bsdiff

bsdiff and bspatch are libraries for building and applying patches to binary files.

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bsdiff/bspatch

bsdiff and bspatch are libraries for building and applying patches to binary
files.

The original algorithm and implementation was developed by Colin Percival. The
algorithm is detailed in his paper, Naïve Differences of Executable Code. For more information, visit his
website at http://www.daemonology.net/bsdiff/.

I maintain this project separately from Colin's work, with the goal of making
the core functionality easily embeddable in existing projects.

Contact

@MatthewEndsley
https://github.com/mendsley/bsdiff

License

Copyright 2003-2005 Colin Percival
Copyright 2012 Matthew Endsley

This project is governed by the BSD 2-clause license. For details see the file
titled LICENSE in the project root folder.

Overview

There are two separate libraries in the project, bsdiff and bspatch. Each are
self contained in bsdiff.c and bspatch.c The easiest way to integrate is to
simply copy the c file to your source folder and build it.

The overarching goal was to modify the original bsdiff/bspatch code from Colin
and eliminate external dependencies and provide a simple interface to the core
functionality.

I've exposed relevant functions via the _stream classes. The only external
dependency not exposed is memcmp in bsdiff.

This library generates patches that are not compatible with the original bsdiff
tool. The incompatibilities were motivated by the patching needs for the game
AirMech https://www.carbongames.com and the following requirements:

  • Eliminate/minimize any seek operations when applying patches
  • Eliminate any required disk I/O and support embedded streams
  • Ability to easily embed the routines as a library instead of an external binary
  • Compile+run on all platforms we use to build the game (Windows, Linux, NaCl, OSX)

Compiling

The libraries should compile warning free in any moderately recent version of
gcc. The project uses <stdint.h> which is technically a C99 file and not
available in Microsoft Visual Studio. The easiest solution here is to use the
msinttypes version of stdint.h from https://code.google.com/p/msinttypes/.
The direct link for the lazy people is:
https://msinttypes.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/stdint.h.

If your compiler does not provide an implementation of <stdint.h> you can
remove the header from the bsdiff/bspatch files and provide your own typedefs
for the following symbols: uint8_t, uint64_t and int64_t.

Examples

Each project has an optional main function that serves as an example for using
the library. Simply defined BSDIFF_EXECUTABLE or BSPATCH_EXECUTABLE to
enable building the standalone tools.

Reference

bsdiff

struct bsdiff_stream
{
	void* opaque;
	void* (*malloc)(size_t size);
	void  (*free)(void* ptr);
	int   (*write)(struct bsdiff_stream* stream,
				   const void* buffer, int size);
};

int bsdiff(const uint8_t* old, int64_t oldsize, const uint8_t* new,
           int64_t newsize, struct bsdiff_stream* stream);

In order to use bsdiff, you need to define functions for allocating memory and
writing binary data. This behavior is controlled by the stream parameter
passed to to bsdiff(...).

The opaque field is never read or modified from within the bsdiff function.
The caller can use this field to store custom state data needed for the callback
functions.

The malloc and free members should point to functions that behave like the
standard malloc and free C functions.

The write function is called by bsdiff to write a block of binary data to the
stream. The return value for write should be 0 on success and non-zero if
the callback failed to write all data. In the default example, bzip2 is used to
compress output data.

bsdiff returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.

bspatch

struct bspatch_stream
{
	void* opaque;
	int (*read)(const struct bspatch_stream* stream,
	            void* buffer, int length);
};

int bspatch(const uint8_t* old, int64_t oldsize, uint8_t* new,
            int64_t newsize, struct bspatch_stream* stream);

The bspatch function transforms the data for a file using data generated from
bsdiff. The caller takes care of loading the old file and allocating space for
new file data. The stream parameter controls the process for reading binary
patch data.

The opaque field is never read or modified from within the bspatch function.
The caller can use this field to store custom state data needed for the read
function.

The read function is called by bspatch to read a block of binary data from
the stream. The return value for read should be 0 on success and non-zero
if the callback failed to read the requested amount of data. In the default
example, bzip2 is used to decompress input data.

bspatch returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. On success, new contains
the data for the patched file.

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownermendsley/bsdiff
Primary LanguageC
Program languageShell (Language Count: 4)
Platform
License:Other
所有者活动
Created At2012-02-04 03:38:32
Pushed At2023-09-06 15:07:46
Last Commit At2020-09-13 14:31:54
Release Count2
Last Release Namev4.3-endsley (Posted on )
First Release Namev4.3 (Posted on 2012-05-14 04:02:16)
用户参与
Stargazers Count2k
Watchers Count69
Fork Count354
Commits Count75
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count18
Issue Open Count14
Pull Requests Count5
Pull Requests Open Count12
Pull Requests Close Count6
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