are converted to UTF-8 for output. The final zero
113 codepoint in the string is removed if there is one. This is unsafe
114 because it does not preserve the fidelity of the strings in the
115 Registry and because the content type of strings is not always
116 UTF-16LE. However it is useful if you just want to display strings for
117 quick hacking and debugging.
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119 You may need to convert the file's encoding using iconv(1) and line
120 endings using unix2dos(1) if sending to a Windows user.
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122 Nodes and keys are sorted alphabetically in the output.
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124 This function does not print a header. The real regedit program will
125 print a header like:
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127 Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
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129 followed by a blank line. (Other headers are possible, see the
130 Wikipedia page on the Windows Registry). If you want a header, you
131 need to write it out yourself.
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133 reg_export_node
134 reg_export_node ($h, $node, $fh, ...);
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136 This is exactly the same as "reg_export" except that instead of
137 specifying the path to a key as a string, you pass a hivex library
138 $node handle.
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141 The situation with encoding strings in the Registry on Windows is very
142 confused. There are two main encodings that you would find in the
143 binary (hive) file, 7 bit ASCII and UTF-16LE. (Other encodings are
144 possible, it's also possible to have arbitrary binary data incorrectly
145 marked with a string type).
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147 The hive file itself doesn't contain any indication of string encoding.
148 Windows probably guesses the encoding.
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150 We think that regedit probably either guesses which encoding to use
151 based on the file encoding, or else has different defaults for
152 different versions of Windows. Neither choice is appropriate for a
153 tool used in a real operating system.
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155 When using "reg_import", you should specify the default encoding for
156 strings using the "encoding" parameter. If not specified, it defaults
157 to UTF-16LE.
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159 The file itself that is imported should be in the local encoding for
160 files (usually UTF-8 on modern Linux systems). This means if you
161 receive a regedit file from a Windows system, you may sometimes have to
162 reencode it:
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164 iconv -f utf-16le -t utf-8 < input.reg | dos2unix > output.reg
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166 When writing regedit files ("reg_export") we bypass this madness
167 completely. All strings (even pure ASCII) are written as hex bytes so
168 there is no doubt about how they should be encoded when they are read
169 back in.
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172 Copyright (C) 2010-2011 Red Hat Inc.
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175 Please see the file COPYING.LIB for the full license.
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178 Win::Hivex(3), hivexregedit(1), virt-win-reg(1), iconv(1), dos2unix(1),
179 unix2dos(1), hivex(3), hivexsh(1), <http://libguestfs.org>,
180 Sys::Guestfs(3).
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184perl v5.28.1 2018-03-12 Win::Hivex::Regedit(3)