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wine
wine-cw
Commits
0a4050d3
Commit
0a4050d3
authored
Feb 07, 2004
by
Troy Rollo
Committed by
Alexandre Julliard
Feb 07, 2004
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Added documentation for DocFiles, based on the CorVu implementation of
DocFiles.
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dlls/ole32/storage.c
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0a4050d3
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@@ -101,6 +101,224 @@ static void _create_istream16(LPSTREAM16 *str);
#define IMPLEMENTED 1
/* The following is taken from the CorVu implementation of docfiles, and
* documents things about the file format that are not implemented here, and
* not documented by the LAOLA project. The CorVu implementation was posted
* to wine-devel in February 2004, and released under the LGPL at the same
* time. Because that implementation is in C++, it's not directly usable in
* Wine, but does have documentation value.
*
*
* #define DF_EXT_VTOC -4
* #define DF_VTOC_VTOC -3
* #define DF_VTOC_EOF -2
* #define DF_VTOC_FREE -1
* #define DF_NAMELEN 0x20 // Maximum entry name length - 31 characters plus
* // a NUL terminator
*
* #define DF_FT_STORAGE 1
* #define DF_FT_STREAM 2
* #define DF_FT_LOCKBYTES 3 // Not used -- How the bloody hell did I manage
* #define DF_FT_PROPERTY 4 // Not Used -- to figure these two out?
* #define DF_FT_ROOT 5
*
* #define DF_BLOCK_SIZE 0x200
* #define DF_VTOC_SIZE 0x80
* #define DF_DE_PER_BLOCK 4
* #define DF_STREAM_BLOCK_SIZE 0x40
*
* A DocFile is divided into blocks of 512 bytes.
* The first block contains the header.
*
* The file header contains The first 109 entries in the VTOC of VTOCs.
*
* Each block pointed to by a VTOC of VTOCs contains a VTOC, which
* includes block chains - just like FAT. This is a somewhat poor
* design for the following reasons:
*
* 1. FAT was a poor file system design to begin with, and
* has long been known to be horrendously inefficient
* for day to day operations.
*
* 2. The problem is compounded here, since the file
* level streams are generally *not* read sequentially.
* This means that a significant percentage of reads
* require seeking from the start of the chain.
*
* Data chains also contain an internal VTOC. The block size for
* the standard VTOC is 512. The block size for the internal VTOC
* is 64.
*
* Now, the 109 blocks in the VTOC of VTOCs allows for files of
* up to around 7MB. So what do you think happens if that's
* exceeded? Well, there's an entry in the header block which
* points to the first block used as additional storage for
* the VTOC of VTOCs.
*
* Now we can get up to around 15MB. Now, guess how the file
* format adds in another block to the VTOC of VTOCs. Come on,
* it's no big surprise. That's right - the last entry in each
* block extending the VTOC of VTOCs is, you guessed it, the
* block number of the next block containing an extension to
* the VTOC of VTOCs. The VTOC of VTOCs is chained!!!!
*
* So, to review:
*
* 1. If you are using a FAT file system, the location of
* your file's blocks is stored in chains.
*
* 2. At the abstract level, the file contains a VTOC of VTOCs,
* which is stored in the most inefficient possible format for
* random access - a chain (AKA list).
*
* 3. The VTOC of VTOCs contains descriptions of three file level
* streams:
*
* a. The Directory stream
* b. The Data stream
* c. The Data VTOC stream
*
* These are, of course, represented as chains.
*
* 4. The Data VTOC contains data describing the chains of blocks
* within the Data stream.
*
* That's right - we have a total of four levels of block chains!
*
* Now, is that complicated enough for you? No? OK, there's another
* complication. If an individual stream (ie. an IStream) reaches
* 4096 bytes in size, it gets moved from the Data Stream to
* a new file level stream. Now, if the stream then gets truncated
* back to less than 4096 bytes, it returns to the data stream.
*
* The effect of using this format can be seen very easily. Pick
* an arbitrary application with a grid data representation that
* can export to both Lotus 123 and Excel 5 or higher. Export
* a large file to Lotus 123 and time it. Export the same thing
* to Excel 5 and time that. The difference is the inefficiency
* of the Microsoft DocFile format.
*
*
* #define TOTAL_SIMPLE_VTOCS 109
*
* struct DocFile_Header
* {
* df_byte iMagic1; // 0xd0
* df_byte iMagic2; // 0xcf
* df_byte iMagic3; // 0x11
* df_byte iMagic4; // 0xe0 - Spells D0CF11E0, or DocFile
* df_byte iMagic5; // 161 (igi upside down)
* df_byte iMagic6; // 177 (lli upside down - see below
* df_byte iMagic7; // 26 (gz upside down)
* df_byte iMagic8; // 225 (szz upside down) - see below
* df_int4 aiUnknown1[4];
* df_int4 iVersion; // DocFile Version - 0x03003E
* df_int4 aiUnknown2[4];
* df_int4 nVTOCs; // Number of VTOCs
* df_int4 iFirstDirBlock; // First Directory Block
* df_int4 aiUnknown3[2];
* df_int4 iFirstDataVTOC; // First data VTOC block
* df_int4 iHasData; // 1 if there is data in the file - yes, this is important
* df_int4 iExtendedVTOC; // Extended VTOC location
* df_int4 iExtendedVTOCSize; // Size of extended VTOC (+1?)
* df_int4 aiVTOCofVTOCs[TOTAL_SIMPLE_VTOCS];
* };
*
* struct DocFile_VTOC
* {
* df_int4 aiBlocks[DF_VTOC_SIZE];
* };
*
*
* The meaning of the magic numbers
*
* 0xd0cf11e0 is DocFile with a zero on the end (sort of)
*
* If you key 177161 into a calculator, then turn the calculator
* upside down, you get igilli, which may be a reference to
* somebody's name, or to the Hebrew word for "angel".
*
* If you key 26225 into a calculator, then turn it upside down, you
* get szzgz. Microsoft has a tradition of creating nonsense words
* using the letters s, g, z and y. We think szzgz may be one of the
* Microsoft placeholder variables, along the lines of foo, bar and baz.
* Alternatively, it could be 22526, which would be gzszz.
*
*
* struct DocFile_DirEnt
* {
* df_char achEntryName[DF_NAMELEN]; // Entry Name
* df_int2 iNameLen; // Name length in bytes, including NUL terminator
* df_byte iFileType; // Entry type
* df_byte iColour; // 1 = Black, 0 = Red
* df_int4 iLeftSibling; // Next Left Sibling Entry - See below
* df_int4 iRightSibling; // Next Right Sibling Entry
* df_int4 iFirstChild; // First Child Entry
* df_byte achClassID[16]; // Class ID
* df_int4 iStateBits; // [GS]etStateBits value
* df_int4 iCreatedLow; // Low DWORD of creation time
* df_int4 iCreatedHigh; // High DWORD of creation time
* df_int4 iModifiedLow; // Low DWORD of modification time
* df_int4 iModifiedHigh; // High DWORD of modification time
* df_int4 iVTOCPosition; // VTOC Position
* df_int4 iFileSize; // Size of the stream
* df_int4 iZero; // We think this is part of the 64 bit stream size - must be 0
* };
*
* Siblings
* ========
*
* Siblings are stored in an obscure but incredibly elegant
* data structure called a red-black tree. This is generally
* defined as a 2-3-4 tree stored in a binary tree.
*
* A red-black tree can always be balanced very easily. The rules
* for a red-black tree are as follows:
*
* 1. The root node is always black.
* 2. The parent of a red node is always black.
*
* There is a Java demo of red-black trees at:
*
* http://langevin.usc.edu/BST/RedBlackTree-Example.html
*
* This demo is an excellent tool for learning how red-black
* trees work, without having to go through the process of
* learning how they were derived.
*
* Within the tree, elements are ordered by the length of the
* name and within that, ASCII order by name. This causes the
* apparently bizarre reordering you see when you use dfview.
*
* This is a somewhat bizarre choice. It suggests that the
* designer of the DocFile format was trying to optimise
* searching through the directory entries. However searching
* through directory entries is a relatively rare operation.
* Reading and seeking within a stream are much more common
* operations, especially within the file level streams, yet
* these use the horrendously inefficient FAT chains.
*
* This suggests that the designer was probably somebody
* fresh out of university, who had some basic knowledge of
* basic data structures, but little knowledge of anything
* more practical. It is bizarre to attempt to optimise
* directory searches while not using a more efficient file
* block locating system than FAT (seedling/sapling/tree
* would result in a massive improvement - in fact we have
* an alternative to DocFiles that we use internally that
* uses seedling/sapling/tree and *is* far more efficient).
*
* It is worth noting that the MS implementation of red-black
* trees is incorrect (I can tell you're surprised) and
* actually causes more operations to occur than are really
* needed. Fortunately the fact that our implementation is
* correct will not cause any problems - the MS implementation
* still appears to cause the tree to satisfy the rules, albeit
* a sequence of the same insertions in the different
* implementations may result in a different, and possibly
* deeper (but never shallower) tree.
*/
/******************************************************************************
* STORAGE_get_big_block [Internal]
...
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