FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-tools
view ffstools/README.old @ 619:f82551c77e58
libserial-newlnx: ASYNC_LOW_LATENCY patch reverted
Reports from Das Signal indicate that loadtools performance on Debian
is about the same as on Slackware, and that including or omitting the
ASYNC_LOW_LATENCY patch from Serg makes no difference. Because the
patch in question does not appear to be necessary, it is being reverted
until and unless someone other than Serg reports an actual real-world
system on which loadtools operation times are slowed compared to the
Mother's Slackware reference and on which Slackware-like performance
can be restored by setting the ASYNC_LOW_LATENCY flag.
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 27 Feb 2020 01:09:48 +0000 |
parents | dd3ec7c92bf1 |
children |
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You are looking at the source for the TIFFS In Vitro Analyzer utility. You may have downloaded it either as a separate package or as part of the larger freecalypso-sw suite. See TIFFS-Overview (in ../doc if you are working with the full freecalypso-sw source tree) for a general description of what TIFFS is and why it matters. The utility contained in the present package runs on a general purpose GNU/Linux (or other Unix) host and enables "in vitro" examination of Flash File System images read out of TI-based GSM devices. Using this utility, you can list the directory and file content of an FFS image, cat any individual file in the FFS, or extract the complete FFS content into your regular Unix file system. Some "forensic" operations are also supported: by listing the inode array, one can deduce the order in which the present FFS content got created, and see what files have been overwritten or deleted in the span of still-visible history. One can then cat the old byte content of those overwritten or deleted files, if those data chunks are still in the FFS image (i.e., if the flash sector in question has not been reclaimed yet). Compilation and installation are straightforward: run 'make' to compile the source; you should get 3 executable binaries named tiffs, mokoffs and pirffs; then run 'make install' as root to install them in /usr/local/bin. The binary named tiffs is the main program; mokoffs and pirffs are wrappers that simplify the most common current use cases. To install somewhere other than /usr/local/bin, edit the INSTBIN= setting in the subdirectory Makefiles. You will also need to edit tiffs-wrappers/installpath.c accordingly, as the mokoffs and pirffs wrappers are designed to exec tiffs by its absolute installed pathname. See Usage for the usage instructions.