Is there any comprehensive information on how binary files can be read? I found information on the PHP website (http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.pack.php) but I am struggling to understand on how to handle "typedef struct" and struct uses.
I have a long binary file with many blocks, each block can be represented us C struct. This C struct has various "typedef struct" similar to what i have come up with below:
typedef struct
{
unsigned char Day;
unsigned char Month;
unsigned char Year;
} DATE_OF_BIRTH;
#define USER_TYPE 5
DATE_OF_BIRTH Birth[2];\
EDIT:
I have a structure below, this is a part of a bigger structure
typedef struct FILE_HEADER_tag
{
int Type;
int Version;
unsigned long Model;
unsigned long Number;
int Class;
int TemplateLoaded;
char TemplateName[32];
RTC_TIME_DATE StartTime;
RTC_TIME_DATE CurrentCal;
RTC_TIME_DATE OriginalCal;
TEMPLATE_SETTINGS;
int EndType;
} FILE_HEADER;
typedef struct
{
unsigned char Second;
unsigned char Minute;
unsigned char Hour;
unsigned char Day;
unsigned char Month;
unsigned char Year;
} RTC_TIME_DATE;
The binary file is full of line breaks and I was able to decode the first line of it, which returned correct: type, version, model, number and a class. I think I have also decoded two next variable, but i am not sure of it because StartTime returns some gibberish.
At the moment I am looping through the lines from the binary file and trying to unpack each one:
$i = 1;
while (($line = fgets($handle)) !== false) {
// process the line read.
var_dump($line);
if($i == 1) {
$unpacked = unpack('iType/iVersion/LModel/LNumber/iClass/iTemplateLoaded', $line );
}if($i == 2) {
$i++;
continue;
}if($i == 3) {
$unpacked = unpack('C32TemplateName/CStartTime[Second]/CStartTime[Minute]/CStartTime[Hour]/CStartTime[Day]/CStartTime[Month]/CStartTime[Year]', $line);
}
print "<pre>";
var_dump($unpacked);
print "</pre>";
$i++;
if($i == 4) { exit; }
}
I'm not really sure what you are trying to achieve here. If you have a binary file generated from the above c code then you could read and upack its content like this:
// get size of the binary file
$filesize = filesize('filename.bin');
// open file for reading in binary mode
$fp = fopen('filename.bin', 'rb');
// read the entire file into a binary string
$binary = fread($fp, $filesize);
// finally close the file
fclose($fp);
// unpack the data - notice that we create a format code using 'C%d'
// that will unpack the size of the file in unsigned chars
$unpacked = unpack(sprintf('C%d', $filesize), $binary);
// reset array keys
$unpacked = array_values($unpacked);
// this variable holds the size of *one* structure in the file
$block_size = 3;
// figure out the number of blocks in the file
$block_count = $file_size/$block_size;
// you now should have an array where each element represents a
// unsigned char from the binary file, so to display Day, Month and Year
for ($i = 0, $j = 0; $i < $block_count; $i++, $j+=$block_size) {
print 'Day: ' . $unpacked[$j] . '<br />';
print 'Month: ' . $unpacked[$j+1] . '<br />';
print 'Year: ' . $unpacked[$j+2] . '<br /><br />';
}
Of course you could also create an object to hold the data:
class DATE_OF_BIRTH {
public $Day;
public $Month;
public $Year;
public function __construct($Day, $Month, $Year) {
$this->Day = $Day;
$this->Month = $Month;
$this->Year = $Year;
}
}
$Birth = [];
for ($i = 0, $j = 0; $i < $block_count; $i++, $j+=$block_size) {
$Birth[] = new DATE_OF_BIRTH(
$unpacked[$j],
$unpacked[$j+1],
$unpacked[$j+2]
);
}
Another approach would be to slice it at each third element:
$Birth = [];
for ($i = 0; $i < $block_count; $i++) {
// slice one read structure from the array
$slice = array_slice($unpacked, $i * $block_size, $block_size);
// combine the extracted array containing Day, Month and Year
// with the appropriate keys
$slice = array_combine(array('Day', 'Month', 'Year'), $slice);
$Birth[] = $slice;
}
You should also be aware that this could become much more complicated depending on what data your structure contains, consider this small c program:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
// pack structure members with a 1 byte aligment
struct __attribute__((__packed__)) person_t {
char name[5];
unsigned int age;
};
struct person_t persons[2] = {
{
{
'l', 'i', 's', 'a', 0
},
16
},
{
{
'c', 'o', 'r', 'n', 0
},
52
}
};
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
FILE* fp = fopen("binary.bin", "wb");
fwrite(persons, sizeof(persons), 1, fp);
fclose(fp);
return 0;
}
The above will write each packed structure into the file binary.bin
, the size will be exactly 18 bytes. To get a better grasp on alignment/packing you can check out this so post: Structure padding and packing
Then in you php code you could read each block in a loop like so:
$filesize = filesize("binary.bin");
$fp = fopen("binary.bin", "rb");
$binary = fread($fp, $filesize);
fclose($fp);
// this variable holds the size of *one* structure
$block_size = 9;
$num_blocks = $filesize/$block_size;
// extract each block in a loop from the binary string
for ($i = 0, $offset = 0; $i < $num_blocks; $i++, $offset += $block_size) {
$unpacked_block = unpack("C5char/Iint", substr($binary, $offset));
$unpacked_block = array_values($unpacked_block);
// walk over the 'name' part and get the ascii value
array_walk($unpacked_block, function(&$item, $key) {
if($key < 5) {
$item = chr($item);
}
});
$name = implode('', array_slice($unpacked_block, 0, 5));
$age = implode('', array_slice($unpacked_block, 5, 1));
print 'name: ' . $name . '<br />';
print 'age: ' . $age . '<br />';
}
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